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Supply
Chain by the Numbers |
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- June 6, 2013
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Contract Manufacturers Operate on Tiny Margins; Yet Another Low Cost Country Factory Disaster; Yuan Continues to Rise in Value - but Still Not Enough; Record Ship Scrapping - but More Container Ships Coming |
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31 |
Number of "megaships" with capacity of more than 10,000 TEU still to be delivered to ocean container carriers in 2013, according to Drewry Shipping Consultants, as the ships keep coming despite soft global demand. The industry will try to counter by scrapping an estimated 450,000 TEU in 2013, according to Alphaliner, a level that would surpass the record 381,000 TEU capacity axed in 2009. Most of the scrapped ships will be in the 3000-5000 TEU range - small and inefficient by today's megaship standards. Still with all that, new supply will again likely exceed capacity taken out of the system - and keep rates low.
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6.17 |
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About the number of Chinese Yuan that one US dollar would have got you this week, a record low, as the Chinese currency continues to rise against the Greenback. The Yuan has gain about 1.5% against the dollar so far this year, and about 8% since 2010, a partial factor in the US' growing competitiveness in manufacturing versus China. Still, many believe the Yuan needs to rise a lot more, with renewed action in the US Senate this week to pass a bill requiring the Commerce Department to investigate if currency manipulation by China is a form of subsidization, against which the US could level duties on Chinese imports.
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