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Red Sea Houthis withdraw: “seismic” impact on maritime transport

The Houthis have seen enough.

The tenuous ceasefire in Gaza has led Yemen-based militias to announce a pause in attacks on merchant ships in the Red Sea, raising hopes of a return of large-scale container shipping to the Suez Canal trade route for the first time since 2023.

The rebels, who control 40% of Yemen, announced their intentions this week in a letter to Hamas, the Palestinian ruling body in Gaza.

Expectations were further raised at a recent shipping summit hosted by Egypt’s Suez Canal officials. Tolls on waterways have fallen by as much as 60% as ship operators divert the region’s largest container ships and oil tankers to longer, more expensive voyages around Africa’s Cape of Good Hope.

While peace talks in Gaza appear to have accomplished what two years of U.S. military attacks against the Houthis failed to, analysts warn that the return of global container shipping depends on assurances that satisfy carriers — and their insurers.

“The details are fuzzy and you cannot base the safety of crews, ships and cargo on the words of the Houthi militia,” said Peter Sand, chief analyst at maritime data platform Xeneta. “Carriers need much more assurance than that and, perhaps more importantly, so do insurance companies.”

Sand said risk tolerance varies among carriers. French company CMA CGM, for example, fueled conspiracy theories in the maritime community when it continued to operate scheduled commercial services in the Red Sea despite continued Houthi violence. The liner tested tolerances again this month as the high-capacity ships CMA CGM Zheng He and CMA CGM Benjamin Franklin transited the region, the largest ships to use the route since 2023.

Chart showing Suez Canal transits by carrier (and flag) in 2025. Maersk and MSC include services contracted by the US government. (Alphaliner)

“Transits could start to increase if the risk is perceived to be less, but we are unlikely to see an imminent return to 2023 levels,” Sand said.

Xeneta estimates that longer routes around Africa currently absorb around 2 million twenty-foot equivalent units (TEUs) of global container shipping capacity, increasing transportation demand on the global fleet.

A full return to the Red Sea – a key trade route linking Asia with Europe, the Mediterranean and North America – would ease strain on the maritime supply chain and could cause freight rates to plummet unless carriers take drastic measures such as idling, scrapping, slow sailing and blank sailings.

“Carriers now face a dilemma: follow through and accept remaining security risks, or stay around Cape Town and risk losing market share,” wrote Luuk de Gruijter, senior investment director at APM Terminals, in a post on LinkedIn. “If more carriers follow and the Red Sea fully reopens, Asia-Europe trade capacity will likely increase and freight rates may fall. Insurers will also be watching closely, with premiums remaining high until several safe transits confirm stability.”

Vincent Clerc, chief executive of AP Moller-Maersk (MAERSK-B.CO), parent company of APM and Maersk, said during an earnings conference call that his company must ensure that the ceasefire in Gaza “is entrenched and stable.” He added that the shipping industry must assess the Houthis’ position to determine when it will be safe to begin Red Sea crossings.

While container lines have generated billions in windfall profits thanks to record demand in 2024, current economic uncertainty has weakened consumer confidence and stunted industrial development.

“Average spot rates from the Far East to Northern Europe, the Mediterranean and the US East Coast – three trades that would normally transit the Red Sea – have all fallen by more than 50% since the start of this year,” Sand said. “A large-scale return of container ships to the Red Sea would flood the market with capacity and cause freight rates to fall even further for all global trade, not just those directly affected by diversions. »

He warned that carriers were heading into a deficit zone and that freight rates were expected to fall by up to 25% globally in 2026, Red Sea or not.

“Shippers should also make contingency plans, as a large-scale return would cause serious disruptions to global maritime supply chains as services transiting the Suez Canal are restored.

“Many questions still remain unanswered, but the impact of a large-scale return would be seismic for shippers and carriers. »

Find more articles by Stuart Chirls here.

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The article Houthi Red Sea withdraws: ‘seismic’ impact on shipping appeared first on FreightWaves.

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