How Maersk Dominates the Global Shipping Industry

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  • Опубликовано: 12 июл 2021
  • The global container business is in chaos. Surging consumer demand, covid outbreaks and a shortage of containers has led to higher volume for ocean carriers and congestion at ports.
    Maersk, the world’s largest container shipper, has seen record profits. The Danish shipping firm whose customers include Walmart and Nike announced May 2021 first-quarter revenue of $12.4 billion, a 30% increase from a year earlier. Maersk has a fleet of over 700 ships and handles one in every five containers shipped by sea. The company also owns terminals around the world and has a growing land-based logistics business. On average a Maersk container ship calls on a port somewhere around the globe every six minutes. Like its competitors the company has faced a series of obstacles in the first half of 2021 ranging from the worldwide shortage of shipping containers to the blockage of the Suez Canal.
    So, with vaccine rollouts in place in the U.S. and consumer discretionary spending shifting towards services will Maersk and its rivals be able to maintain their momentum? And what do bottlenecks at ports and higher freight rates mean for U.S. consumers? Watch the video to find out what's next for Maersk.
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    How Maersk Dominates the Global Shipping Industry

Комментарии • 726

  • @frankkreyssig7626
    @frankkreyssig7626 2 года назад +317

    Of course they’re going to make record profits when the price of shipping a 20 foot container goes from $1800 to $18,000 in the matter of six months.

  • @xpkareem
    @xpkareem 2 года назад +351

    David is straight from central casting when you request a "Longshoreman type".

    • @mikepict9011
      @mikepict9011 2 года назад +18

      Definitely seems like he " lost " q few containers in his day .

    • @ph11p3540
      @ph11p3540 2 года назад +10

      He sounds and looks like a certain longshoreman union forman from the cast of Eraser staring Arnold Schwarzenegger. "No one messes with the union"

    • @ArcticSilverFox1
      @ArcticSilverFox1 2 года назад +9

      Don't make him call "Tony" !!

    • @johnneveu1718
      @johnneveu1718 2 года назад +8

      I swear I've seen him talking to Tony Soprano at some point

  • @victoriancu7358
    @victoriancu7358 2 года назад +221

    Truly is amazing that its still cheaper to make a product 6000 miles away and have it traverse a vast ocean braving high winds and waves just to make it to your front door. You could have the US factory right next door to the customer and they still can't compete.

    • @davewong22
      @davewong22 2 года назад +67

      not just cheaper, but the infrastructure and supply lines to produce the products are all over seas. Thats why the tariffs imposed by Trump was meaningless, it only hurt the consumers because at the end of the day the US can not produce the same products as overseas. Not until US invest in the proper infrastructure and supply chain needed.

    • @4TheRecord
      @4TheRecord 2 года назад +24

      The only way to compete with China is to introduce forced labour with little or no pay, just like the Chinese do.

    • @orionide4032
      @orionide4032 2 года назад +19

      @@davewong22 Its cheaper because here you get insane regulations. Like Europe going green and removing their industries, will benefit China greatly.

    • @cheezeball6109
      @cheezeball6109 2 года назад +16

      They can compete, the problem is the middlemen make less. Retail stuff is marked up so much, supporting US goods would mean lower profit margins for the middlemen, so they prefer China to maximize their profits. At the retail end, its just cheaper. This is how the 1 percent kept wages supressed the last 30 years, and now is in a pickle if Chine decides to inflate its currency.

    • @happyhappynuts
      @happyhappynuts 2 года назад +7

      @@orionide4032 it's not only that.
      China government gives lots of loans to producers of steel, glass, solar panels and so on, causing lots of over capacity.
      That's why it's cheap.

  • @BLWard-ht3qw
    @BLWard-ht3qw 2 года назад +91

    Don't know why I've always found transportation logistics fascinating, not to mention shipping ports. Their operations just seems like something I could watch all day, trying to figure out how things move about.

    • @neeljavia2965
      @neeljavia2965 2 года назад +12

      Logistics is a great career choice.

    • @DonCorleon31
      @DonCorleon31 2 года назад +7

      @@neeljavia2965 yes, I've just started my internship in logistics, it's fascinating

    • @neeljavia2965
      @neeljavia2965 2 года назад

      @@DonCorleon31 Excellent.

    • @kidGabriel20
      @kidGabriel20 Год назад +4

      10 yrs working on it im glad to work for Maersk wait till you see our sorter system on warehouses

    • @adobotravels
      @adobotravels Год назад +1

      @@DonCorleon31 how did you get the internship?

  • @DanielPearson1
    @DanielPearson1 2 года назад +27

    "We're moving a lot of empty containers from this terminal, so a lot of choice New Jersey air is being sent away from here to other locations" Underrated hilarious joke.

  • @cesar280z
    @cesar280z 2 года назад +47

    Taking a Loaded container with scrap paper to Jakarta = $2500
    Taking an empty container to China = $7000
    no need to be a rocket science to guess what the shipping line is going to choose to do...
    taka a vessel loaded with empty containers... creating chaos at the terminal levels...
    if you don't work in the industry... you wouldn't know.

    • @soul0360
      @soul0360 2 года назад +2

      Supply and demand at work, in a free market.
      Obviously there is still profit to be made by Chinese companies while offering to pay higher rates, else they wouldn't.
      While Indonesian paper recyclers or what ever. Either can't offer the same prices, or won't because they don't have a shortage.
      Not saying this is the way things should be. But it's the way they are.
      I don't know what scrap paper is used for in Indonesia. But if it's just the cheapest place to get paper recycled. Maybe this is a good thing for the climate. Because transporting stuff half way across the world to get cheap labor to make a penny, isn't really sustainable, if we want our grand kids to live comfortably on this planet.

  • @brentmarrillo2181
    @brentmarrillo2181 2 года назад +58

    I'm proud to be part of Maersk as an officer in their vessels

  • @curtisclark802
    @curtisclark802 Год назад +1

    Shipping is the backbone of all society right now, sea or land. As a healthcare worker, we couldn't do it without EVERY person involved.

  • @justmeangelasee4388
    @justmeangelasee4388 2 года назад +7

    Maersk has always been the best!! I loved working for this company!

  • @benheal6466
    @benheal6466 2 года назад +85

    I didn’t know Steve-O worked as a longshoreman

  • @christinegloriene6831
    @christinegloriene6831 9 месяцев назад +1

    Maersk work is commendable. Salute to the people who work on this company. Even during the pandemic Maersk is striving!

  • @listocastillo6453
    @listocastillo6453 2 года назад +2

    As a kid I always saw Maersk containers on the road. The emblem always held a place in my herat

  • @kirillkhizhnyak3749
    @kirillkhizhnyak3749 2 года назад +5

    Big respect to everyone working there.

  • @jamssnana4084
    @jamssnana4084 2 года назад +24

    My daughter and two granddaughters are moving from Louisiana to Virginia Thursday. She and my husband have put her entire household AND her car into a 20’ sea can, sealed it up, loaded it into his trailer, hitched it to his enormous truck, weighed it, and are good to go. It's amazing what these things can hold.
    This one is a rental, but when prices come down, we will be getting a bigger one to store some "preparations" in.

    • @TheZProtocol
      @TheZProtocol 2 года назад

      How much did that cost?

    • @jamssnana4084
      @jamssnana4084 2 года назад

      @@TheZProtocol I'm so sorry it took me this long to answer you!! I didn't realize I had a question.
      My husband says it was $150 to rent the sea can where he got it, but he has seen them as high as $250 for the same thing. Gotta shop around. I hope I'm not too late to help you out.

    • @JohnPaul-lv4yx
      @JohnPaul-lv4yx 10 месяцев назад

      ruclips.net/user/shortsZiswUh9-bJo?feature=share
      here's how the vehicles are stuffed into the container

  • @FinancialShinanigan
    @FinancialShinanigan 2 года назад +118

    I live across the APM Terminal and these ships are massive and definitely see a bump in activities.

    • @Sanyu-Tumusiime
      @Sanyu-Tumusiime 2 года назад +2

      너 혹시 한국인예요?

    • @jarretheller2244
      @jarretheller2244 2 года назад

      We see them all the time at any park alongside the Delaware river going to Wilmington, Philly and Trenton. they are quite a sight to behold

  • @FinancialShinanigan
    @FinancialShinanigan 2 года назад +25

    I only use washing machines as measurement so glad I know how many fits in a cargo container!

    • @daviddefortier5970
      @daviddefortier5970 2 года назад +8

      Americans and their football fields, olympic swimming pools and now washing machines 🙄

    • @gsnitable
      @gsnitable 2 года назад +1

      I only use bananas

  • @dertythegrower
    @dertythegrower 2 года назад +28

    Very cool report,
    well done report here, whoever is the Maersk reporter, props.

  • @lzh4950
    @lzh4950 2 года назад +11

    Here in Singapore we learnt in Secondary 4/5 (equivalent to 10th grade) in public schools that Maersk moved from our ports to that of _Tg Pelepas_ in neighbouring Malaysia because it was cheaper & allowed more flexible operations. But then I later also learnt that they later moved back to Singapore in 2017 as it was more efficient

    • @flaviomonteiro1414
      @flaviomonteiro1414 2 года назад

      Thanks for sharing!

    • @12345ngb
      @12345ngb Год назад

      Pelepas is Maersk s own terminal. There are times when PSA gets so congested that alternatives are needed. Even though Changi airport is so vast, DHL has kept a major cargo warehouse in Johor Bahru.
      Maersk would have gone like the other container shipping firms but for 2 major lifelines it has; it has invested so much in ports that now almost half of the major shipping terminals belong to the group. And most important, it has Maersk Oil and Maersk Drilling that keep all other businesses going

  • @gawkthimm6030
    @gawkthimm6030 2 года назад +46

    funny thing is Mærsk is Danish and here in Denmark we have strong labor unions and with the various EU regulatory workers rights, etc. so at home Mærsk is much more fair to its workers than outside the EU..

    • @bzdtemp
      @bzdtemp 2 года назад +12

      Actually from what I understand MAERSK is being pretty fair to their people where ever they work and what ever countries hey are from. The company knows from the experience at home that treating people fair pays, it is much smarter in the long run to have people working that are happy to do so than the opposite.

    • @hopecharity7917
      @hopecharity7917 2 года назад

      @@bzdtemp where do you see moller maersk in the next 10 yrs?

  • @ramoncroes9243
    @ramoncroes9243 2 года назад +1

    Oh, Very Good reporting! Thanks.

  • @jaredspencer3304
    @jaredspencer3304 2 года назад +93

    Early in the pandemic, shipping slowed and the price of scrap steel rose, leading to many functional ships being scrapped for the money. I wonder what impact this had on the current shipping shortage.

    • @FrancisBehnen
      @FrancisBehnen 2 года назад +3

      Why did scrap metal increase so much?

    • @jaredspencer3304
      @jaredspencer3304 2 года назад +10

      @@FrancisBehnen I think the primary causes were 1) China continuing its infrastructure building boom and 2) most steel exports and ore mining being halted from around the world because of lockdowns.

    • @dagarza1010
      @dagarza1010 2 года назад +2

      Jijijijijijiji

    • @soul0360
      @soul0360 2 года назад +4

      One benefit that could happen, should shipping prices not plateau soon. Is that the cost benefit of cheap labor and operating cost of factories overseas, will become less. Hence there is an economic incentive, to moving factories closer to the end consumer.
      A net win for the environment, that in turn will lower our dependency on lang haul shipping capacity.
      Wishful thinking, I know.
      One could also argue the other way though. That the dependency on stability in foreign countries, that make our stuff. Make the world a safer place with less wars.
      And that those countries, that currently rely on their cheap labor for economic competitiveness, will suffer, should factories be moved "home".

    • @mingdianli7802
      @mingdianli7802 2 года назад +1

      Source?

  • @fredmidtgaard5487
    @fredmidtgaard5487 2 года назад +4

    Good that a Danish company can rule like that!

  • @namkkemalkrkkanat2833
    @namkkemalkrkkanat2833 Год назад +1

    Thanks for the good content.

  • @TheMrFishnDucks
    @TheMrFishnDucks 2 года назад +1

    Great video. Keep up the good work.

  • @mountainman6172
    @mountainman6172 2 года назад +18

    The Danes English accent are very distinct. If you've lived there, then you can immediately spot it.

  • @Paata02
    @Paata02 2 года назад +51

    I am an importer and had to pay 6 times more on this shipment compared to one mid pandemic

    • @davewong22
      @davewong22 2 года назад +1

      yeah same, and even if you can afford the prices you arent guaranteed a spot.

    • @Aalliiiq
      @Aalliiiq 2 года назад

      @@davewong22
      Do you book through an agent or do you use the Maersk APP?

    • @Paata02
      @Paata02 2 года назад

      @@Aalliiiq this time I did DDP and it actually comes out pretty reasonable.

    • @Aalliiiq
      @Aalliiiq 2 года назад

      @@Paata02
      Oh with DDP freight cost is very reasonable. Plus the seller assumes all the risk.

    • @willlewis9194
      @willlewis9194 2 года назад

      @@Aalliiiq we ship on average from Xiamen to US 6x 40HQ or 5x 45ft per month, needless to say this is killing us, we looked at going direct to Maersk but didn't have any luck. it seems CH Robinson is still our best bet and been using them for years but the invoices are HUGE!!

  • @malcolmdias7532
    @malcolmdias7532 2 года назад +2

    Love Maersk!

  • @chansaicommerce1721
    @chansaicommerce1721 2 года назад

    AMAZING !!

  • @anemoiyang4362
    @anemoiyang4362 2 года назад +15

    In short: they raise the price. As a company, we are experiencing rates twice as high compared to pre pandemic

    • @soul0360
      @soul0360 2 года назад

      Supply and demand at work, in a free market.
      A shortage on a product raises prices.
      Companies who can afford to pay, while still making a profit, get their stuff transported, and those who can't will close down.
      In the end, it's up to consumers, how much we are willing to pay for different products. And once we collectively decide, transport prices will plateau.
      Not saying that that is the way our society should work. But it's the way it currently does.

    • @DonCorleon31
      @DonCorleon31 2 года назад

      I work at a shipping company we have seen prices go up eightfould

  • @Sacto1654
    @Sacto1654 2 года назад +18

    Moving shipping containers by ship is one thing. But moving shipping containers on _land_ is also becoming a big problem, too. Here in the USA and in Canada, that's not much of a problem with doublestack container trains, but it is a problem in other parts of the world. Small wonder why the Chinese government is promoting the _Belt and Road_ initiative to move these containers by rail across the Eurasian continental land mass.

    • @Manshukz55
      @Manshukz55 2 года назад

      Because by rail it is faster

    • @jordie4423
      @jordie4423 2 года назад +2

      That’s why we need to move the factories back home

  • @williammsilu2789
    @williammsilu2789 2 года назад

    Good work

  • @zowfirzaheed
    @zowfirzaheed 2 года назад +15

    Pandemic is a blessing in disguise for shipping industry with most of them doing exceptionally well with super profits. Some industries misery is another industry's gain!!

  • @user-fq4ut9fk7g
    @user-fq4ut9fk7g 7 месяцев назад

    Your extra intell is fantastic

  • @kidGabriel20
    @kidGabriel20 Год назад

    Maersk baby!

  • @leadersofthenewschool
    @leadersofthenewschool 2 года назад +2

    David was definitely a heavy smoker at some point 🤣🤣

  • @silverfranklin508
    @silverfranklin508 2 года назад +52

    Investment are stepping stones to success, investment is what create wealth

    • @jessicamolly9733
      @jessicamolly9733 2 года назад

      If you want to be successful have the mindset of the rich, spend less and invest more don't give up on your dreams.

    • @simontrees5289
      @simontrees5289 2 года назад

      Impressive, I that the secret to making a million is saving for a better investment...i always tell myself you don't need new Aston Martin or that vacation in Hawaii just yet and that mindset hell me make more money investing.

    • @simontrees5289
      @simontrees5289 2 года назад

      Diversifying is the best key to investing and being wealthy

    • @gwencaster8470
      @gwencaster8470 2 года назад

      It is better to put the price of discipline than to pay the price of regret tomorrow and make the right decision to join the winning team today

    • @gwencaster8470
      @gwencaster8470 2 года назад

      I'm enjoying investing under a platform that brings good returns in my life and I have been making my weekly returns without stress all with Mrs Michelle

  • @Ohaupt
    @Ohaupt 2 года назад +7

    Biggest jump in price was for shipping furniture (large items I guess). Maybe a good time to produce some of that closer to the retailer?

    • @daisydaisy2104
      @daisydaisy2104 2 года назад +1

      Still cheaper, but more than double the time

    • @adamt195
      @adamt195 2 года назад +2

      Or we really need to get better as a society about buying secondhand. Everyone buying new furniture during the pandemic but what is happening to all the old furniture? Straight to the landfill.

    • @daisydaisy2104
      @daisydaisy2104 2 года назад

      @@adamt195 hospitality industry can’t do that

  • @komlanagbezouke9027
    @komlanagbezouke9027 Год назад

    maersk Line is not only shipping company,it also shipping school 👍👍👍

  • @zhouxinbo8974
    @zhouxinbo8974 2 года назад +53

    I’m so sorry for the rest of the world who gets that “choice New Jersey air” from Newark 😂🤣

    • @aguyontheinternet1
      @aguyontheinternet1 2 года назад +3

      Nobody wants to live in new jersey they just end up there

    • @DD-ws6cu
      @DD-ws6cu 2 года назад +1

      I know it’s a joke, but NJ is actually pretty nice in a lot of areas

  • @alparslankorkmaz2964
    @alparslankorkmaz2964 2 года назад +1

    Nice video.

  • @spankeyham
    @spankeyham 2 года назад +38

    They didn't mention the many ships that were scrapped at the start of 2020 because they couldn't meet the new fuel regulations from the IMO. Yes volumes increased and containers are displaced but there is more to it than just pandemic shopping. Right now freight spot rates are up around 350% and you can bet that this price will be passed on to the consumer especially when large contract rates are up for renewal.

    • @soul0360
      @soul0360 2 года назад

      To my knowledge, most of the shipping capacity that were scrapped, wasn't until replacements were built. So it's not like capacity went down a whole lot (or possibly at all), it's just that it didn't rise as much, when ever new ships were finished.
      Whether prices will be passed on to consumers or not, depends on us. If we are willing to pay more for a given product it will. If we are not willing, prices won't rise, but some company's will close down, and more competitive ones, will pick up their market share.

    • @kewalsanghvi4651
      @kewalsanghvi4651 2 года назад

      True. At the end, it will be the consumer who will pay. We can already see prices going up, and the greed of the shipping lines will form the root cause of this continued inflation

  • @reshabhupadhyay4781
    @reshabhupadhyay4781 2 года назад

    Impressive

  • @paintedbird6791
    @paintedbird6791 2 года назад +21

    This company just charges more/ When other were charging 3k for reefer from USA west coast to east asia, they were charging 12k.
    They can get away with charging more, good for them

  • @olegmajor9780
    @olegmajor9780 2 года назад

    Please continue to make subtitles for the video!

  • @owenhuu
    @owenhuu 2 года назад +4

    Port automation (e.g. Rotterdam) will be painful in the short run in terms of union job loss, but America needs to be capable of making such generational decisions.

  • @godseeu2
    @godseeu2 2 года назад +80

    Guess who’s paying these sky rocking ocean freight eventually?

    • @arvindnair5956
      @arvindnair5956 2 года назад +58

      you gotta pay for services my man... no one runs container ships for charity...

    • @TheRealBizWiz
      @TheRealBizWiz 2 года назад +5

      @@arvindnair5956
      Exactly, lol.
      🤦🏻‍♂️

    • @hangender
      @hangender 2 года назад +8

      But there is no inflation.... Or so liberals keep telling me.

    • @kalbereanimesh
      @kalbereanimesh 2 года назад

      Me 🙌🏻

    • @terrycoontz
      @terrycoontz 2 года назад +13

      @@hangender that’s not inflation dude..

  • @ozcinemarob
    @ozcinemarob 2 года назад +8

    We've seen the shipping lines record record profits, now it won't be long before the terminal operators want in on the cash flow to maximise their own profits. When this occurs, expect freight costs to rise significantly again....all in all, the end consumer will need to pickup the difference and we will see quite some retail price rises in the very near future.

  • @springfieldFlute
    @springfieldFlute 2 года назад +20

    Hi, I've been listening to news here on and off, and have often listen to this VO speak. I'd like to say you've improved! You used to be very robotic, lots of awkward pauses. Your speech much more smooth now and less tense in your voice. Keep it up :) Looking forward to more news.

  • @dannyhughes4889
    @dannyhughes4889 2 года назад +9

    The solution is fairly simple...encourage/ incentivize people to buy as much locally produced stuff as possible and buy less junk from overseas.

    • @carlosruz4655
      @carlosruz4655 2 года назад +1

      @@NicholasPeters1 I agree. We are by now accustomed to buy low quality elements, those who once were local producers went into chinese cheap production goods for better profit, almost nobody is making the good quality elements of yesterday and would be very unlikely to start producing again... all is a matter of money. As you say, this will never stop.

  • @svenfrontin-rollet8469
    @svenfrontin-rollet8469 2 года назад

    Never will the world need a bigger ship than these

  • @soobinsii8273
    @soobinsii8273 2 года назад +45

    My friend applied here and pronounced it as "Mayersk" like the narrator. She failed the initial interview right away.

    • @MrMtanz
      @MrMtanz 2 года назад +4

      Is it more like "Mursk"?

    • @TheRealBedintruder
      @TheRealBedintruder 2 года назад +1

      @@MrMtanz Dane here: at around 0:11 in this video the name is pronounced correctly: ruclips.net/video/hY578Ivugxc/видео.html

    • @akyhne
      @akyhne 2 года назад

      Dudes... Use Google translate. Choose Danish to English (or any language).
      Then in the Danish section of Google translate, there's a play icon (speaker icon), that will pronounce the Danish word for you.

    •  2 года назад +1

      @@akyhne It isn't perfect. It draws the 'æ' a bit too much.

  • @kennyh5083
    @kennyh5083 Год назад +1

    It is mind boggling that these ships fully loaded actually float!

  • @bestgeneral6153
    @bestgeneral6153 Год назад

    👍👍👍good

  • @dean9566
    @dean9566 2 года назад +3

    Captain here:
    6:21 That's 175 bananas long
    ~~Flies away~~

  • @loftsatsympaticodotc
    @loftsatsympaticodotc 2 года назад +1

    Excellent analysis. Few know what a bargain for cost-per-mile ocean shipping is. Just compare to trucks, rail, or your family van or car! LOL

  • @peterferrydriver
    @peterferrydriver 2 года назад +8

    Instead of shipping toasters and washing machines around the world at ever increasing prices, perhaps local manufacturing can again be reinstated, keeping labour dollars at home.

  • @husnimuhammadarmin3998
    @husnimuhammadarmin3998 11 месяцев назад +1

    I am big boss. Next working friends hahaha😂❤

  • @Emillionaer
    @Emillionaer 2 года назад

    loving the danglish

  • @kushm9636
    @kushm9636 2 года назад

    More profitable than ever before, oh yes you're correct

  • @furball8967
    @furball8967 2 года назад +1

    David played ‘Daddy’ in the series ‘Claw’. His side job is longshoremen.

  • @kjensen7819
    @kjensen7819 Год назад

    Maersk and other Shipping Lines are making fortunes these last 2 years. Maersk's profit was more than the GDP of small countries. In the media there is a lot of talk about inflation, but nobody seems to want to talk about the Shipping Giants role is this. Freight prices have soared more than 100% and that of course increases prices for everything we buy. Maersk and others are making a killing and we are all paying for it and nobody seems to care.

  • @beroyan
    @beroyan 2 года назад

    Hello from Armenia 🇦🇲🇦🇲🇦🇲

  • @mikealbert525
    @mikealbert525 2 года назад

    good

  • @stanpatterson5033
    @stanpatterson5033 2 года назад +11

    Simply put, it's the ocean-going carriers' turn to gouge and charge what they want.

    • @jhwyatt831
      @jhwyatt831 2 года назад +1

      After years and years of losses, carriers are finally in the drivers seat

    • @stevedowdeswell139
      @stevedowdeswell139 2 года назад

      China to Uk now cost #25,000 for a 40 foot container. Too expensive.

  • @indradarmawan8614
    @indradarmawan8614 2 года назад

    does the maersline ship go to Indonesia? how can it happen there are ships on fire? that lately there are often news of burning container ships

  • @elierose3021
    @elierose3021 2 года назад +1

    MSC is doing quite very well too :p

  • @coolmxx
    @coolmxx 8 месяцев назад

    Tebrikler 👏👏👏

  • @zzcc229
    @zzcc229 2 года назад +2

    Like how do you even a star a business like this from scratch..like this has to be the most you only have a chance if your parents are millionaires business

  • @svenfrontin-rollet8469
    @svenfrontin-rollet8469 2 года назад

    Yes. The massive ships are ridiculously big

  • @chansaicommerce1721
    @chansaicommerce1721 2 года назад

    COOL +++++++++++++++++++

  • @FableFrenzy
    @FableFrenzy 2 года назад

    Why isn't David Hallerman saying *they be swimming with the fishes?* 5:07

  • @MIKESGREATSTORY
    @MIKESGREATSTORY 2 года назад

    The rates are up because they charge on containers that are still on the ship(shipping lines), trucker rates are still the same

  • @JosEmanuel0n24
    @JosEmanuel0n24 2 года назад

    Thanks for informing the informed...
    Any price targets for any of this companies?

  • @vecnagreyhawk78
    @vecnagreyhawk78 2 года назад +1

    I wonder how this will affect consumer international moving rates.

  • @bzdtemp
    @bzdtemp 2 года назад +26

    Am I the only one not really finding much answers in this video. Like for example why is it that Maersk looks to be profiting more than their competitors? And what is up with that CO2 neutral ship? And who did schedule it for 2030?

    • @baresan4699
      @baresan4699 2 года назад +5

      CNBC doesn’t understand anything really.

    • @PPT75019
      @PPT75019 2 года назад +3

      Maersk is bigger -> They take a bigger share of the cake
      Also from my experience, they've always been more organized than their competitors

    • @htopherollem649
      @htopherollem649 2 года назад +3

      our "news" has been taken over by corporate America it no longer informs us with the truth but what the powers that be want us to believe

    • @bzdtemp
      @bzdtemp 2 года назад +1

      @@htopherollem649 To the best of my knowledge nothing wrong was told in the video. But perhaps you would like to elaborate, what part was wrong and why?

    • @donna8243
      @donna8243 2 года назад

      Agreed. I didn't hear solutions about how to make these inflated prices go back to normal.

  • @alexandermiller557
    @alexandermiller557 2 года назад

    @3:40 they are citing an article from 2010 quoting the current economic situation? Might need to fix this

  • @9aasheesh
    @9aasheesh 2 года назад

    Worked in Maersk India . Funny place . They have people from Govt schools . There was a rice export scam . The documentation manager was involved .

  • @fredcarr3550
    @fredcarr3550 2 года назад +5

    Bring back manufacturing to North America and Europe and the problem will be solved.

    • @jagboy69
      @jagboy69 2 года назад

      1st we have to get prices here at home under control. Example, I just bought a huge scissor lift from china that cost 9k SHIPPED and here in the states, it's over 40k! It came down to the price of steel here that's out of control. Combine that with workers that don't demand 100k a year to sweep the floor and this is how the US has become a service based economy. Wealthy workers have never come out of mcds unless they bought the place. Pretty tough on 15bucks an hour when gas is over 4bucks! In short, we are ROYALLY SCREWED! Nov2022 is our only hope, woke politics is making us go broke.

  • @KamilKonstantin
    @KamilKonstantin 10 месяцев назад +4

    {{I used to work for Maersk in the Netherlands for about 7 years, I enjoyed the logistic career until during the summer holiday of 2009 I attended a seminar and that seminar changed my life. My financial life transformed greatly as I started investing in assets that earns me monthly passive income and now I got 4 out of my 5 goals. Just hope it encourages someone's that it doesn’t matter if you dont have any knowledge right now, you can start TODAY regardless your age INVEST and change your future! Investing in the financial market is a grand choice I made.}}

  • @Dynasty1818
    @Dynasty1818 2 года назад

    Surge in demand, yet the US only returns around 20-30% of all containers that arrive in or near LA. Hardly a great way to keep container availability high.

  • @rkaushik8534
    @rkaushik8534 2 года назад

    Who do you think does sysops for Maersk? System operations. I'm serious - who makes em go tick tick tick instead of tick tick boom?

    • @Carewolf
      @Carewolf 2 года назад

      They have a HUGE IT department. Often getting the best CS people they can to write logistics algorithms to best balance loads, but I imagine the engineering side is also pretty hardcore.

  • @learningearning8385
    @learningearning8385 2 года назад

    I worked for a trucking company which picked up loads from the docks & rail yards. Maersk truck drivers outnumbered ours 3 to 1. Wonder how much their truck drivers make?

  • @hankzane
    @hankzane 2 года назад

    Do you remember working for Maersk in GTA V? Pepperidge Farm remembers

  • @zetajolyne3689
    @zetajolyne3689 2 года назад +3

    Maersk just investigated the Eurasia railway of Chinese BRI

    • @haha-ui3fp
      @haha-ui3fp 2 года назад

      The word "just" is unnecessary here. E.g. already in 2019 Maersk launched a regular rail freight line(AE19) between Vladivostok and St. Petersburg to ship some containers quicker from East Asian countries (especially Japan) to EU. Now these somewhat quirky alternatives that were slowly starting up for the last decade are just suddenly in very high demand and the media is talking about them.

  • @ayansinha4039
    @ayansinha4039 2 года назад +1

    wow my uncle is chief engineer on maersk!

  • @smarthome1502
    @smarthome1502 2 года назад +7

    Apple shipped my iMac 2021 fortunately with airplane from China, last week. But of my Weber Grill I wait more than 2 months. And It should approx. come in one month.

    • @irbose9895
      @irbose9895 2 года назад +2

      Your grille ain’t coming

  • @grandmaster137
    @grandmaster137 2 года назад +1

    People should invest more in the container business

    • @jonroy06
      @jonroy06 2 года назад

      By the time your investment goes to work, you will have missed the boat. Prices will calm down soon.

  • @eternaldarkness2094
    @eternaldarkness2094 2 года назад

    I wish they focused more on ports.

  • @mikehedson
    @mikehedson 2 года назад

    What about all the ship breakups that were in the news six months ago? Did that factor in to this crisis?

  • @morgichor679
    @morgichor679 2 года назад +2

    the aptly provided bananas for scale.

  • @siddharthashrestha4599
    @siddharthashrestha4599 2 года назад +4

    6:36 wow 48,000 bananas for scale? This is one of the most American things i ever seen 😂😂

    • @WycliffStudios
      @WycliffStudios 2 года назад

      They are trying to explain it to the common man. Do you think villagers in India would grasp Cubic meters ?

  • @nutsbutdum
    @nutsbutdum 2 года назад +7

    How many Jensens can you fit in a single video? 😂😂😂

    • @robertmartin2867
      @robertmartin2867 2 года назад +2

      You should see their orientation videos for new employees. The word "Svenborg" is almost punctuation.

    • @nikhilparanjape7890
      @nikhilparanjape7890 2 года назад +1

      I was looking for this comment...

    • @Carewolf
      @Carewolf 2 года назад +2

      In Denmark it is like "Smith", only even more common. Somewhere between 5 to 10% of all Danes are Jensen.

    • @jianeyabrahams
      @jianeyabrahams 2 года назад +1

      So are the Moller's 😂

  • @Le_Blnk____
    @Le_Blnk____ 2 года назад

    Oooh it's Me yersk

  • @sfperalta
    @sfperalta 2 года назад

    The predominance of global shipping seems to have been predicated on the proposition that, even including shipping costs, it's cheaper to manufacture goods (excluding autos) in China that are consumed in North America and Europe than to set up manufacturing in those markets and sell locally. This, along with the rapid adoption of Just-In-Time manufacturing has appeared to expose the precarity of the global supply chain, due to pandemic, extreme weather, war, or other factors. I wonder to what degree this might incent manufacturers to move factories back to their local markets in order to isolate their operations from such disruptions?

  • @pghomies
    @pghomies Год назад

    @3:40 an article from 2010?

  • @user-fq4ut9fk7g
    @user-fq4ut9fk7g 7 месяцев назад

    Is their portholes on Argo ships

  • @michaeldeng1981
    @michaeldeng1981 2 года назад +1

    I like the danish accent English.

  • @user-fq4ut9fk7g
    @user-fq4ut9fk7g 7 месяцев назад

    Surprised its me again

  • @abhishekvajpeyi7318
    @abhishekvajpeyi7318 2 года назад

    ya

  • @norcalguaponorcalguapo6773
    @norcalguaponorcalguapo6773 2 года назад +3

    I work in logistics. It’s a nightmare right now

    • @hakuhosho9802
      @hakuhosho9802 2 года назад

      Why? Can you be more specific

    • @norcalguaponorcalguapo6773
      @norcalguaponorcalguapo6773 2 года назад

      I’m on the carrier (Trucking) side of the buisness i manage a crew that goes to the port of Oakland’ for imports and exports. Vessels now only giving a day or day and half for receiving,. The constant changes in LRDs and Erds those r just small examples but it’s crazy 😜

    • @Carewolf
      @Carewolf 2 года назад

      Unless you have a stock in the business too, then it is heaven.