Taps Coogan – January 30th, 2024
Enjoy The Sounding Line? Click here to subscribe for free.
As the following chart highlights, container shipping volumes through the Suez Canal have hit near-zero for the first time since the Ever Given ship briefly blocked transit in 2020. Via Andreas Steno Larson:
We are approaching a 1970s style de facto shipping blockade!
— AndreasStenoLarsen (@AndreasSteno) January 28, 2024
The situation is worsening in the Red Sea. No containers, soon no dry bulk and no mid-sized tankers either!
Full data in our editorial here -> https://t.co/wXRWFbhVnL pic.twitter.com/75JKW5a7Cd
Whereas the Ever Given blockage was a relatively brief interruption, the remarkably effective Houthi blockade of the Red Sea has no easy resolution and continues despite several belated and incremental retaliatory strikes. It is very likely part of a broad strategy by Iran and its regional proxies (Hamas, Hezbollah, militias in Iraq, etc…) to draw the US into another amorphous Middle-Eastern conflict that diverts resources away from Ukraine or Taiwan, where Iran’s allies Russia and China are waging major power wars of expansion (or soon will be).
Iran likely sees itself at the pinnacle of its regional power and so close to a nuclear weapon that the distinction is irrelevant, and likely sees the US as politically divided, financially constrained, and lacking the focus needed to win/support any conflict, let alone a trans-national one in the Middle East with unclear objectives that should really be pursued by regional stakeholders like Egypt, Saudi Arabia, or the European countries that rely much more than the US on Red Sea shipping.
Would you like to be notified when we publish a new article on The Sounding Line? Click here to subscribe for free.
Can anyone explain why this has had a negligible impact on prices and oil prices specifically. I have a theory but…… only for oil prices.
That chart is for container ships. Tankers volumes have been less effected. Shortages will take some time to work into the system and price increases more time after that. Ever Given was late 2020, inflation didn’t take off until 2021. That being said, inflation was more about monetary and fiscal stimulus than the supply chain stuff IMO
Or could we take the Houthis at face value and accept that it might just be a reaction to the destruction of Gaza. And traffic will flow again as soon as that stops
Entirely possible, but that’s not happening anytime soon
The terrorist state of Israel must stop its genocide of native Palestinians.