Key Points

Jefferies has released a comprehensive report highlighting potential risks to India's container shipping volumes amid global economic challenges. The analysis suggests that container volumes have a higher correlation with global GDP growth, making them vulnerable to international economic fluctuations. Despite these risks, the report indicates significant investment potential, with over $30 billion expected in the port sector by 2030. The government's push towards privatization and a landlord model could help mitigate these challenges and drive sector growth.

Key Points: Jefferies Warns India Port Volumes at Risk from Global Slowdown

  • India's port sector set for $30 billion investment by 2030
  • Global economic shifts impact container volume growth
  • Privatization driving port sector transformation
2 min read

India's container volumes at a higher risk of potential global growth slowdown: Jefferies

Jefferies report highlights potential challenges for India's container shipping sector amid global economic uncertainties and trade dynamics

"Container volumes at higher risk of potential global growth slowdown - Jefferies Report"

New Delhi April 16

According to a report by Jefferies, India's port sector, especially the container volume, is likely to be significantly impacted by the US tariff and the potential global growth slowdown.

"Container volumes at higher risk of potential global growth slowdown", said the report

Container has a higher correlation to global GDP growth, while volumes have a higher correlation to domestic GDP growth.

The report, however, also noted that in India the sector will see an investment of over USD 30 billion by FY30 as compared to less than USD 10 billion in the past decade.

It says that volume growth will be driven by capacity addition and terminal privatisation at major ports. The private sector port players' volume will grow by 10-16 per cent CAGR with an EBITDA of 13-21 per cent in FY25-FY30.

Total cargo handling by PPP operators is targeted to reach over 85 per cent by FY30 from the existing 51 per cent. Approximately 28 per cent of the berths across major ports are under the PPP/captive model and handle around 51 per cent of the total cargo.

The government has already identified a pipeline of 81 projects worth USD 5 billion for PPP under the national monetisation pipeline, and 19 projects worth USD1.4 billion were awarded to date. The government is planning to shift to an 80 per cent landlord model by 2030 across its 12 major ports

India's port volumes have come to historically low correlation to global GDP growth and are highly dependent on domestic economic growth during previous crisis.

During the 2008 Global Financial Crisis (GFC), global GDP growth declined 1 per cent, but India's Port volume growth dropped from 11 per cent in FY08 to 3 per cent in FY09, before recovering to 14 per cent in FY10.

In FY21, during the COVID-19 crisis, global GDP growth declined by 3 per cent, and India's Port volumes and GDP growth declined by 5 per cent and 6 per cent, respectively.

India is a net importing country with USD 241 billion trade deficit in FY24.

The report also noted that any slowdown in global growth drives volume growth by substantially lowering container freight rates.

Global container freight rates declined 20-25 per cent (YoY) in Feb-Mar 2024. Any further easing with improved availability can make EXIM trade more competitive, adding to port and rail volumes.

- ANI

Share this article:

Reader Comments

R
Rahul K.
Interesting analysis! The $30 billion investment planned by FY30 shows real commitment to port infrastructure. Private sector participation could be a game changer for efficiency. 🚢
P
Priya M.
The correlation data with past crises is eye-opening. Shows how resilient India's domestic economy can be even when global markets struggle. Hope the PPP model delivers on its promises!
A
Amit S.
While the investment numbers look impressive, I'm concerned about execution challenges. We've seen delays in infrastructure projects before. Hope the government has learned from past mistakes.
S
Sunita R.
Lower container rates could be good for Indian exporters! Maybe some silver lining in this global slowdown cloud. 🌤️
V
Vikram J.
The shift to 80% landlord model by 2030 is ambitious but necessary. Private operators generally bring better efficiency - just look at how Adani ports have performed!
N
Neha P.
Respectful criticism: The article focuses heavily on container volumes but doesn't address environmental concerns enough. With such massive expansion planned, sustainability should be front and center.

We welcome thoughtful discussions from our readers. Please keep comments respectful and on-topic.

Leave a Comment

Minimum 50 characters 0/50