Tag Archives: disruption

Rickmers Maritime: ‘modern Greek tragedy’ 

Firms that charter out ships to others to move cargo are in big trouble. There’s a squeeze, with overcapacity in the usage market, and  capitalization issues in these asset based firms, who need to borrow to own ships, but do not try to use them themselves, instead finding others to rent to.  Some of these firms will probably go down, as Rickmers Maritime Trust did. Stock price is no measure of a firm’s chance for success. Post-US election and Brexit, volatility of international trade factors is a given, and these firms, as intermediaries, are ideally placed to suffer most from the oscillations.  They need predictability to buy ships for the long term, and rent (charter) them for a shorter term.

What’s the future?  Interest rates are bound to go up!  Charter rates are not going up, and may go down quite a bit.  It will be harder to find credit worthy customers, since they cannot predict their demand as well as before.  We will see higher bad debt problems, such as Hanjin posed.

Loss of some of these intermediaries will reduce the options available for those who want to move cargo, and will increase capital needs just as that is the last thing they need.

Source: Analysis: Rickmers Maritime not alone; we may see a modern Greek tragedy – The Loadstar

Team wins prize for rentable refrigeration in India

I found this outstanding example of entrepreneurship through the Supply Chain @ MIT blog.  It is a great case of entrepreneurs meeting a real need and shaping the product to fit it.  The extra advantage, and one all entrepreneurs should heed, is that many of the best ideas are  humanitarian, sustainable, and ethical, turning a problem real people (or creatures) have into something economically viable as well.  Hats off to these students.

Also note that MIT students (and Harvard students, I am bound to say, though my Princeton degree makes it harder) won the first 3 prizes!!

MIT News Logo

Modular boxes that keep food shipments fresh win MIT Food and Agribusiness Innovation Prize.

Source: Team wins prize for bringing rentable refrigeration to India’s food supply chain | MIT News

Supply Chain MIT Logo

http://supplychainmit.com/2016/05/03/modular-refrigeration-units-could-reduce-cold-chain-costs-in-india/

This History of the Shipping Container

John Edmonds of Freightos sent me this history of the shipping container in time for the 60th anniversary of the first container shipment, the Ideal X, on April 26th.

I found it useful reading.  It never hurts to remind ourselves of the disruptive effect mass acceptance of a standard has on coordinating efforts in an industry.  We see it over and over in high tech, energy, autos, manufacturing.

Of course some standards fail to be accepted (for instance, beta video tape), and fall by the wayside.  But we cannot advance if we do not try; that is the nature of disruptive entrepreneurial behavior in business.

Such is the dilemma facing ocean carriers and alliances today. Perfect competition will not yield profit; the surplus will go to those with critical inputs.  Instead the pie must be made bigger by coordinating efforts through standards.  This will inevitably create niches in which particular firms can survive nicely by adding their special value.

Freightos Logo

 

A comprehensive history of the freight shipping container; its creator, Malcolm McLean; and how it’s driven the industry, the global economy, and more.

Source: This History of the Shipping Container