Thomas Lister
CEO at Global Ship Lease
Secondly, with rerouting having settled into stable new norms after a protracted period of reshuffling, a return to Red Sea and Suez transits would represent a major undertaking for the liner companies, involving network disruption, complexity, and significant costs. Taken together, the threshold for a large-scale return to Suez transits is quite high, especially for liner companies operating complex service networks. Consequently, the sector wants to first regain comfort and high conviction that transits can be completed safely on a consistent, and I emphasize, consistent, basis for the long term. On slide 13, we provide some data to help frame a couple of the hot topics of the day, namely US-China tariffs and the proposed US port fees on Chinese-built and operated ships, the latter of which is typically referred to as USTR. Tariffs first. Big picture, U.S. imports represent a meaningful slice of global containerized trade, although perhaps less than some might imagine, at 13%. That's 13%. A significant portion of which, almost 40%, comes from China. A smaller, but still non-negligible volume of containerized trade goes back the other way. During April, tariffs on this bilateral trade climbed as high as 145% and 125%, respectively, triggering severe disruptions to supply chains, which are still rippling through the system. Fortunately, the situation appears to be de-escalating, with tariffs now set, at least for the time being, at 30% and 10%, while the U.S. and China work on establishing a longer-term framework. Turning to USTR, the U.S. is looking to impose fees both on Chinese-built and on Chinese-operated ships. The implications will be wide-ranging, as ships built in China currently account for 28% of the global container ship fleet on the water and 71% of the order book. So, almost everyone has or will have such ships in their fleet. Having said that, USTR is not yet in its final form and has already passed through various iterations and reviews, each of which has tempered the terms, and a further review is, in fact, scheduled to take place today. As things currently stand, it seems that ships of 4,000 TEU or smaller will not be impacted by USTR. Turning to GSL specifically, our fleet at the end of the first quarter included 10 Chinese-built ships, of which only four are larger than 4,000 TEU, of which none are currently deployed on China-US trades.