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Date: 14th January 2026

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New Zealand

AIR

IMPORT

  • New Zealand terminal facilities (Air NZ and Menzies at AKL) are fully functional with no major service issues reported outside regional disruptions.

EXPORT

  • Export operations at New Zealand terminals (Menzies and Air New Zealand) remain fully functional, with no major service issues reported.

LANDSIDE & CUSTOMS

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Australia

LANDSIDE & CUSTOMS

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Asia

AIR

IMPORT

  • Capacity is relatively stable across most Asia to New Zealand and Australia, supported by steady freighter and belly-hold availability, though demand remains firm driven mostly by e-commerce.
  • China rates have dipped slightly in early January 2026 amid softer post-holiday demand, but remain volatile and adjusted weekly based on capacity, transhipment congestion, and emerging Lunar New Year pressures (Chinese New Year falls on February 17, 2026, with advance bookings strongly recommended to secure space ahead of the expected pre-holiday surge).
  • China Southern Airlines continues to offer competitive spot rates ex Guangzhou, applicable to key gateways like AKL, SYD, MEL, BNE, and PER.
  • Overall, Asia-Pacific airfreight outlook for Q1 2026 is cautiously optimistic, with potential rate fluctuations due to geopolitical uncertainties and supply chain shifts.

EXPORT

  • Consols are moving as booked, with sufficient capacity on most carriers, though early bookings are advised ahead
    of Lunar New Year to avoid rate spikes or space shortages.
  • Demand from New Zealand and Australia remains strong for tech and e-commerce exports, contributing to firm but stable rates in early January.

OCEAN

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Trans-Tasman

AIR

IMPORT

  • Consols are moving as booked with very good capacity on Trans-Tasman lanes (e.g., ex AKL to SYD, MEL, BNE, PER and vice versa), as well as from Pacific islands.
  • Rates remain steady, with only minor adjustments expected for fuel surcharges or terminal fees; regional demand is supported by e-commerce growth but remains balanced.
  • Australian terminals (including Qantas Freight, Swissport, dnata, and Menzies) are fully functional with no major service issues reported outside regional disruptions.
  • Note on Victoria Bushfires: Ongoing bushfires in Victoria, declared a State of Disaster on January 10, 2026, have razed significant areas and continue to cause disruptions. Smoke is reducing visibility at Melbourne Airport (MEL), leading to flight delays, cancellations, single-runway operations, and potential consol backlogs of 2–4 days (with knock-on effects possibly extending into the week). Qantas and other carriers have offered fee-free rebookings for affected itineraries (originally through January 10–11, with extensions in some cases). Parcel and mail networks in northern Victoria may face additional delays.

EXPORT

  • Consols are moving as booked, with adequate uplift on most carriers across Trans-Tasman and Pacific routes.
  • Export operations at Australian major terminals (Qantas, Dnata, Swissport, Menzies) remain fully functional, with no major service issues reported.
  • Bushfire impacts in Victoria may cause minor outbound delays from MEL; potentially rerouting time-critical shipments via SYD/BNE.

OCEAN

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Europe

AIR

IMPORT

  • Capacity remains generally stable across Europe to New Zealand and Australia, with most airlines maintaining consistent schedules despite minor aircraft delivery delays constraining global growth.
  • Rates are holding steady, though spot pricing may apply for urgent, oversized, or late bookings; intra-Europe trade growth is adding indirect pressure on transatlantic and transpacific lanes that could influence backhaul availability.

EXPORT

  • Consols are moving as booked, with adequate uplift on most carriers; steady capacity is expected through Q1 2026, though volatile global rates could influence spot opportunities.

OCEAN

IMPORT

  • BMSB season has started again on September 1st 2025 and will run to April 30th 2026. Procedures are mostly the same as last season.
  • CMA CGM has announced that some of their vessels will return to the Suez canal in February. We are investigating this as a possible LCL option from Hamburg initially and other ports as they roll out. Maersk has not advised any Suez options yet.
  • We have seen increased customs inspections from European ports particularly on cargo with any military connection.

EXPORT

  • Due to increased imports from China to the Middle East many carriers are experiencing heavy demand and space has tightened. ONE has withdrawn their service to the Middle East.
  • Due to winter storms terminals in Hamburg, the North of France, Rotterdam, and Antwerp are experiencing slower operations, and in some cases, terminal activities may be temporarily suspended. As a result, delays are expected for vessels and shipments moving through these locations.
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North America

AIR

IMPORT

  • Rates remain generally stable into New Zealand and Australia, with spot pricing possible for time-sensitive shipments; early January has seen a brief softening before the anticipated Lunar New Year buildup.
  • Peak-season congestion persists at major US gateways like LAX, with consol delays of up to 2-4 days reported, potentially affecting onward connections to AKL, SYD, MEL, BNE, and PER.
  • Capacity into New Zealand routes (particularly AKL) benefits from strong uplift options, while Australian ports remain adequate on most carriers, bolstered by seasonal services.

EXPORT

  • Consols are moving as booked, with adequate uplift on most carriers; softer early January demand is opening capacity, but US gateway congestion (e.g., LAX) may require flexible routing.

OCEAN

  • Vancouver – no berthing delays. Import rail dwell average has increased to 4.1 days.
  • Panama Canal services for ANP/OC1 service – Space is readily accessible, we do encourage that bookings are
    placed in 2+ weeks in advance of departure.
  • US Terminal Operations:
New York – berthing delays of 3.5 days. Import rail dwell time is 0.9 days. Berth congestion and arrival delays are related to the holiday schedule and adverse weather conditions.
Norfolk – berthing delays of 18 hours, import dwell time has increased to 3.2 days.
Charleston – no berthing delays, import dwell has increased to 9.6 days.
Savannah – average wait time for a berth has decreased to 1.0 day, Import dwell time has increased to 10.8 days, rail dwell time has reduced to 0.9 days.
Houston – no waiting time for a berth. Import dwell time is 3.8 days.
Oakland – no berthing delays. Average import delivery timeframe remains at 4 days.
Seattle – no berthing delays. Rail import dwell time remains at 3 days.
Long Beach – congestion on port has not improved with delays of 4-8 days.

 

IMPORT

  • The first services on the MSC’s new Eagle service will begin their Southbound rotations from mid-March, this is yet to have any major impact on rates and we are unlikely to see any action until Q2 departures.
  • All other services moving as usual from North America at this point.

EXPORT

  • MSC’s Eagle service commences in February with the first vessel, Etoile, departing Wellington February 16th and Tauranga February 18th.
  • West Coast North America – the direct service to West Coast of the US & Canadian is seeing a drop off in demand, the Vancouver calling vessels remain at capacity. There is a blank sailing in week 5, after the departure of the Mate 602N (Jan 22) the next departure for Seattle is not until Feb 12th.

Thank you for choosing Oceanbridge Shipping

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