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Intra-Asia Container Rates Decline 3% as Shipping Demand Softens

By MGN EditorialApril 14, 2026 at 06:00 PM

Drewry's Intra-Asia Container Index fell to $839 per 40ft container in mid-April, reflecting ongoing pressure on regional shipping rates as market conditions remain challenging for carriers.

Container rates across Asia's major shipping routes continued their downward trajectory in the second week of April, with Drewry's Intra-Asia Container Index (IACI) declining 3% to reach $839 per 40ft container. The IACI, which tracks weighted average spot rates across 18 major trade routes within Asia, serves as a key barometer for the region's container shipping market. The week-over-week decline signals continued softness in demand across intra-regional routes, a trend that has persisted through the first quarter of 2026. The weakness in Intra-Asia rates reflects broader market dynamics affecting container shipping globally. With global supply chains stabilizing after pandemic-era volatility, spot rates have normalized significantly from the elevated levels seen in recent years. Regional carriers operating on Intra-Asia routes—traditionally among the world's busiest container corridors—face intensified competition as capacity remains abundant and shipper demand fluctuates seasonally. Intra-Asia shipping represents a critical component of global trade, linking major manufacturing hubs in China, Vietnam, and Thailand with port gateways in Southeast Asia, India, and beyond. Weakness in these rates often signals softer economic activity in manufacturing-dependent regions and may precede broader market shifts affecting transpacific and transatlantic trades. Industry observers will monitor whether the current downward trend stabilizes or accelerates in coming weeks, particularly as carriers prepare for potential seasonal demand shifts heading into the second half of the year.
#container shipping#Asia#rates#Drewry's#logistics

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