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US port strike ends leaving huge cargo backlog to be cleared
Oct 4, 2024 3:49 AM

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54 container ships queued outside ports, risking shortages

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Tentative deal includes 62% wage hike over six

years-sources

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Strike cost U.S. economy $5 billion/day, JP Morgan

analysts say

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Shipping stocks tumble across Asia

(Adds more shipping shares, comments in paragraphs 6-10)

By Doyinsola Oladipo and David Shepardson

Oct 4 (Reuters) - U.S. East Coast and Gulf Coast ports

began reopening on Thursday night after dockworkers and port

operators reached a wage deal to settle the industry's biggest

work stoppage in nearly half a century, but clearing the cargo

backlog will take time.

The strike's end came sooner than investors had expected,

taking the fizz out of shipping stocks across Asia on Friday as

freight rates were no longer expected to surge.

At least 54 container ships queued up outside the ports

over three days as the strike prevented unloading and threatened

shortages of everything from bananas to auto parts. The figure

by Everstream Analytics was calculated at 4:00 p.m. ET (2000

GMT). More ships are sure to arrive.

The International Longshoremen's Association (ILA) workers

union and United States Maritime Alliance (USMX) port operators

announced the deal and an immediate end to the strike late on

Thursday. Sources said they had agreed a wage hike of around 62%

over six years, raising average wages to about $63 an hour from

$39 an hour.

Shares in shipping companies in Asia fell heavily across

Asia.

"Shipping stocks had previously rallied on expectations of

price increases triggered by the strike by U.S. dock workers

and the tense situation in the Middle East," said Taishin

Securities Investment Advisory analyst Tony Huang.

"Now the strike will end, meaning the price rise factor is

no longer in play."

Japan's Nippon Yusen, which had hit a record high a

day earlier, tumbled 9% and Kawasaki Kisen fell 9.5%.

Mitsui O.S.K. Lines ( MSLOF ) also fell 7% in its heaviest

trading day for 18 months.

In South Korea, HMM dropped 6.6% to a three-week

low and Pan Ocean dropped 5.7%, while Taiwan's

Evergreen Marine, Wan Hai Lines and Yang

Ming Marine also fell between 8.8% and 10% in their

heaviest drops for several months.

In Hong Kong, Orient Overseas (International) ( OROVF ) was

the biggest loser on the Hang Seng index with an 8% drop.

The ILA launched the strike by 45,000 port workers, their

first major work stoppage since 1977, on Tuesday, affecting 36

ports from Maine to Texas. JP Morgan analysts have said the

strike would cost the U.S. economy around $5 billion per day.

Retailers account for about half of all container shipping

volume, with Walmart ( WMT ), IKEA, and Home Depot ( HD ) among

those that heavily rely on the East Coast and Gulf Coast ports,

according to eMarketer analyst Sky Canaves.

According to bill of lading data from Import Yeti, a data

firm, some of the importers relying on affected ports range from

IKEA and Walmart ( WMT ) to Goodyear Tire & Rubber ( GT ).

East Coast ports are also key destinations for coffee, and

prices have already risen due to the port disruptions.

The strike ended with the tentative deal on wages, though

the two sides will continue hammering out other issues,

including ports' use of automation that workers say will lead to

job losses.

"The decision to end the current strike and allow the East

and Gulf coast ports to reopen is good news for the nation's

economy," the National Retail Federation said in a statement.

"The sooner they reach a (final) deal, the better for all

American families."

(Additional reporting by Jihoon Lee in Seoul, Emily Chan in

Taipei, Tom Westbrook in Singapore; Writing by Peter Henderson;

Editing by Sonali Paul)

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