Cargo-Shipping Stocks going bats After Hours.

Discussion in 'Stocks' started by JesseJamesFinn1, Nov 11, 2020.

  1. fan27

    fan27

    As soon as the economy started bouncing back this passed summer. The market is rather tight right now in terms of logistics capacity. The downturn took a lot of FTL (full truck load) carriers out of the market so those that are remaining are doing very well. This is also good for rail because a tight FTL market makes rail an attractive alternative. These conditions typically last 12 to 18 months.
     
    #11     Nov 12, 2020
    vanzandt likes this.
  2. SunTrader

    SunTrader

    The BDI is for ocean borne worldwide cargo. Not rail and road and not US specific either. BDI hasn't turned ... yet. At least as far as I see.
     
    #12     Nov 12, 2020
  3. fan27

    fan27

    BDI tracks raw materials. I know for a fact ports are jammed packed which is why carriers are doing very well.
     
    #13     Nov 12, 2020
    longandshort likes this.
  4. SunTrader

    SunTrader

    Sorry. BDI is complied from ocean global cargo rates. Not raw materials. I worked many years in the OCEAN shipping industry directly. Not in logistics, not in IT. Ship owners - liners, voyage and time charters.
     
    #14     Nov 12, 2020
  5. SunTrader

    SunTrader

    Further to cargo shipping stocks going bats: I got 15 of them in a screener. Currently 3 are green on the day.
     
    #15     Nov 12, 2020
  6. Cabin111

    Cabin111

    Just wondering if you have this on your list? Thoughts...

    Matson, Inc. (MATX)
     
    #16     Nov 12, 2020
  7. tsznecki

    tsznecki

    EDRY is a 10M market cap stock. It's not going to impact anything.
     
    #17     Nov 12, 2020
    SunTrader likes this.
  8. SunTrader

    SunTrader

    No I do not. Matson is a US flag company and because of that a special case different from flagged cargo vessels/lines from other nations.

    Looks good though been breaking out to alltime highs so something positive, to say the least, has been happening.
     
    #18     Nov 12, 2020
  9. very difficult to get 40 foot containers and costs have x2 or x3 from earlier this year...cant even confirm bookings for Dec or Jan ...crazy stuff..
     
    #19     Nov 13, 2020
  10. That does not correlate with ocean freight bookings I hear from OOCL and Maersk and many others on global shipping routes. Maybe your broker is pretty US centric? What you probably mean is that many ocean terminals at the US operate at or above peak capacity but that is a very misleading metric because many ports in the US currently are completely underutilized. For example the largest port in the US which is Port of LA operates currently at a 80-85 percent utilization. In a nutshell when you bottleneck an operation and only operate at a fraction of possible utilization then those who work and operate or working at max or above max capacity to make up or at least alleviate the underutilization.

     
    Last edited: Nov 13, 2020
    #20     Nov 13, 2020
    SunTrader likes this.