Hapag-Lloyd reported a rough start to 2026, swinging to a net loss of $256 million in Q1 after a $469 million profit in the same period last year. The stock was up around 2.65% in early trading following the results.
Revenue came in at $4.92 billion, down from $5.32 billion a year ago. That beat analyst forecasts, which had penciled in revenue of around $3.9 billion.
EBITDA landed at 422 million euros for the quarter, down sharply from 1.05 billion euros a year ago. Analysts had expected around 407 million euros, so results came in slightly ahead there too.
Hapag-Lloyd AG, HLAG.DE
CEO Rolf Habben Jansen called Q1 “unsatisfactory,” pointing to weather-related supply chain disruptions alongside pressure on freight rates.
The problems didn’t stop at the weather. When conflict in the Middle East escalated at the end of February, Hapag-Lloyd was forced to suspend routes through the Strait of Hormuz and the Gulf of Oman. Ships were rerouted on longer paths, adding both time and cost.
Transport volumes fell 0.7% in the quarter. Average freight rates dropped 9.5%, hurt by weaker demand.
Transport costs overall fell 6%, helped by a weaker U.S. dollar against the euro. But strip out the currency effect and those costs would have risen 4.6%, or around 147 million euros — driven largely by the Middle East reroutes and longer transit times.
Bad weather in Europe and North America also played a role, causing delays and added costs at ports and across supply chains.
The Strait of Hormuz situation intensified in March, disrupting trade flows in the final month of the quarter. That added another layer of cost pressure that the company hadn’t fully absorbed.
Hapag-Lloyd said higher average freight rates are expected to partly offset rising costs going forward. But it flagged “considerable uncertainty” over how freight rates and the conflict will develop through the rest of the year.
Despite the rough Q1, the company kept its full-year EBITDA forecast in the range of $1.1 billion to $3.1 billion, with EBIT ranging from a loss of 1.3 billion euros to a profit of 400 million euros.
That’s a wide band — and deliberately so. The company acknowledged that freight rate volatility and the ongoing Middle East conflict make any precise forecast difficult.
Hapag-Lloyd is the world’s fifth-largest container line by capacity, and its results reflect the wider pressure across the shipping sector.
The company continues to monitor the situation in the Middle East closely, with route decisions being made on an ongoing basis depending on conditions.
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