Cargo Facts

No products in the cart.

SUBSCRIBE
  • NEWS
  • AI TOOL
  • INSIGHTS DATA
    • Cargo Facts Insights Overview
    • Dashboard
  • FEATURES
  • LIVE EVENTS
  • VIRTUAL EVENTS
    • Cyber Aviation Global Forum
    • Webinar Library
  • PODCAST
  • CONSULTING
Thursday, July 16, 2026
Log In
No Result
View All Result
  • Freighter Transactions
  • Capacity & Demand
  • Conversions
  • Carriers
  • Routes
  • AAM
  • The Future
  • Cybersecurity
Cargo Facts
  • NEWS
  • AI TOOL
  • INSIGHTS DATA
    • Cargo Facts Insights Overview
    • Dashboard
  • FEATURES
  • LIVE EVENTS
  • VIRTUAL EVENTS
    • Cyber Aviation Global Forum
    • Webinar Library
  • PODCAST
  • CONSULTING
Log In
No Result
View All Result
Cargo Facts
No Result
View All Result

WorldACD: Do modest November volumes indicate a 2019 slowdown?

Randy WoodsbyRandy Woods
December 31, 2018
in Capacity & Demand, News
0
Share on FacebookShare on LinkedIn

One of the more reliable annual air cargo results in recent years has been a healthy rise in volumes for November, indicating the results of the busy shipping events surrounding “11.11” in China and “Black Friday/Cyber Monday” in the United States. But according to analysis released today by WorldACD, November has not performed quite as expected, sending a shiver through the logistics industry on the cusp of 2019.

The New Year’s Eve release of November data from WorldACD was not cataclysmic, but it did indicate that air cargo volumes for the month were 1.4 percent lower than the previous November’s numbers, and also 2 percent less than October 2018’s volumes.

The good news, however, was that cargo yields (revenues per kilogram) in November continued their steady rise, as they have done all year so far in 2018. The less-good news is that the yield-growth percentage each month has been shrinking slowly. “Nevertheless, the yield-jump from October to November was larger than the [month-over-month] increases earlier in the year,” WorldACD said.

Regionally, cargo originating from Africa and the Asia-Pacific region grew faster in November than October (4.9 percent and 0.5 percent, respectively) did better in November than in October. The destinations Africa (2.8 percent) and Europe (0.3 percent) also increased m-o-m in November, while Asia Pacific-to-Europe increased substantially by of 7.2 percent m-o-m.

The regions that drew more puzzlement from WorldACD were China and Hong King. China figures were better than the worldwide average (-1 percent, year-over-year, and 4.1 percent, m-o-m, in November), but Hong Kong was mixed and harder to read, at -4.2 percent, y-o-y, and 8.8 percent, m-o-m. And yields measured in U.S. dollars ex-Hong Kong rose sharply at 13 percent, y-o-y, in November.

In October, WorldACD “interpreted the very positive y-o-y October figures for the market China-USA as a sign of US businesses ‘stocking up’ before tariffs would begin to bite.” Could that still be the case in November? The signals remain mixed, WorldACD said.

The China-U.S. market increased 1 percent, m-o-m, in November, but fell by almost 5 percent, y-o-y. “Combine this with a considerable drop in the opposite direction, U.S. to China, and we find that the overall market between these two countries fell by almost 6 percent, y-o-y, and by 1 percent, m-o-m,” WorldACD said. “November was the first month since the trade war started that the y-o-y volume change for both directions was negative. It goes for both China and the U.S. that their performance to the rest of the world is much better than their performance to the territory of their trade war adversary.”

The mixed indicators seen in this data for the end of 2018 “may well carry over into the new year, which seems to announce itself with much more uncertainty than a year ago, when the air cargo world looked quite stable,” WorldACD concluded.

Tags: ACNChinaHong KongTradeViewpointsWorldACD
Previous Post

We asked: The top 5 reasons to join air cargo industry

Next Post

Top 5 airfreight trends to expect for 2019

Related Posts

Aloha Air Cargo 737-400F
Fleets

World Star signs 1st 737-400F deal with Saltchuk Aviation

July 16, 2026
Challenge Group 777-300ERSF
Routes

Challenge Group prepares for 2nd 777-300ERSF delivery amid network expansion

July 16, 2026
Mammoth Freighters 777-200LRMF
Freighter Aircraft

First Chinese 777 conversion site emerges in Mammoth deal with STAECO

July 15, 2026
Next Post

Top 5 airfreight trends to expect for 2019

Cargo Facts Free Newsletters

Cargo Facts Connect Podcast

  • About Us
  • Help Center
  • Contact Us
  • Privacy & Usage Terms
  • ADA Compliance
  • Advertise
  • Archive
  • The Dahl Scholarship

 [wt_cli_manage_consent]

Follow Us

twitter linkedin podcast podcast podcast
© 2026 Royal Media
No Result
View All Result
  • News
    • Freighter Transactions
    • Capacity & Demand
    • Conversions
    • Carriers
    • Routes
    • AAM
    • The Future
  • Insights Data
    • Cargo Facts Insights Overview
    • Dashboard
  • AI Tool
  • Features
  • Live Events
  • Virtual Events
    • Cyber Aviation Global Forum
  • Podcast
  • Consulting
  • Subscribe
  • Log In / Account

© 2022 Royal Media & Cargo Facts

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In
No Result
View All Result
  • News
    • Freighter Transactions
    • Capacity & Demand
    • Conversions
    • Carriers
    • Routes
    • AAM
    • The Future
  • Insights Data
    • Cargo Facts Insights Overview
    • Dashboard
  • AI Tool
  • Features
  • Live Events
  • Virtual Events
    • Cyber Aviation Global Forum
  • Podcast
  • Consulting
  • Subscribe
  • Log In / Account

© 2022 Royal Media & Cargo Facts