---
title: "Maersk Lifts Its Profit Forecast as Shipping Rates Stay High"
description: "Shipping giant Maersk sharply raised its 2026 profit outlook — to $8–10 billion in core earnings, up from $4.5–7 billion — as freight rates stay elevated. The drivers: ships rerouting around the Red Sea, and US importers rushing goods in ahead of tariffs. Both are tailwinds that may not last."
category: "Markets"
category_url: https://boursel.com/category/markets
author: "Hannah Blackwood"
published: 2026-06-30T17:44:20.000Z
updated: 2026-06-30T17:44:20.000Z
canonical: https://boursel.com/article/maersk-lifts-its-profit-forecast-as-shipping-rates-stay-high
tags: ["maersk", "shipping", "freight", "trade", "markets"]
---
# Maersk Lifts Its Profit Forecast as Shipping Rates Stay High

Shipping giant Maersk sharply raised its 2026 profit outlook — to $8–10 billion in core earnings, up from $4.5–7 billion — as freight rates stay elevated. The drivers: ships rerouting around the Red Sea, and US importers rushing goods in ahead of tariffs. Both are tailwinds that may not last.

One of the clearest barometers of global trade just flashed green. **A.P. Moller-Maersk**, the Danish container-shipping giant, **raised its 2026 profit guidance**, lifting expected underlying **EBITDA** (a measure of core earnings) to **$8–10 billion**, up sharply from a prior **$4.5–7 billion**, [Yahoo Finance reported](https://finance.yahoo.com/economy/articles/wartime-economy-maersk-lifts-full-164517015.html) and [Seatrade Maritime confirmed](https://www.seatrade-maritime.com/containers/maersk-sharply-ups-full-year-profit-forecast). The reason: **freight rates have stayed high**, and Maersk now sees the global container market growing faster than it expected.

## Why rates are elevated

Two forces are keeping shipping prices up — and they're ones Boursel has tracked.

**Rerouting around the Red Sea.** Since attacks on shipping made the **Suez Canal / Red Sea** route unsafe, most container lines have been sailing **the long way around Africa**, via the **Cape of Good Hope.** That detour adds roughly **ten days and thousands of miles** to Asia–Europe voyages, which **soaks up ships** — vessels spend longer at sea, effectively shrinking available capacity. Less effective capacity, same-or-rising demand, **higher rates.**

**Tariff front-running.** As Boursel reported, **US importers are rushing cargo in early** to beat looming tariff deadlines, pushing up shipping volumes; industry trackers expect June import volumes **up around 14% year over year.** That surge is straining capacity further and propping up rates — on some lanes, Asia-to-US-West-Coast container prices have jumped well above **$4,000 per container** in recent weeks.

(Explainer: a container line's **EBITDA** swings with **freight rates** — the price to ship a box. When capacity is tight and demand strong, rates and profits soar; when ships free up, they fall fast.)

## Why Maersk is a bellwether

Maersk moves a huge share of the world's containerized goods, so its results are a **read on global trade.** When it lifts guidance and says demand is strong, it signals **busy ports and resilient commerce**; when its rates collapse, it often warns of a slowdown. Right now, the message is **robust near-term demand** — but with a clear caveat.

## The catch: these tailwinds are temporary

Both drivers are, by nature, **finite.** If the **Red Sea reopens** to normal traffic, all those rerouted ships come back into service, **capacity floods back, and rates fall.** And tariff front-running **borrows demand from the future** — once the deadline passes, import volumes and rates tend to **drop**, the "trough" Boursel flagged when US retailers were pulling orders forward. Maersk's own framing acknowledges the strength is tied to **disruption and a rush**, not a durable demand boom.

## Why it matters

For **Maersk and its shippers**, it's a lucrative window — pricing power born of disruption. For the **global economy**, the guidance is a reassuring sign that **trade volumes remain healthy** despite tariffs and geopolitics. But for **consumers and retailers**, elevated freight costs are a cost pressure that can **feed into prices** down the line. And the bigger lesson is about **fragility**: a chunk of the shipping industry's current profitability rests on a **blocked sea lane and a tariff scramble**, both of which could reverse. Boursel offers no view on Maersk's stock; the takeaway is that the company is **minting money off a disrupted world** — and is candid that the boom comes with an expiry date.

## Sources

- [Maersk lifts full-year guidance on strong demand](https://finance.yahoo.com/economy/articles/wartime-economy-maersk-lifts-full-164517015.html)
- [Maersk sharply ups full-year profit forecast](https://www.seatrade-maritime.com/containers/maersk-sharply-ups-full-year-profit-forecast)

