Last week, I received news from a contact who is friends with one of the biggest billionaire shipping families in the world. He told me they had no ships at sea right now, because operating them meant running at a loss.
This weekend, reports are circulating saying much the same thing: The North Atlantic has little or no cargo ships traveling in its waters. Instead, they are anchored. Unmoving. Empty.
You can see one such report here. According to it,
Commerce between Europe and North America has literally come to a halt. For the first time in known history, not one cargo ship is in-transit in the North Atlantic between Europe and North America. All of them (hundreds) are either anchored offshore or in-port. NOTHING is moving.
This has never happened before. It is a horrific economic sign; proof that commerce is literally stopped.
We checked VesselFinder.com and it appears to show no ships in transit anywhere in the world. We aren’t experts on shipping, however, so if you have a better site or source to track this apparent phenomenon, please let us know.

We also checked MarineTraffic.com, and it seemed to show the same thing. Not a ship in transit…

If true, this would be catastrophic for world trade. Even if it’s not true, shipping is still nearly dead in the water according to other indices. The Baltic Dry Index, an assessment of the price of moving major raw materials by sea, was already at record all-time lows a month ago... and in the last month it has dropped even more, especially in the last week. Today BDIY hit 415...
Factories aren’t buying and retailers aren’t stocking. The ratio of inventory to sales in the US is an indicator of this. The last time that ratio was this high was during the “great recession” in 2008.

Hey, Ms. Yellen, what recovery? The economy is taking on water at a rapid rate.
The storm has been building for some time, actually. Not so long ago, there was a spate of reports that the world’s automobile manufacturers were in trouble because cars were not selling and shipments were backing up around the world.
ZeroHedge reported on it this way:
In the past several years, one of the topics covered in detail on these pages has been the surge in such gimmicks designed to disguise lack of demand and end customer sales, used extensively by US automotive manufacturers, better known as “channel stuffing”, of which General Motors is particularly guilty and whose inventory at dealer lots just hit a new record high.
Here is a photo of unsold cars in the United Kingdom from that article.

The world’s economy seems in serious trouble. You can’t print your way to prosperity. All you are doing is hollowing out your economy. Draining it. And sooner or later it’s empty and you have to start over after a good deal of crisis and chaos.
It’s no coincidence that China is struggling desperately to contain a stock implosion. Reportedly, banks have been told they are forbidden to buy US dollars and numerous Chinese billionaires have gone missing. And the markets have just opened on Monday and are again deeply in the red.
Here at The Dollar Vigilante we’ve specialized in explaining the reality of the global faux-economy and why it’s important that you not believe mainstream media lies.
In the meantime, keep your eye on this shipping story! If it is true and worldwide shipping is disastrously foundering, it’ll only be a matter of days before grocery store shelves will reflect that with increasingly bare shelves.
Are people upset now? Just wait. Interruptions in goods and services, most critically food, almost happened in 2008 during the Great Financial Crisis. For three days worldwide shipping was stranded due to shipping companies not knowing whether or not the receiver’s bank credit was good.
That crisis was staved off due to a massive amount of money printing. It was a temporary stay of execution, like bailing out the Titanic with coffee cups, however, and one that may reach much larger proportions in 2016.
Sailors watch the weather to see if it is safe to set sail. Investors should be watching the economic climate with the same intensity.
We are already sailing through very stormy waters.




Imagine losing your car in that sea of metal... "Shit!! Where did I park, again??"
Can we invade Saudi yet?
Just look at the Dollar Vigilante's web site, as seen on Fox News, tells all. I can't wait for Fox & Friends to run with this.
Just go to Jeff's website, The dollar vigilante, and see the Fox News logo. It tells all.
Gads, you are as careless as this article. The fox and other logos on the website are only because Jeff Berwick appeared on finance shows on those channels, not because they freaking own or control the Dollar Vigilante.
Those logos appear directly under the words "as seen on".
Gads, can't anyone be sane... and a bit careful?
Sigh.
Currently in Athens...plenty of shipping activity...( I build the fuckers )
BTW : AIS transponders function on VHF, therefore their range is limited to line of sight.
this is bad news. I could call this an apocalypse bias.
I agree with a few other posters, this is a rediculous article that was poorly researched. I expect better from ZH. I'm in the export market and very familiar shipping, it is very depressed right now as not much is moving globally but this article is rediculous to assume that no ships are sailing because they couldn't figure out how to properly use the websites. This is the type of bullshit reporting I came here to get away from, confidence is definately underminded on this one ZeroHedge.
BTW, if you want to know how bad the shipping market for containers currently is, last year at this time we where paying around $1200 per container from the South East U.S. to China. This year the same route is $300. Big supply of containers, no import or export demand equals low prices.
The statement "nothing is moving" is demonstrably false. The statement "no cargo ships are currently at sea in transit between Europe and the US" might be true. It depends if by "cargo ships" one means only container ships or if it includes bulk carriers. I could only find one merchant ship going from Europe to the U.S., the Am Contreceur, a bulk carrier in transit from Terneuzen in the Netherlands to Baltimore. But no matter how we parse phrases, this does not bode well.
Come on guys, this isn't how AIS works. There may or may not be many ships on the Atlantic, but we cannot confirm nor deny based on AIS. http://www.cruisin.me/forum/f485/why-cant-track-ship-know-its-sailing-22...
Edit: for some reason clicking the link doesn't work (it says you have to register to the forum) but copy and paste to browser does.
Nope. HYPE.
http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com/2016/01/investigating-claims-...
Scary sounding article, but it looks like a bunch of bullshit. It's predicated on a second-hand rumor from a Mr. X. I looked at the website and found ships moving. And this a financial blog/newsletter-type guy, so you know it's going to be mostly hyperbole and hot air, anyway. Also, that famous pic of the parked cars has been attacked in the past as a short-term storage lot. I don't know if it's authentic, or just a shot of a temporary shipping lot, but I'm going to assume BS until someone can convince me otherwise. Oh, and you don't see the comments on his site from actual shipping company folks who point out that ship tracker site he links only uses land-based radar, so there's no way of actually seeing who is at sea.
When I flew over Istanbul the other day, I saw lots of cargo ships and freighters anchored outside the Straits of Bosphorous, one of the world's busiest waterways. I think he's FOS.
Price of bunker fuel...
http://www.bunkerworld.com/prices/
Draw your own conclusions.
http://www.hellenicshippingnews.com/shipping-industry-calls-out-distress...
As an astrologer we know the planets are back in the same place as 1929. Depression for 2 years.
Oil supply is getting a big push -- simultaneously, the price is in the ditch.
vixpredictor.com
Go to http://www.marinetraffic.com as there are many ships on the move. Also the BDI is distorted as there are changes taking place in the shipping industry. Very large container ships are being brought on line which increases capacity. This will drive out small vessels. However, there is no doubt that global trade is slowing.