Layoff Wave Hits Hard: Global Shipping & Logistics Industry Faces Mass Job Cuts
Publish Time: 2026-02-13 Origin: Site
HMM’s Early Retirement Program
Recently, HMM officially launched its early retirement program for employees aged around 50. Under the plan, participants will receive a one-time compensation of no less than two years’ salary, and the company has promised to provide reemployment and entrepreneurship counseling services. An HMM spokesperson told the media that the move is “aimed at promoting the rational flow of the organizational structure and reserving human resources for new recruits,” emphasizing that it has “nothing to do with the current container market situation.”
Industry Environment & Freight Rate Pressure
While analysts predict HMM will remain profitable thanks to its diversified business portfolio, including dry bulk carriers and oil tankers, it’s not uncommon for companies to make preventive workforce adjustments when industry prospects tighten. Market data shows that pressure on the global container shipping industry is mounting.
On February 6, 2026, the Shanghai Containerized Freight Index (SCFI) closed at 1,266.56 points, a drop of more than 30% from last year’s high of around 2,000 points. At the same time, global new ship deliveries are expected to reach approximately 10 million TEU this year, fueling growing concerns about overcapacity.
Layoff Trends Among Global Shipping Giants
HMM is far from alone in this. Around the same time, Maersk launched a $180 million cost-cutting plan, which will eliminate approximately 1,000 headquarters and functional positions—one-sixth of its roughly 6,000 headquarters roles. Maersk’s EBIT from its shipping business in the fourth quarter was -$153 million, a sharp drop from $567 million in the previous quarter and a massive decline from $1.6 billion in the same period last year.
Overcapacity & Market Challenges
Data shows that global container capacity increased by 7% in 2025, while overall market cargo volume grew by only about 4.8%. In 2026, global container cargo volume is expected to rise by 2.5%, while capacity growth may reach 4.6%—creating a clear supply surplus.
Industry insiders point out that as capacity continues to be released and downward pressure on freight rates intensifies, shipping companies will have no choice but to control costs through layoffs, early retirement, and other measures, while optimizing their organizational structures to reserve space for future market recovery.