Europe’s container market is entering a phase where traditional supply-demand signals no longer tell the full story. According to the Sogese Container Market Update (April 2026), the region is not experiencing a true oversupply of containers, but rather a reduction in effective capacity driven by slower equipment circulation across disrupted trade corridors.

“Containers are out there, but they are not where or when the market needs them. The market today is defined by how efficiently equipment can move, not how much of it exists.” said Andrea Monti, CEO & Managing Director of Sogese. “This is not a supply problem, it’s a circulation problem,”

Circulation Efficiency is Impaired

Ongoing instability linked to the Middle East tensions continue to stress the container circulation as far as Europe. Longer routings are extending Asia–Europe transit times by 10–20 days, directly reducing equipment availability and slowing network circulation.
Recent updates from Sea-Intelligence also point to continued schedule disruption and extended transit times across major east–west trade lanes, reinforcing the structural nature of these delays.

Mediterranean Feeder Networks Emerge as a Critical Constraint

As mainline services are restructured, more cargo is being routed through western Mediterranean transshipment hubs such as Algeciras and Tanger Med.
This is increasing reliance on feeder networks for distribution into Southern Europe, turning the final leg of the journey into a key point of volatility.
Feeder networks are handling greater volumes
Connection windows are tightening
Costs are rising in specific corridors
“The feeder leg is no longer secondary, it is increasingly where both cost and reliability are determined,” Monti added.

Capacity Exists, But Usable Capacity Is Shrinking

Despite a relatively large global fleet and soft headline demand, the report highlights a critical shift:
Equipment is spending more time in transit
Containers are increasingly positioned in the wrong locations
Inland congestion and depot pressure are delaying release and reuse
Blank sailings and network adjustments are further tightening availability

Industry data from Alphaliner similarly indicates that fleet size alone is no longer a reliable indicator of market capacity, as operational inefficiencies continue to limit effective supply.

Cost Volatility Is Now Structural

The report finds that cost pressures are no longer episodic but embedded:
Bunker surcharges and war-risk premiums are now part of the baseline
EU ETS exposure is influencing pricing structures
Longer transit cycles are increasing storage and buffer costs
According to recent market updates from Xeneta, freight rates across key corridors continue to show short-term volatility, reflecting a combination of seasonal factors and disruption-linked cost pressures.

A More Fragmented Market Is Emerging

The growing pressure on feeder networks and overall circulation inefficiency is not affecting all cargo segments equally.
As constraints increase across the system, a clear divergence is emerging:
Resilient segments: pharmaceuticals, reefer logistics, and time-sensitive cargo, where reliability and service continuity justify higher costs
Under pressure: standard dry cargo and low-margin intermediary flows, which remain highly price-sensitive and more exposed to disruption
This divergence reflects a broader shift in the market, where access to reliable capacity is becoming more important than nominal availability.
What This Means for Shippers and Forwarders

The report indicates that price alone is no longer a sufficient decision-making metric.

“In this environment, the cheapest routing can easily become the most expensive once delays, storage, and reliability risks are factored in,” said Monti.

Customers are increasingly required to:
Factor in reliability risk alongside price
Build flexibility into routing and inventory strategies
Work with partners that offer operational control, not just nominal availability

Founded in 1980, Sogese is an Italy-based provider of container logistics and infrastructure solutions, offering container sale, rental, maintenance, and customization, supported by integrated depot, repair, and specialized equipment capabilities.
Source: Sogese