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DP World locks in long-term play at Thailand’s busiest port

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WHAT WE’RE TRACKING TODAY

TODAY: DP World holds on to its Thai gateway

Good morning, ladies and gents. We’re starting off the week with a relatively balanced read — mostly led by good news in the world of ports, planes, and power plays. Leading our issue today is a fresh boost for DP World, which secured another five years at Thailand’s busiest container gateway — tightening its grip on one of Southeast Asia’s key trade hubs.

Plus: Pakistan-Iran talks seem to have made some headway, with Qatar managing to export itsfirst LNG cargo — bound for a Pakistani port — through Hormuz since the conflict started. Islamabad reportedly expects three more vessels to ship Qatari LNG through the waterway over the coming days.


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LNG — Qatar appears to have pushed its first LNG cargo through Hormuz since disruptions began. The Qatari tanker, Al Kharaitiyat, departed Ras Laffan en route to Port Qasim in Pakistan under a state-to-state supply agreement between the two countries. Iran reportedly approved the shipment as Pakistan pushes to secure permission for a limited number of LNG tankers to transit the strait.

IN CONTEXT- Two Qatari LNG tankers were halted near Hormuz earlier last month as the conflict disrupted outbound gas flows. However, the UAE’s Adnoc managed to move two LNG cargoes out of the region recently.

The market is now watching whether this was a one-off or the start of a restart: QatarEnergy’s European customer Edison expects the Gulf producer could initially restore around two-thirds of contracted LNG volumes in a “month or a month and a half” following any kind of “lasting” peace agreement, the Italian utility’s CEO Nicola Monti said.

QatarEnergy appears to have kept enough production alive to avoid a cold restart, keeping operation levels at a minimum by continuing LNG exports to Kuwait — a move that could allow a faster ramp-up once wider export routes reopen. The Qatari gas giant had extended force majeure on its supply till mid-June.


CARGO — DP World is rolling out ins. coverage for cargo traveling through regional trade routes, with the logistics giant stating that coverage will be available across multi-modal options and — unlike other policies which leave gaps for storage and inland transport operations — will cover the whole supply chain operation.

The fine print: The policy covers damage and physical losses caused by war-linked events, with coverage limits of USD 400 mn for shipping and USD 1 mn for inland operations.

This is the UAE taking matters into its own hands to help encourage global logistics firms to continue to operate in the region. Standard commercial ins. policies often have war exclusion clauses that mean coverage can be canceled with just seven days' notice. DP World is providing a safety net that allows trade to continue even when geopolitical tensions rise.


RAIL — Iran’s trade detours inland? Iran is leaning on rail freight for inland trade with China as Tehran moves to keep goods moving under mounting pressure on its ports due to the US blockade. Cargo trains from Xi’an to Tehran are now running every three to four days, up from roughly one departure a week before the war.

The lane is becoming an emergency channel, but not a cheap one. Demand for the corridor is already feeding through into pricing, with quotes for a standard 40-ft container reaching as high as USD 7k, roughly 40% above normal levels. Each Xi’an-Tehran rail service carries around 50 standard 40-ft containers, while a long-haul container ship can carry thousands.

Next on the rail map: Tehran is also working on deepening its rail cooperation with Islamabad, with a focus on upgrading the Taftan-Zahedan link and the Islamabad-Tehran-Istanbul freight route — giving Iran another land-side corridor to move cargo when seaborne routes are constrained.

Market watch

Oil prices surged this morning after US President Donald Trump criticized Iran’s response to a US peace proposal — fueling supply concerns as the Strait of Hormuz remained mostly closed, Reuters reports. Brent crude futures gained USD 4.16 to trade at USD 105.45 / bbl by 03.40 GMT, while US West Texas Intermediate (WTI) increased USD 4.38 to USD 99.80 / bbl.


The Baltic Index breaks winning streak: The Baltic Exchange’s dry bulk index — which tracks rates for the capesize, panamax, and supramax vessel segments — fell 1.9% to 2,978 points on Friday. The capesize slipped 3.6%% to 4,955 points, while the panamax index increased 1.7% to 2,233. The smaller supramax was up 0.1% to 1,522 points.


The Drewry World Container Index increased 3% at USD 2,286 per 40-ft container last week, snapping three weeks of declines, according to the latest index readings. The lift came as transpacific and Asia-Europe rates moved higher, with Shanghai-Los Angeles rose (5%) and Shanghai-New York (7%), and Shanghai-Rotterdam (2%). The rebound still looks surcharge-led rather than demand-led, with excess capacity and weak demand continuing to weigh on Asia-Europe despite carriers pushing firmer (Freight All Kinds) FAK rates and managing supply through blank sailings and capacity reductions.

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The Big Story Today

DP World clinches 5-year extension at Thailand’s main gateway

DP World holds on to its Thai gateway: DP World’s Laem Chabang International Terminal (LCIT) secured a five-year extension to operate the B5 container berth at Laem Chabang Port — extending the concession to run from May 2026 through April 2031.

The terminal already has scale on the ground: LCIT already operates the B5 and C3 berths at Thailand’s largest container hub — offering 900 meters of berth length, the capacity to handle up to four vessels at once, and 4.4k sqm of on-dock CFS space. The terminal also handled a record 1.9 mn TEUs in 2025.

Why it matters

The trade lane is crowded — and that is precisely the point: Intra-Asia shipping has become one of the most contested container markets, with at least 69 active players and regional container capacity rising 13% last year to 2.4 mn TEUs. Meanwhile, Vietnam, Thailand, and Indonesia are now pushing port upgrades to handle bigger vessels and rising cargo volumes, positioning Laem Chabang’s next phase — and DP World’s renewed berth position — inside a wider regional upgrade cycle.

Bigger port, bigger role: Laem Chabang’s next phase is designed to increase the port’s container capacity from 11 mn TEUs to 18 mn TEUs annually and raise vehicle handling from 2 mn to 3 mn cars a year. Terminal F1 is scheduled to open in 2027, while F2 is slated for 2031.

The next lever is inland connectivity: DP World is pairing the berth extension with a wider Thailand network that includes cross-border trucking, landside logistics, freight corridor, and a rail-connected inland container yard in Khon Kaen with a thrice-weekly shuttle to Laem Chabang.

Rails is where phase 3 gets serious: The expansion plan is also targeting raising rail’s share of hinterland transport from 7% to 30%, with rail capacity set at 6 mn containers a year.

Same playbook, different mechanics

The regional buildout is already underway: The Leam Chabang extension fits a wider DP World push across Southeast Asian gateways. In Indonesia, the port operator is expanding Belwana New Container Terminal to 1.4 mn TEUs and building a new 3 mn-TEU terminal with Masipon Group in East Java, alongside an industrial and logistics park. Meanwhile, in Vietnam, DP World operates Saigon Premier Container Terminal and has added a domestic coastal logistics service with VIMC Lines, tying port capacity more directly to manufacturing zones.

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Purchasing

Egypt’s big PMI drop

Egypt's non-oil private sector activity contracted at its fastest pace in over three years in April as the regional war drove input costs to their highest level since early 2023, according to S&P Global's latest Purchasing Managers’ Index (PMI) report (pdf). The headline reading fell 1.4 points to 46.6 — a fifth straight monthly decline and well below the 50.0 growth threshold, down from 48.0 in March.

Output, new orders, purchasing, and employment all weakened. Supplier delivery times lengthened for the first time this year due to input shortages and shipping delays tied to the war.

After months of absorbing higher fuel and material costs, companies pushed selling prices up at their fastest pace since August 2024. Order books softened immediately in response, with manufacturing and wholesale/retail taking the heaviest hits.

Why it matters: The reading is consistent with annual GDP growth slowing to around 3.9%. S&P's David Owen warns the price acceleration suggests March's 15.2% headline inflation “may have further to run.”

What's next: Companies are hoping that the disruption from the Middle East conflict will ease and market conditions will recover, but for now, the April reading shows the private sector starting 2Q with weaker demand, faster price increases, and a subdued outlook.

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Earnings Watch

Emirates flies through the airspace shock

Emirates Group posts record earnings

The Emirates Group saw its net income rise 3% y-o-y to an all-time high in FY 2025/26 despite severe airspace disruptions triggered by the outbreak of the war at the end of February. The airline logged a net income of AED 21 bn, coupled with a record revenue of AED 150.5 bn, according to Dubai Media Office.

The breakdown: Emirates Airlines alone booked AED 19.7 bn in net income on AED 130.9 bn in revenue. Meanwhile, Emirates SkyCargo generated AED 16.2 bn in revenue, while its air services provider arm dnata posted a AED 23.6 bn top line.

The forward view: Emirates has about three-quarters of its flights operating at pre-conflict capacity, Emirates CEO Ahmed bin Saeed Al Maktoum said. Emirates is hedged on fuel until 2028-2029 and has secured the supply volumes needed to restore operations back to pre-disruption levels, he added. He also mentioned that the group’s capital reserves allow it to continue fleet and retrofit spending without “knee-jerk cost control measures.”

A strong start to the year offsets war disruption for Aramex

A strong start to the year helped Dubai-based logistics firm Aramex offset the disruption that hit regional trade flows in March, according to an earnings release (pdf). Net income came in at AED 17 mn, dipping just 1% y-o-y, while revenue rose 2% to AED 1.6 bn after momentum in January and February helped cushion the impact of weaker activity during the quarter.

Growth was led by domestic express revenue, which climbed 11% y-o-y, alongside a 9% rise in logistics revenue and 7% growth in freight forwarding. That helped offset weaker international express revenue, which fell 9% during the quarter.

Behind the results: Aramex said January and February had exceeded their expectations across key products and markets before the outbreak of regional conflict disrupted parts of its network and weighed on business activity across the Gulf. In March, some trade lanes faced temporary constraints, though the company maintained operational continuity by rerouting shipments and activating alternative gateways.

Geographically, the GCC and the Indian subcontinent still accounted for the lion’s share of revenues with 46%.

GMS earnings took the war hit

GMS earnings take a hit on the back of fleet suspension: Gulf Marine Services (GMS) saw its revenue slip 10% to USD 38 mn in 1Q 2026 as conflict in the Gulf led to a temporary suspension of part of its fleet, according to its financial release.

Fleet trimmed, revenues squeezed: GMS’ operations were heavily affected by the ongoing regional war, with average fleet utilization dropping to 74% (from 89% a year earlier) after the company temporarily evacuated four vessels from a GCC country as a precautionary measure. Despite the war drag, the group continued to expand its footprint, acquiring a new mid-class vessel in January and lifting its total fleet to 15. The purchase was partly financed through a USD 37.4 mn bridge loan, underscoring a strategy of selective growth even amid heightened operational disruption.

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Also on Our Radar

Kezad gets another beverage plant

Kezad adds a drinks plant to the mix: Abu Dhabi Refreshment Company is investing AED 300 mn in a new beverage production and distribution facility at Khalifa Economic Zones (Kezad) under a long-term land lease with the Abu Dhabi industrial zone. The facility will span around 32.5k sqm, building on the zone’s existing food and beverage manufacturing base, which already houses PRAN’s 42k-sqm facility.


MAY

12-14 May (Tuesday-Thursday): Aviation Energy Forum (AEF), Paris, France.

19-21 May (Tuesday-Thursday): Ground Handling Conference (IGHC), Cairo, Egypt.

19-21 May (Tuesday-Thursday): Terminal Operations Conference & Exhibition, Hamburg, Germany.

JUNE

2-4 June (Tuesday-Thursday): ProPak Mena, Cairo, Egypt.

4-5 June (Thursday-Friday): Supply Chain and Logistics Summit, Amsterdam, Netherlands.

6-8 June (Saturday-Monday): IATA World Air Transport Summit, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.

10-11 June (Wednesday-Thursday): Black Sea Ports and Logistics, Istanbul, Turkey.

21-24 June (Sunday-Wednesday): Saudi Smart Logistics, Riyadh, Saudi Arabia.

22-23 June (Monday-Tuesday): Decarbonizing Shipping Forum, Rotterdam, Netherlands.

AUGUST

30 August-1 September (Sunday-Tuesday): Air Cargo Middle East, Riyadh, Saudi Arabia.

30 August-1 September (Sunday-Tuesday): Saudi Warehouse and Logistics Expo, Riyadh, Saudi Arabia.

SEPTEMBER

16-17 September (Wednesday-Thursday): Saudi Maritime & Logistics Congress, Dammam, Saudi Arabia.

22-24 September (Tuesday-Thursday): Seamless Middle East, Dubai, UAE.

28-30 September (Monday-Wednesday): Transport Logistics Middle East, Riyadh, Saudi Arabia.

OCTOBER

12-14 October (Monday-Wednesday): The Airport Show, Dubai, UAE.

21-22 October (Wednesday-Thursday): Global Ports Forum, Singapore.

26-29 (Monday-Thursday): Air Cargo Forum, Miami, US.

27-29 October (Tuesday-Thursday): Routes World, Riyadh, Saudi Arabia.

NOVEMBER

2-5 November (Monday-Thursday): ADIPEC Maritime and Logistics Exhibition and Conference, Abu Dhabi, UAE.

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