Singapore, Feb 6, 2026, 14:58 SGT — Regular session
Shares of Yangzijiang Shipbuilding slipped roughly 5%, trading at S$3.20 in the afternoon session
Shares sank after Maersk flagged that ongoing freight-rate pressures might weigh on earnings through 2026
Attention shifts to shipping-rate trends and Yangzijiang’s upcoming earnings release in early March
Shares of Yangzijiang Shipbuilding (Holdings) Ltd dropped roughly 5% on Friday afternoon, weighing on Singapore’s industrial sector as investors pulled back from shipping-related stocks. By 2:49 p.m., the stock was at S$3.20, down 17 Singapore cents from Thursday’s close. (SG Investors)
The drop followed A.P. Moller-Maersk’s warning that increased ship capacity and a shift back to shorter Red Sea routes could drive freight rates lower, denting profits in 2026. “New ships are coming in,” Maersk CEO Vincent Clerc noted, adding that Red Sea shipping is “likely to reopen.” Meanwhile, Jyske Bank analyst Haider Anjum flagged that longer vessel lifespans “point in the other direction” for freight rates. (Reuters)
Yangzijiang took the biggest hit on the Singapore Exchange early Friday, sliding 5.3% by 9:30 a.m., shedding over S$700 million in market value, according to The Business Times. The sharp drop reflected jitters over Maersk’s earnings outlook and its announced job cuts. (The Business Times)
Shares of Yangzijiang traded between S$3.16 and S$3.30 today, following a close of S$3.37 on Thursday, according to price data. The stock has moved within a 52-week range of S$1.80 to S$3.75. (Investing)
The sell-off unfolded alongside a wider risk-off mood in the region. Singapore shares dropped 0.7%, while Asian stocks retreated as investors stepped away from tech and other risky assets, Reuters noted. eToro analyst Zavier Wong called it a move by “investors de-risking and locking in gains.” (Reuters)
Maersk, a key indicator for global trade, forecasted container market growth of 2% to 4% in 2026 and signaled a stricter approach on costs amid softening freight rates. The Danish company also announced plans to slash around 1,000 corporate jobs and reduce annual corporate overhead by $180 million. (Maersk)
For shipbuilders, the connection isn’t direct but remains impossible to overlook. Liner earnings and freight rates shape demand for new vessels, despite contracts being inked years in advance and deliveries stretched over lengthy lead times.
Maersk’s outlook is based on a slow reopening of the Red Sea route, which would release vessel capacity currently caught on extended detours around Africa, The Business Times reported. This tends to put downward pressure on freight rates— a key metric shipowners use to gauge how bold to be with new orders.
The read-through isn’t straightforward. Should disruptions continue or demand hold up stronger than predicted, rate pressure might ease, helping the sector stabilize fast. On the flip side, if rates drop quickly, sentiment could shift to caution, sparking more volatility in shipbuilding stocks.
Investors are eyeing Yangzijiang’s upcoming earnings on March 4, eager for updates on order flow and customer demand, especially after Maersk’s recent caution on the shipping sector. (TipRanks)