Copenhagen, Aug. 13, 2025 — It wasn’t the kind of announcement many in the shipping sector were expecting. Maersk, usually careful with its forecasts, told investors this morning it now sees container volumes climbing between 2 and 4 percent in 2025. Only a few months ago, the upper end of that range seemed optimistic.
The mood inside the company’s headquarters reflected the shift. Managers spoke of busier terminals, steadier booking flows, and a sense that some of the uncertainty hanging over trade earlier this year is starting to lift. One operations director described the last quarter as “a run of weeks where the phones didn’t stop ringing.”
The numbers help explain the confidence. Operating profit for the second quarter came in at $2.3 billion, roughly 7 percent higher than a year ago. Revenue reached $13.1 billion. The growth wasn’t limited to the big east–west lanes — shipments out of Africa and Latin America also picked up pace, adding cargo that had been missing from the mix since 2023.
Not just a shipping line anymore
Maersk has spent years adding air freight services, trucking networks, and warehouse capacity. That diversification, while costly at first, is proving useful when freight rates dip or port schedules turn messy. Customers who once booked only ocean slots are now asking for full door-to-door solutions.
Reading between the lines
For the wider industry, Maersk’s new outlook suggests demand is holding up better than feared. Still, shipping veterans know how quickly tides can turn — storms, strikes, and policy changes can rearrange the picture overnight. For now, the company is leaning into the momentum, keeping ships full and planes busy.