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Exports of containerized shipments to the U.S. from 10 major countries and regions in Asia decreased 0.8% year on year to 1,447,128 TEUs in January, according to Automated Commercial Environment and bill-of-lading (B/L) data provided by the U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CPB), American research company Descartes Datamyne unveiled recently. For the month of January, throughput remained nearly unchanged for three years in a row.

Looking at eastbound containers by origin, those from China fell 4.5% to 842,206 TEUs, registering a year-on-year decline for the 12th consecutive month. Exports from South Korea fell 4.1% to 146,599 TEUs, while those from Japan waned more severely, going down 9.2% to 34,192 TEUs (down 9.3% on a port-of-discharge basis). In contrast, containers from Vietnam soared 39.6% to 120,250 TEUs, and those from Taiwan improved 0.3% to 92,013 TEUs. Shipments from India were also brisk, surging 10.6% to 43,859 TEUs.

In 2019, containers from China plunged 15.8% from the previous year to 1,748,420 TEUs, although they managed to account for the largest part of the pie. They suffered a year-on-year contraction for two years running. From 2017, they plummeted 37.2%. Meanwhile, those from South Korea swelled 1.6% to 744,654 TEUs, while exports from Japan rose 8.8% to 715,050 TEUs. Containers from Taiwan hiked 4% to 610,981 TEUs, and those from India jumped 14.6% to 561,971 TEUs.


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