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Suspension of U.S.-China port fees

Since publishing our article (How the New U.S.–China port fees could reshape ship finance) on 20 October 2025, the U.S. and China have announced the suspension — among other measures — of the reciprocal port fees for one year. The immediate cost impact for vessels trading to these jurisdictions has been deferred, providing temporary relief to owners, charterers, and financiers. 

However, this appears to be more of a tactical truce than a resolution. The shipping industry could again be affected by broader trade confrontation, and the structural risks laid out in our article remain relevant. In particular, exposures tied to vessel ownership, flagging, charterparty obligations, and financing structures continue to require careful monitoring.

 The suspension may, in fact, offer a window for the market to take stock: to reassess risk, update contractual and financial models, and prepare for a possible resumption of measures once the truce expires.

The Special Port Service Fees may look like a narrow retaliatory measure. However, its imposition challenges long-settled assumptions in the ship finance industry about cost allocation, operational safety, and asset valuation.

Tags

shipping, usa, china, ports, transportation