How to stop the commoditisation of container shipping
The two biggest carriers chart radically different routes
Don’t feel bad if MSC, the Mediterranean Shipping Company, is the biggest ocean-going carrier you have never heard of. It is meant to be that way. Its founder, Gianluigi Aponte, is a publicity-shy Italian billionaire, based in Switzerland, a country with no maritime borders and a culture of secrecy as deep as the ocean. His firm has taken the seafaring world by stealth. Born in 1970 with a single vessel trading between Somalia and southern Italy, msc last year overtook A.P. Moller-Maersk to become the world’s biggest container-shipping company. Yet its culture of silence remains. When its CEO, Soren Toft, spoke at a shipping jamboree in Long Beach this month, he revealed next to nothing. “We’re not going to make [talking in public] a habit,” he said gruffly.
This article appeared in the Business section of the print edition under the headline “High risk on the high seas”

From the March 11th 2023 edition
Discover stories from this section and more in the list of contents
Explore the edition
How Trump’s tariffs could crush American carmakers
They must hope the levies do not endure
The Economist’s office agony uncle is back
Another bulging postbag for Max Flannel

The smiling new face of German big business
From Allianz to Zalando, pedlars of services are outdoing industrial firms at home—and foreign rivals abroad
Airbus has not taken full advantage of Boeing’s weakness
That could leave a gap for other planemakers to fill
The business of second-hand clothing is booming
Can it be profitable, too?
Zyn is giving investors a buzz—for now
Nicotine pouches are growing fast