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Hong Kong economy
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Hong Kong exporters and exhibitors face fallout from US-Israel strikes on Iran

Traders grapple with surging oil and freight costs, while flight disruptions compound challenges for Middle East exhibitors in the city

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Exporters in Hong Kong have been hit by freight delays and surging costs as tensions mount. Photo: Sam Tsang
Ambrose LiandKevin Li

Adverse economic impacts from the US-Israel strikes on Iran unfolded on Monday, disrupting supply chains, driving up oil prices and leaving many Middle East business leaders at a major trade fair in Hong Kong in an awkward position.

As the strikes entered a third day, oil prices surged by 13 per cent – the biggest rise in four years – briefly climbing above US$80 a barrel. Freight costs also jumped due to risks of potential damage to vessels passing through the Strait of Hormuz, a narrow passage along Iran’s southern coast.

Sunny Ho Lap-kee, executive director of the Hong Kong Shippers’ Council, said many companies with confirmed orders had chosen to delay dispatches rather than ship immediately.

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He said the city’s exporters primarily routed electric vehicles, batteries, low-cost mobile phones and appliances through the Middle East en route to Africa.

“So far we have not seen large-scale order cancellations, but if the situation persists, that possibility cannot be ruled out,” Ho said.

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He added that shipping lines were concerned not just about rising freight rates, but also about possible war-risk insurance surcharges needed to protect their crews in conflict zones.

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