UPDATE 3-US charges seven Chinese executives and four firms with illegal shipping container cartel

Prosecutors allege the scheme ⁠resulted ​in U.S. consumers ⁠paying more, and waiting longer, for goods during the pandemic.

UPDATE 3-US charges seven Chinese executives and four firms with illegal shipping container cartel

​The United States ​has charged seven Chinese ‌executives and ​four of the world's largest shipping container companies with conspiring to ‌restrict supply, raising the price of containers during the COVID pandemic, Department of Justice officials said on Tuesday.

The companies together ‌manufacture about 95% of the world's standard dry shipping ‌containers and conspired to restrict output and fix prices between November 2019 and January 2024, the DOJ said. Prosecutors allege the scheme ⁠resulted ​in U.S. consumers ⁠paying more, and waiting longer, for goods during the pandemic. "Around the start ⁠of the global pandemic, these manufacturers exploited the crisis and ​their market power to squeeze the supply chain for ⁠profit," Associate Attorney General Stanley Woodward said while announcing the case.

One ⁠of ​the executives, Vick Ma, 54, a marketing director Singamas Container Holdings Ltd, was arrested in France in April, ⁠the DOJ said. Singamas did not immediately respond to ⁠a request for ⁠comment on the allegations.

TRENDING

OPINION / BLOG / INTERVIEW

Renewable energy cuts emissions in GCC, but oil dependence keeps climate pressure high

One-size-fits-all healthcare AI may deepen global health gaps

Machine learning could solve renewable energy’s 'uncertainty' problem

Automation is changing cybersecurity workflows, not replacing human expertise

DevShots

Latest News

Connect us on

LinkedIn Quora Youtube RSS
Give Feedback