
The signal didn’t come from the market, but from the government.
In recent weeks, Chinese officials have held direct meetings with executives from Maersk and Mediterranean Shipping Company (MSC) to review their role in international shipping and, in particular, their involvement in strategic port infrastructure. While no detailed statements have been released, the meetings—reported by Platform Media and AAStocks— mark a turning point: Beijing is moving from observation to intervention.
The tone also hardened.
According to information published on April 15 by Reuters , citing the Financial Times , Chinese officials have asked both shipping companies to refrain from participating in operations that affect the interests of Chinese companies, in a direct reference to their role in Panama Canal ports. This warning places Maersk and MSC in an unprecedented position: private operators under explicit political pressure from a global power.
The background of these conversations points to Panama, but not as an isolated event, but as the result of a sequence that altered the balance of control in one of the most important logistics hubs in the world.
In early 2026, the Supreme Court of Panama annulled the concession held by CK Hutchison —through Panama Ports Company —for the Balboa and Cristóbal terminals , after years of legal challenges and audits. The decision led to direct intervention by the Panamanian state, which assumed operational control of the ports through an occupation decree to ensure the continuity of operations.
It was at that point that Maersk and MSC entered the picture .
Far from being a direct purchase, the Panamanian government opted for a transition scheme: it assigned provisional operating licenses – of up to 18 months – to APM Terminals (Maersk’s port arm) for Balboa, on the Pacific, and to Terminal Investment Limited (TIL) , linked to MSC, for Cristóbal, on the Atlantic.
The move resolved the immediate operation, but opened a larger front.
Prior to the contract’s annulment, CK Hutchison had already begun the process of selling part of its global port portfolio —including assets in Panama— to a consortium that included Western investors and MSC itself. The court intervention not only halted this process but, paradoxically, ended up placing one of the potential buyers as the temporary operator of the assets.
From Beijing, the interpretation was different.
For years, China has built a global logistics network of influence in which ports play a central role. Hutchison’s forced departure from Panama —and the entry of operators linked to Western capital—is interpreted as a strategic shift in a region crucial for international trade.
In that context, the meetings with Maersk and MSC take on a different meaning: they are not technical reviews, but political signals.
The episode also reflects a broader shift in the industry. Major shipping companies have evolved into integrated infrastructure operators, capable of influencing routes, costs, and trade flows. This transformation puts them on the radar of governments as actors with implications beyond mere business.
This is compounded by a highly volatile environment. China has expressed concern about rising maritime tariffs and disruptions to global shipping routes, particularly given the tensions in the Middle East, according to the Financial Times. In this context, control of ports and supply chains takes on even greater strategic importance.
What’s happening between China, Maersk, and MSC, therefore, goes beyond the corporate sphere. It’s a dispute over who defines the rules—and controls the hubs—of global trade. And on this playing field, shipping companies no longer just transport goods. They also wield geopolitical pressure.
Comment and follow us on LinkedIn: @GrupoT21






