Chinese passenger car exports surged 73% year-on-year in May to approximately 809,000 vehicles, according to data from the China Association of Automobile Manufacturers, continuing a historic run of record-challenging monthly totals. The export surge, led by new energy vehicles (NEVs), has driven car carrier charter rates to fresh highs and effectively cleared the spot market of available tonnage, forcing Chinese OEMs to divert growing volumes onto containerships.
Export Data Surge
May's figure edged above the 796,000 passenger cars exported in April, the association reported. The most striking element was the performance of NEVs – fully electric and plug-in hybrid models combined – which more than doubled year-on-year to a record 435,000 units, accounting for over half of all passenger car exports for the first time.
| Metric | May 2026 | Change vs. Prior Year |
|---|---|---|
| Total passenger car exports | ~809,000 units | +73% |
| NEV exports | 435,000 units | >+100% |
| NEV share of total | ~54% | First time >50% |
Car Carrier Market Tightens
The impact on car carrier shipping has been significant. Clarksons quoted $65,000 per day in May, reflecting unprecedented demand. Shipping analysts at SEB described the data as confirmation of a structural shift rather than a cyclical bump. “May was another positive datapoint for the roro story – Chinese export momentum shows no signs of slowing,” the bank said in a note to clients.
Multiple metrics highlight how car carrier fortunes have leapt. The brand new 7,000 ceu Lake Rotorua was fixed at $90,000 a day for six months to SAIC Anji Logistics in May, 70% above the one-year 6,500 ceu Index. Light vehicle spot freight rates from China to Europe firmed to $150 per cu m this month, up 100% versus the Q4 2025 average. In a striking asset play, over $34 million was placed on the 18-year-old, 3,930 ceu Trans Leader by Chinese interests – $20.5 million above the 10-year fixed age average, according to VesselsValue.
Container Diversion
With ro-ro capacity unable to keep pace with demand, Chinese OEMs are increasingly turning to container vessels. SEB reported that “the latest wave of Chinese export volumes has effectively vacuumed the market for short-term TC, pushing one-year rates even higher and forcing Chinese OEMs to increasingly divert volumes onto container vessels, as ro-ro capacity simply cannot keep pace with demand.”
Dan Nash, a car carrier analyst with Veson Nautical, stated that around 1 million cars are now exported from China on containerships due to insufficient ro-ro capacity. He expects the majority will switch back to car carriers when supply improves in 2027/28, providing a buffer for ro-ro owner-operator earnings.
Expert Views
Nash highlighted that China is short on ro-ro capacity and newbuild deliveries look insufficient to meet export requirements for the rest of this year, supporting a higher for longer trend for rates and values in the car carrier market. This dynamic benefits containerlines, which are capturing volumes that would otherwise move on specialised car carriers.
Implications for Trade Executives
For importers and freight forwarders, the diversion of car volumes to containerships adds pressure on container capacity and rates, particularly on China-Europe routes. Customs brokers and trade policy analysts should monitor whether the trend prompts regulatory changes or investments in ro-ro newbuilds. With NEV exports now exceeding half of all car exports, the shift is structural, not temporary. What to watch: the pace of car carrier newbuilding deliveries in 2027/28 and any further rate moves in container shipping as Chinese export momentum continues.