NEW YORK, July 6, 2026, 16:04 (EDT)
- ZIM Integrated Shipping Services Ltd. NYSE:ZIM dropped 7.31% to end at $23.70. The stock traded 4.52 million shares, or 360% of its 65-day average volume, according to .
- ZIM shares now change hands at a 32.3% discount to Hapag-Lloyd AG’s ETR:HLAG $35-per-share cash bid. The spread is now a play on Israeli government approval.
- Freight rates jumped again. Drewry’s World Container Index climbed 9% to $4,530 for a 40-foot box. More increases are likely, the firm said.
ZIM Integrated Shipping Services Ltd. NYSE:ZIM dropped sharply Monday after Israel’s Defense Ministry came out against the planned takeover by Hapag-Lloyd AG ETR:HLAG. Shares stayed far under the agreed buyout price, while container freight indexes gained.
ZIM finished at $23.70, off $1.87, or 7.31%. Shares changed hands between $23.29 and $24.45. Volume came in at 4.52 million, running well above its 65-day average—more than triple.
Investors are watching the spread now. ZIM ended Monday $11.30 below Hapag-Lloyd’s $35 per share offer. That’s a 32.3% discount to the bid, or a 47.7% return if the deal goes through at that price. The company said Monday it’s still operating under the merger terms and working with “relevant state authorities” while the review is ongoing. ZIM Investor Relations
Israel’s approval matters for the ZIM deal. The agreement from February says the transaction needs sign-off from regulators and from the State of Israel under the Special State Share before it closes. ZIM Investor Relations Calcalist reported this week the Defense Ministry opposes the deal in the current form, and Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has said the sale isn’t on the cabinet’s agenda right now. Defense Minister Israel Katz said the government still owns a golden share in ZIM, giving it the right to step in if national security is involved.
Israel Hayom quoted Netanyahu saying, “It is not on the agenda at all.” Katz said, “We have a golden share,” adding that the state would use its authority if necessary. www.israelhayom.com
| Benchmark | Latest figure | Read-through from Monday close |
|---|---|---|
| Hapag-Lloyd’s buyout offer for ZIM | $35.00 per share | 47.7% premium to the $23.70 close |
| ZIM’s Monday closing price | $23.70 | 32.3% under the offer |
| MarketWatch average price target | $26.96 | 13.8% higher than the close; average rating is Underweight |
| Barclays PLC (LON:BARC), Marco Limite | $17 target, Underweight | 28.3% lower than the close |
| JPMorgan Chase & Co. NYSE:JPM, Alexia Dogani | $16.50 target, Underweight | 30.4% under the close |
The table is the trade. ZIM isn’t trading like a shipping-rate stock any more. Now it’s pricing between the $35 buyout offer and a lower stand-alone value set by bearish analysts.
Freight rates are up, which usually benefits ZIM. Drewry’s World Container Index was up 9% at $4,530 per 40-foot box in the July 2 update. Shanghai-New York shipping rates climbed 11% to $7,902, with Shanghai-Los Angeles up 10% to $6,349. Drewry reported eight blank sailings on the transpacific for next week and expects rates to go higher in the coming weeks.
ZIM is more leveraged to spot rates compared to carriers that contract all their volume. Former CEO Eli Glickman said in May roughly 65% of ZIM’s transpacific business is exposed to spot pricing. He also said freight rates have “strengthened alongside demand” in that lane. PR Newswire
| Market or earnings gauge | Latest | Forecast or next read |
|---|---|---|
| Drewry World Container Index | $4,530 per 40-foot box, up 9% | Drewry sees rates climbing in the weeks ahead |
| Containerized Freight Index | 3,326.87 points July 6, up 2.69% on the day, 22.02% in a month | Trading Economics puts it at 3,353.99 for the quarter close and 3,733.36 in a year |
| ZIM Q2 2026 EPS estimate | -$0.29 | Next report set for Aug. 19, 2026 |
| ZIM Q3 2026 EPS estimate | $1.76 | Was $0.63 a month ago |
| ZIM FY 2026 / FY 2027 EPS estimate | $0.69 / -$3.23 | FY 2027 stays negative, even after the Q3 jump |
ZIM’s Q1 results point to the impact of the latest rate move. The shipping line posted $1.40 billion in revenue, a net loss of $86 million, and volume of 866,000 TEUs at an average rate of $1,310 per TEU. Revenue fell 30% versus last year, and average freight rates dropped 26%.
At the deal announcement, Glickman said ZIM had handed out “an extraordinary $5.7 billion in dividends” to shareholders since its 2021 IPO, and said total capital returned would hit about $10 billion if the deal closes. ZIM Investor Relations Hapag-Lloyd CEO Rolf Habben Jansen, announcing the deal, called ZIM “an excellent partner for Hapag-Lloyd.” Hapag-Lloyd
ZIM brought in Dr. Chen Lichtenstein as president and CEO starting July 1, following Glickman’s exit in April, just before this latest selloff. Lichtenstein said ZIM faces a “dynamic, competitive, and complex market” and stressed stability and performance. PR Newswire