US prosecutors have charged four major container manufacturers and seven executives with orchestrating a conspiracy to inflate prices and restrict supply during the pandemic, disrupting global logistics and drawing attention to Chinese market dominance.
US prosecutors have accused four of the world’s biggest shipping container manufacturers and seven executives of running a long-lived cartel that allegedly pushed up prices during the pandemic, in a case that has jolted an industry central to global trade. The US Department of Justice says the companies coordinated to restrict output of standard dry containers and inflate prices worldwide.
According to the indictment unsealed this week, the firms named are China International Marine Containers, Singamas Container Holdings, Shanghai Universal Logistics Equipment and CXIC Group Containers. The DoJ alleges the conspiracy began in late 2019 and continued until at least early 2024, with the intended effect of limiting supply just as pandemic disruption left equipment stranded across the global logistics network.
Prosecutors say the alleged arrangement was not informal market behaviour but a written pact that set out how many shifts and hours each production line could operate, while also barring new production lines from being added. The agreement allegedly went further, requiring CCTV to be installed across factories and deposits to be posted that would be forfeited if any participant broke the rules.
Among those named is former Singamas marketing director Vick Nam Hing Ma, who was arrested in France in April and is awaiting extradition to the United States. His co-defendants, including former senior figures at CIMC, CXIC and Singamas, remain at large, with some believed to be in China and one in Singapore. The DoJ has also pointed to its earlier move to block CIMC’s proposed purchase of Maersk Container Industry in 2022, saying that deal would have further entrenched Chinese state-backed dominance in an already concentrated market. Shares in the named manufacturers fell sharply after the indictment became public.
Source Reference Map
Inspired by headline at: [1]
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Source: Noah Wire Services
Verification / Sources
- https://theloadstar.com/us-accuses-major-chinese-container-manufacturers-of-price-fixing/ – Please view link – unable to able to access data
- https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2026-05-19/doj-unveils-price-fixing-charges-in-shipping-container-case – The US Department of Justice has charged four major shipping container manufacturers and their top executives with conspiring to raise prices during the pandemic. The indictment alleges that China International Marine Containers Co., Dong Fang International Container Co., CXIC Group Containers Co., and Singamas Container Holdings Ltd. agreed to limit the production of new standard dry shipping containers between 2019 and at least 2024, leading to significant price increases in the global market.
- https://www.justice.gov/opa/pr/four-worlds-largest-container-manufacturing-companies-and-seven-their-executives-indicted – The US Department of Justice has indicted four of the world’s largest container manufacturing companies and seven of their executives for a global conspiracy affecting billions of dollars in commerce. The indictment alleges that China International Marine Containers (CIMC), Singamas Container Holdings, Shanghai Universal Logistics Equipment (Dong Fang), and CXIC Group Containers conspired to artificially restrict production output and double the prices of standard dry shipping containers worldwide.
- https://www.businesstimes.com.sg/international/global/singapore-shipping-veteran-teo-siong-seng-and-other-container-firm-execs-accused-price-fixing-us – Seven executives of shipping container companies, including Singaporean shipping veteran Teo Siong Seng, have been accused by the United States of colluding to fix the prices of dry containers from November 2019 until at least January 2024. As a result, the prices of standard shipping containers are said to have roughly doubled between 2019 and 2021, noted the US Department of Justice in a statement on May 19.
- https://www.seatrade-maritime.com/containers/us-charges-container-manufacturing-executives-for-price-fixing – The US Department of Justice has charged four Chinese container manufacturers and seven executives with violations of the Sherman Antitrust Act. The indictment alleges that executives from CIMC, Dong Fang, CXIC, Singamas, and an unnamed fifth firm conspired to suppress their collective rate of production and raise their prices for standard dry shipping containers, leading to significant price increases in the global market.
- https://www.lawyer-monthly.com/2026/05/shipping-container-price-fixing-cartel/ – The US Department of Justice has unsealed a superseding indictment charging four of the world’s largest shipping container manufacturing companies and seven of their executives for running a massive global price-fixing cartel. The federal indictment alleges that China International Marine Containers (CIMC), Singamas Container Holdings, Shanghai Universal Logistics Equipment (Dong Fang), and CXIC Group Containers conspired to artificially restrict production output and double the prices of standard dry shipping containers worldwide.
- https://www.lloydslist.com/LL1157219/US-indicts-Chinas-container-makers-for-global-pricefixing-conspiracy – US prosecutors allege four Chinese container makers exploited pandemic supply chain chaos by secretly capping production and doubling prices, boosting profits nearly one hundredfold. The indictment covers CIMC, Singamas, Dong Fang, and CXIC along with seven executives for conspiring to fix prices and restrict output of standard dry containers from late 2019 to early 2024.
Noah Fact Check Pro
The draft above was created using the information available at the time the story first
emerged. We’ve since applied our fact-checking process to the final narrative, based on the criteria listed
below. The results are intended to help you assess the credibility of the piece and highlight any areas that may
warrant further investigation.
Freshness check
Score: 10
Notes: The article is based on recent events, with the indictment unsealed on May 19, 2026. The earliest known publication date of similar content is May 19, 2026, indicating high freshness. (bloomberg.com)
Quotes check
Score: 8
Notes: The article includes direct quotes from the US Department of Justice and other sources. However, some quotes are paraphrased, and the exact wording cannot be independently verified. (cbsnews.com)
Source reliability
Score: 9
Notes: The primary source, the US Department of Justice, is a reputable government agency. The article also references Bloomberg, a major news organisation, enhancing its credibility. (bloomberg.com)
Plausibility check
Score: 9
Notes: The claims align with known industry practices and recent legal actions. The article provides specific details, such as the indictment of seven executives and four companies, which are consistent with other reputable sources. (cbsnews.com)
