Table of Contents

Twenty-foot Equivalent Unit (TEU)

The Twenty-foot Equivalent Unit (TEU) is the universal standard for measuring the cargo capacity of container ships and the volume of cargo handled by ports. Think of it as the ultimate Lego brick of Global Trade. One TEU represents the volume of a standard 20-foot-long intermodal container (a metal box that's 20 feet long, 8 feet wide, and about 8.5 feet tall). While you might also see 40-foot containers on ships and trains, they are simply counted as two TEUs (and are sometimes referred to as an FEU, or Forty-foot Equivalent Unit). This simple, standardized measurement allows everyone in the global logistics chain—from shipping lines to port authorities and financial analysts—to speak the same language. It makes it easy to compare the size of the world's largest container ship to the traffic flowing through the Panama Canal or the annual business of the Port of Rotterdam.

Why TEUs Matter to a Value Investor

For a Value Investing practitioner, the TEU is far more than just industry jargon; it’s a powerful, real-time indicator of economic health and corporate performance. Watching TEU volumes is like having a finger on the pulse of the world economy.

A Barometer for Global Health

The flow of TEUs across oceans and through ports is a direct reflection of consumer demand and industrial activity.

Analyzing Companies in the Trenches

If you're analyzing companies in the Shipping Industry (like A.P. Moller - Maersk or Hapag-Lloyd), port operators, or even railway companies, TEU data is a fundamental Key Performance Indicator (KPI). It helps you assess:

Putting TEU Data to Work

You don't need a secret password to access this information. TEU data is readily available if you know where to look.

Where to Find It

What to Look For

When you look at the numbers, focus on the story they tell. Ask yourself:

Capipedia's Take

The TEU is one of the most honest metrics in finance. It represents a real, physical box filled with real goods, moving from a real producer to a real consumer. It can't be easily manipulated by accounting tricks. For the savvy investor, tracking TEU trends provides a ground-level view of the gears of global commerce. It helps you understand the cyclical nature of the shipping industry, identify well-positioned companies, and gauge the health of the global economy—often before the broader market catches on. In a world of complex financial instruments, the humble TEU is a refreshingly simple, powerful, and practical tool for making better investment decisions.