Ports & Harbors - Publications
Port Pricing in North America: Port Pricing
THOMAS J. DOWD and DOUGLAS K. FLEMING
School of Marine Affairs, HF-O5, University of Washington, Seattle.
WA 98195, U.S.A.
Port pricing in North America often owes more to
politics and to artistry than to repeatable scientific logic. Even when the pricing
process seems to be carefully thought out. a concentration on internal
factors, a neglect of external factors or a tendency to adopt a 'short
run' time frame may bring unwanted results. To shed light upon an
arena which seems to be constantly in the shadows, we offer in this
paper an overview and a guide to effective port pricing practices
based on US and Canadian observations.
1. Introduction
Public port authorities provide services and lease
facilities at
a range of prices. The application of these prices generates the
operating revenues of a Port. Operating revenues are the major income
source at virtually every public port authority in North America.
Thus, the success or failure of a Port's pricing strategy is a major
determinant of a Port's viability.
When most US public port authorities were initially
established,
they relied on some form of subsidy (e.g. tax revenue, monetary grants
and/or allocations, land grants, general obligation bonding authority)
to cover capital and/or operating expenses. Today, some of those
subsidies have been eliminated, some have been or are being reduced
and many, if not most, of those that remain are under threat of reduction
or elimination. This has forced public port authorities to pay close
attention to the commercial viability of their operation and to keep
a closer rein on the bureaucratic extravagancies sometimes associated
with public agencies. An increasing emphasis on the 'business side'
also means a much greater reliance on operating revenues and an inclination
to price services and facilities to generate a profit or, at least,
to break even.
A major challenge for public port authorities in the
1990s will be to act more like businesses. For some Ports, this means adopting
more carefully constructed pricing policies.
2. The environment
Over the years a number of basic changes have affected
the environment for North American Port pricing.
Port pricing is no longer as effective a means to
influence the actions
of either carriers or shippers. Items out of the Port's control such
as system-wide intermodal considerations, single bill of lading documentation,
in-port time for vessels, labour work rules, and carriers' strategic
considerations have become high priorities on carrier and shipper
agendas. Today the pricing of Port services or facilities is not
a high enough priority item on these agendas to influence decisions
significantly. The cost of transiting a port represents a rather
small fraction of total voyage cost for most long-distance intermodal
movements today.
Port pricing has undergone a series of significant
market-driven
changes that have altered the way that Ports price their services/facilities.
For example, wharfage, dockage and demurrage used to be the major
components of a Port's tariff and major revenue sources, but today
these have been replaced by terminal rents and time/volume payments.
In some ports, wharfage and dockage charges exist primarily as a
funding mechanism for terminal leases and other agreements.
Customer relationships within the Port have changed
dramatically.
The Port as lessor courts the steamship line as lessee; the commodity
shipper is the carrier's customer, not (directly) the Port's customer.
Long-term agreements between Port and carrier have replaced the ship-by-ship
arrangements at common berth facilities. Long-term agreements have
actually limited pricing options and alternatives for many Ports.
Thus, the last decade has seen changes that have
altered very significantly
the effect of Port pricing on carrier and shipper decisions, the
ways in which Ports relate to their now-redefined customers, the
tools that Ports use to price services and facilities, and the options
available in Port pricing.
3. The players
Pricing should not be the sole responsibility of the
Port's marketing
department, nor the sole responsibility of the accounting department
or any other single department or person. Each department, the executive
director, and the Board should have some level of input into the
Port pricing arena. By involving these players early in the game,
conflicts can be recognized and dealt with. The relative weight given
to inputs from each department in the ultimate pricing decision depends
on a number of internal and external factors.
At a micro-level, and in the short run, if capacity is
not a constraint
and the Port has significant excess capacity, it might be very appropriate
for the marketing department to exercise a major influence on the
pricing of a service or facility. Conversely, if capacity is constrained,
input from the marketing department might be less significant. In
effect, some very basic conditions of supply and demand should determine
the relative strength of the various players in the Port pricing
arena.
At a macro-level, it is virtually impossible for any
public port
authority to do effective pricing without policy guidelines. The
Board must provide leadership by formulating these guidelines and
making them pan of the strategic planning process. The process should
include the identification of target customers and target business
sectors and indicators should be provided for appropriate return
on investment (ROI) ra~e levels. Without such guidelines virtually
every project or customer is of equal importance, which would force
the Board to make all the ultimate pricing decisions. Additionally,
without appropriate policy direction from the Board, the executive
director and Port staff would be forced to waste time and resources
following up every prospect with equal effort. Thus, a clearly articulated
pricing strategy is a prerequisite to the success of a public port
authority.
4. Pricing strategy
Port pricing can not be dealt with in isolation, since
pricing is
a major factor in the implementation of a Port's strategic plan.
Pricing must be viewed as one element in a much broader Port management
concept. This concept has three elements. The first is the Port's
planning and development philosophy and the Port's goals or objectives.
The second is the Port's investment criteria and policies. The third
is the Port's pricing policies and techniques. These three elements
are closely interrelated. Significant change in anyone of these three
elements affects the other two elements directly. This means that
a Port's pricing approach should be supportive of the Port's overall
objectives, be consistent with the Port's development and planning
philosophy, and be a logical extension of the Port's investment criteria
and policies.
There are three basic approaches that Ports consider in
formulating
their pricing policies. The first is a purely economic approach,
which argues for marginal cost pricing. The second is a financial
approach, which argues for prices to be set to recover fixed and
variable costs and provide an adequate rate of return. The third
approach is a public enterprise approach which argues for prices
to be set to recognize the need for the Port to be a means to foster
local development and existing local, regional and/or national economic
activities. The third approach usually requires subsidies by taxpayers
or other Port customers.
The economic approach would be used by Ports that are
primarily concerned
with being self-supporting (breaking even). The financial approach
would be used by Ports that want to maximize profit as their main
Port goal. The public enterprise approach would be used by Ports
that are primarily concerned with maximizing throughput and can afford
to subsidize certain operations and functions in order to capture
cargo.
Each of these approaches has its own strengths, but the
basic objectives
differ. The resolution of this question of objective-recognizing
that there may have to be compromises-is the first step toward formulation
of a pricing policy that is each Port's foundation for pricing facilities
or services rationally.
Clearly there is no single pricing approach that is
accepted and
applied uniformly by all Ports. Nor can it be said that there is
a 'best approach,' given the diversity in port characteristics, types
of ownership, philosophies of management. specific goals, etc. These
differences are reflected in the pricing approach or combination
of approaches that they use, and, of course, there are always cases
of mismanagement and misguided policies!
There is nothing inherently desirable or undesirable in
this diversity
and lack of uniformity in pricing. The essential thing for a successful
Port pricing policy is that it be supportive of the Port's planning
and development philosophy and objectives and the Port's investment
policies and criteria. As simple as this may sound. it is one of
the most complex challenges for Port managers.
5. Port pricing process
Before making any pricing decision on new Port
business, it is necessary
to answer the question: 'Does this piece of business fit into the
Port's strategic plan?' If the answer ~ yes, the Port can proceed.
If it is no, then the Port must determine if the strategic plan should
be changed to accommodate the new prospect or whether the business
should be rejected. Unfortunately, many Ports have not felt sufficiently
confident of their strategic plan to make a rejection decision when
objective analysis calls for it.
There are three phases in the Port pricing process: the
internal examination, the external examination or 'reality check', and the determination.
5.1. Internal examination
The internal examination is the first phase of the Port
pricing process. It provides a valid method of calculating the internal cost-based price
or price range. The outcome of the internal investigation phase is a benchmark price.
The benchmark price is a price that would generate
sufficient gross revenue to cover all direct and indirect costs associated with the
delivery of a service or facility to the customer.
There are four elements of the benchmark price formula:
historical costs, imputed costs, return on investment, and sensitivity analysis.
5.1.1. Historical cost. service The first step is to calculate the
historical costs of providing the service or facility.
These will include:
(a) direct depreciation expenses on existing facilities and equipment
and depreciation or amortization expenses on
facilities and equipment to be constructed or acquired;
(b) direct maintenance expenses for facilities and equipment including
amortization of contingency funds;
(c) direct tax and insurance expenses;
(d) direct and indirect terminal operating expenses; and
(e) administrative and general expenses including indirect depreciation,
maintenance, taxes and
insurance as well as some
share of the Port's general and administrative expenses.
If any of these expenses
are passed on to the customer through lease provisions or in
the articles of any usage or throughput agreement, or if any
of these expenses are not applicable (e.g. terminal operating
expenses on a terminal to be operated by a lessee or Contract
terminal operator), such expenses should be eliminated from the
above formula.
5.1.2. Imputed cost. The second step is the calculation of imputed
costs. Imputed costs are unreimbursed and often unrecorded benefits
provided by an outside entity (e.g. fire, police, computer, or other
services).
5.1.3. Return on investment. The third step involves computation
of return on investment (ROI) for both land and facilities and equipment.
It seems sensible to base these ROI computations on
market or replacement value rather than book value, even though establishment of
market or replacement value may not be easy for the Port.
5.1.4 Sensitivity analysis. The calculation of historical cost, imputed
cost, and return on investment requires that certain assumptions
be made about various cost elements. These assumptions take the form
of estimates or educated guesses about the applicable amounts or
percentages of certain costs and whether or not to include a certain
cost item in the benchmark price formula at all.
Despite the fact that the analyst bases these
assumptions on the
best available information, these assumptions may lead to understatement
or overstatement of costs. Thus, it is important for the analyst
to state clearly the critical underlying assumptions used to calculate
the cost estimates and to test how sensitive each is to the calculation
of the benchmark price.
The price per unit of cargo or the normal published
tariff rate is
the benchmark price incorporating historical cost, imputed cost,
return on investment, tempered by the sensitivity analysis, less
any applicable usage revenue (e.g. dockage, wharfage, storage charges)
divided by the throughput volume.
A major controlling factor in the successful
execution of the internal
investigation phase of the Port pricing process is the Port's own
accounting system. In order to gain the maximum benefit from this
first phase a Port must have a fairly sophisticated cost accounting
system. The system must be able to identify the various cost computation
components (e.g. costs by line of business. function and facility)-
For many Ports the absence of or lack of sophistication in the cost
accounting segment of their accounting system may make it difficult
to establish a benchmark price accurately.
5.2. External examination or reality check
The first phase of the Port pricing process
produces the 'benchmark
price', a specific number or numerical range that. if used. would
ensure that the Port will cover all direct. and indirect. depreciation
and debt service expenses and earn a profit. Ideally the Port would
charge the customer the benchmark price and prosper. Since Ports
must contend with a real rather than an ideal world the next phase
is designed to subject the benchmark price to a series of tests that
will determine its applicability and usefulness.
This series of tests can be called the 'reality
check'. Just as the
first phase of the Port pricing process concentrates on internal
factors (e.g. various actual and anticipated expenses and a target
ROI), the second phase concentrates on external factors (e.g. strategic
goals and objectives of the Port. some of which may be non-economic.
inter-port competition. general business conditions and trends. etc.).
There are two steps in the 'reality check': consideration and
negotiation.
5.2.1. Consideration. This step involves identifying, listing and prioritizing
the various elements that might affect the Port's ultimate pricing decision.
These factors would include at least the following: need to
find business to
match excess terminal capacity; need to stay abreast of the competition and cultivate/accommodate
important customers; need to respond to external economic and political pressures
(e.g. regional and national economic and social objectives); need to address
growth management impacts (e.g. utility, road, rail, and mass transit concerns)
and environmental implications of prospective new business and port growth.
It is necessary to weigh these elements and prioritize them.
Prioritization allows the Port to move into the next step in this phase. negotiation.
5.2.2. Negotiation. This step is the most difficult one for most Ports. It requires
that representatives of the Port and potential client meet to discuss the Port's
proposed price or the benchmark price modified by the appropriate external factors.
In any event, the potential customer may reject the initial
Port price offered
or make a counter offer. At this point, the Port enters negotiation with the
customer. The possible tactics and strategies for price negotiation are numerous.
and the specific situation will dictate which the Port will employ.
However, prior to each round of negotiation, the Port should
examine the priorities
of the various external factors as well as the potential effect that the new
price offer may have on the Port's other customers and pricing arrangements.
and the Port's overall financial condition.
Negotiation should be a rational process resulting in a
reasonable intersection of interests.
5.3. Determination
This phase involves approving the negotiated price. Normally,
if the Port has a well-articulated pricing policy, the ultimate decision on most prices can be
approved at the executive director level.
However, if the Port lacks such a policy or is faced with a
reservation of price approval power on certain or all ultimate price decisions. these decisions
may need to be made at the commissioner level.
If the ultimate pricing decisions will be made by the
Commission, it is, of course, necessary that a fonnal staff recommendation and supporting
documentation be made available to the members prior to their vote.
5.4. The tariff rate
There is a general but often incorrect assumption that the
rates published in
the Port's official tariff apply to all customers. At best, a published tariff
rate is the benchmark price, less usage revenues (e.g. preferential berthing
charges), divided by estimated throughput. At worst, it is a random number, arrived
at without any study of expense data, that appears to be in line with the tariff
rates published by competing Ports.
In fact, published tariff rates are an effective and flexible
marketing tool.
These rates are often a starting point for the negotiation of a time/volume agreement
or of a first or last port of call status agreement. Tariff rates are the starting
point for any analyses of profit potential from scale economies or of contracted
time/volume effects on expense levels.
It is extremely important to remember that, if at all possible,
any deviation
from a published tariff rate should be allowed oni.\' if there is a written agreement
between the Port and carrier or'shipper spelling out exactly what guarantees
of additional throughput or other considerations are being made to justify such
a deviation. Ports must recognize that any deviation from a published tariff
rate is a valuable consideration that should be traded but not given away.
6. Conclusions
Ports need to go beyond their own internal workings and short-
term economics
before they can perfect their pricing techniques. Ports need to understand among
many other things the 'Port vs Port' negotiating tactics employed by some carriers
and shippers. In North America, port competition is a fact of life and cannot
be ignored. And in many cases, carriers, shippers and other customers of the
Port use this competitive situation to their own maximum advantage. Playing one
Port against another seems to be a normal negotiating technique. Unfortunately,
in many instances, this tactic makes Ports lose sight of their previously-stated
goals and objectives. An appreciation of actual costs from the Port pricing decision
agenda is obscured by the fear of losing a customer. When this happens, Ports
bid blindly in order to get a specific customer and the customer usually gets
the services and facilities at a subsidized rate. Is the Port that eventually
obtains the business the winner or the loser?
The process outlined in this paper should facilitate the Port's
pricing of both
services and facilities. It should help Ports to price in a logical and economically
sound manner as part of an overall strategy. It should provide a framework for
consideration of both internal and external factors that impinge on the pricing
process. Perhaps also it points towards more business-like and less impulsive
decision-making.
Acknowledgments
The cooperation and support of the American Association of Port Authorities (AAPA),
especially the AAPA's Finance and Commerce Committees, and numerous Canadian
and US public port authorities in this Washington Sea Grant-funded research project
are gratefully acknowledged.
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