Themes
Revealed: emerging ship industry investment themes to watch in 2022
Patrick Scott analyses the emerging investment trends in the shipping sector for the year ahead, using the latest data from GlobalData.
Virtual and augmented reality, future of work and energy storage were the fastest emerging investment themes in the shipping industry this year according to an analysis of trends across three pillars of key investment activity.
We picked out the top 30 driving forces in recruitment, deal-making and innovation (through patent filings) across 23 industries in 2021 and measured how far up or down the rankings each had travelled compared with the previous year. The results uncover which forces have the most momentum going into 2022 and could therefore establish themselves as critically important influencers.
Virtual and augmented reality had the strongest momentum when it came to shipping industry hiring patterns, climbing 29 places to rank 13th this year. This meant that there were 116 virtual and augmented reality roles sought per every 10,000 job postings in the sector in 2021, a significant increase.
Virtual reality was the second-fastest emerging hiring theme (up 29 ranking spots), while health and safety came in third (up by 19 ranking spots).
Themes, as referenced throughout this article, are defined by GlobalData, from whom our data is taken, as ‘any issue that keeps a CEO awake at night’. Companies that fail to spot the important themes within their industry risk being unprepared for their future and, ultimately, failure. GlobalData tags millions of data points with these themes across its proprietary databases on a daily basis, making it possible to track their momentum over time.
Our analysis found that the fastest rising themes tended to differ depending on the investment metric being analysed. ESG-related themes, such as ethics and governance featured heavily across the board as emerging forces in recruitment, while themes related to disruptive technologies tended to be the biggest risers across mergers, acquisitions and other deal-based investments.
For example, machine learning was a top-five emerging theme for deal investment in seven out of the 23 industries we analysed, with big data, autonomous vehicles and the internet of things each appearing in five.
Deals related to future of work enjoyed the biggest increase in ranking among the ship equipment supply, product and services companies included in the analysis, rising 30 places higher this year compared to last. Online food delivery was the second-fastest emerging dealmaking theme (up 30 ranking spots), while autonomous vehicles came in third (up by 26 ranking spots).
The final investment pillar analysed was patent filings, with the themes emerging here unsurprisingly tending to be at the cutting edge of each industry. This resulted in less overlap between industries but it was notable that renewable energy research was present for six of the 23.
Energy storage-related patent filings had the most momentum in the shipping industry, ranking 28th in 2021. This was an increase of 32 ranking places this year compared to last. Drones were the second-fastest emerging innovation theme (up 12 ranking spots), while ecommerce came in third (up by eight ranking spots).
It is important to note that all the themes within this article are emerging themes that are worth watching in the future. They won't all necessarily rise to the tops of the thematic rankings (some will almost certainly fizzle out next year) but they have the potential to do so in the coming years.
Last week, GlobalData's Thematic Team produced their annual report predicting the biggest themes for 2022 in the tech, media and telecom industries, with their top picks including artificial intelligence, cybersecurity, metaverse and augmented reality.
For more on this report, including which companies are predicted to be winners and losers, visit GlobalData's report store.
Methodology:
GlobalData’s unique Job analytics enables understanding of hiring trends, strategies, and predictive signals across sectors, themes, companies, and geographies. Intelligent web crawlers capture data from publicly available sources. Key parameters include active, posted and closed jobs, posting duration, experience, seniority level, educational qualifications and skills.
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