Right now, hundreds of highly collectible and exciting used cars including exotic supercars and JDM legends are currently trapped aboard massive container ships idling in the ocean.
Due to the war in the Middle East, a number of highly important shipping routes like the Strait of Hormuz have become blocked. This means that massive cargo ships loaded with Japanese and South Korean vehicle exports are currently holding their station, becoming floating parking lots full of hard-metal cash.
For the $19 billion overseas used-car industry, this means countless vehicles are literally stranded at sea.
When commercial ships like these originally charted for Dubai had to suddenly alter their routes to avoid zones of conflict, harbours that had stepped up soon became full. Now, there are countless ships waiting in traffic jams across the sea as they wait for docking spaces to become available.
Umar Ali Hyder Ali is an exporter operating out of Yokohama, and he saw firsthand the 500 vehicles that have been unable to land at A Sri Lankan port. Unfortunately for those waiting for these cars, anchors have been dropped in the middle of the sea.
He told Reuters the following:
“The cars that we already shipped to Sri Lanka were kind of idling in the ocean, waiting to enter because there was no space”
The cargo he was managing eventually made it, but he’s one of just few, with some ships delayed by more than a week and a half.
Lamborghinis Locked in Steel Containers
It’s not just Peugeots and Volvos hidden inside these shipping containers. Behind the sun-burnt metal sit fifty highly expensive cars, ranging from Ferraris and Lamborghinis to Rolls-Royces. Hyder Ali had 50 of these cars dumped at docks in China and Sri Lanka instead of their real destination, the United Arab Emirates.
Ships coming from South Korea are also seeing similar issues. KDM cars are also waiting for their homes to come into sight.
Yun Seung-hyun, the president of Ventus Auto, a number of their containers are stuck on the western coast of India, waiting for their time to dock at Jebel Ali.
No Port in a Storm
You may be wondering why these cars can’t just be taken somewhere else and sold to a different market. Unfortunately for the companies behind these, it’s just not that simple. Buyers for these vehicles are usually locked in. And even if they weren’t, you can’t just land cars at a random country and expect there to be a market.
“You can’t just simply redirect shipments to Africa or Latin America.” Ali told Reuters.
With rising oil costs pushing freight rates even higher and massive vessels stuck waiting for clearance, things don’t look great for an already struggling automotive industry.
LATEST POSTS
- 1
Manageable Living: Eco-Accommodating Decisions for Regular day to day existence - 2
1st-ever disease gene fix, Alzheimer's blood test: 7 medical breakthroughs in 2025 - 3
Fireball sightings are surging across the US — here's what's really going on - 4
Elanco's drug gets emergency nod to treat deadly flesh-eating parasite in cats - 5
California is completely free of drought for the first time in 25 years
Vote in favor of your Favored kind of pasta
Who plays Moana in the live-action remake? What to know about Catherine Lagaʻaia.
Transcript: Scott Gottlieb on "Face the Nation with Margaret Brennan," Dec. 7, 2025
Cuba fights to contain spread of mosquito-borne chikungunya virus
How a toxic self-improvement trend with a funny name took over your feed
The Best 10 Innovation Advancements of the Year
Denny's is shutting down restaurants around the country. What's behind the closures?
US measles cases surpass 2,000, highest in 30 years: CDC
75% of Arab Israelis support Arab party joining government coalition post-war, survey reveals











