In the System Baseline edition of The Reliability Illusion, we established a simple but critical shift:
Vessel schedule reliability doesn’t break at arrival.
It breaks inside the cargo receiving window.
That window - defined by the Earliest Return Date (ERD) and CY Cutoff - is where export execution actually happens.
This edition applies the same framework to ZIM (ZIMU) to understand how cargo receiving windows behave in practice - where they stay predictable, and where they don’t.
All terms used here are defined in the Reliability Series - Methodology Appendix:
https://www.tradelanes.co/blog/reliability-series-methodology-appendix
This analysis is based on an observational system sample of executable export port-calls and is not a statistically randomized sample.
Filters applied:
A receiving window is considered moved if either ERD or CY Cutoff shifts by one calendar day or more from its originally published value.
Plain English meaning:
In this sample, ZIM receiving windows are stable in a clear majority of port-calls. But nearly one in three still move, which is enough to create recurring execution breaks - especially when changes land late.
Drift measures how far ERDs or CY Cutoffs move between original and final values, expressed in calendar days.
Plain English meaning:
Most ZIM ERD movement is small, but the tail still matters: 15% of port-calls experienced 3+ days of ERD drift.
Static buffers are built for the middle of the curve.
Operational pain lives in the tail.
Across the ZIM sample, CY Cutoff drift exceeds ERD drift.
Average drift
Threshold comparison
Plain English meaning:
The gap between ERD and CY is smaller here than in some other carrier editions, but the pattern still holds: CY Cutoffs drift slightly more often, and that is where the execution constraint tends to surface.
A late-stage change is defined as a change to ERD or CY Cutoff that occurs within the final 72 hours before the receiving window opens.
Plain English meaning:
About one in four ZIM ERDs and CY Cutoffs changed inside the final 72 hours - which helps explain why exporters can still experience disruption even when overall stability looks relatively strong.
So far, we’ve looked at how windows move.
Next, we look at where.
The Port Volatility Index (PVI) reflects how quickly static planning assumptions break at a port.
Below are the ports in this ZIM sample, ordered by PVI.
What this feels like:
This is where the ZIM volatility concentrates. Plans often need re-work, and a meaningful share of changes land late.
What this feels like:
Small sample, but the signal is clear: low average drift can still hide late-stage change risk.
What this feels like:
A very stable environment in this sample.
What this feels like:
High predictability and limited late-stage change in this sample.
Top examples:
Plain English meaning:
These are stress tests, not typical shipments. They show how quickly drift can stack when multiple changes coincide - especially in the high-volatility port environments.
Static buffers fail in these scenarios by design.
Plain English meaning:
For ZIM in this sample, stability is the majority state. The operational risk shows up in two places: the tail of large drift events, and the timing of late-stage changes.
Plain English meaning:
When drift has a long tail and late-stage changes are common, fixed buffers are routinely exceeded. Planning must adapt to observed behavior, not assumptions.
A vessel can be “on time” and still break export execution if the receiving window shifts underneath it.
This ZIM edition shows:
Methodology and definitions:
Reliability Series - Methodology Appendix
https://www.tradelanes.co/blog/reliability-series-methodology-appendix
Yang Ming - publishing next.