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Key Information

Matson, Inc., is an American shipping and navigation services company headquartered in Honolulu, Hawaii. Founded in 1882,[2] Matson, Inc.'s subsidiary Matson Navigation Company provides ocean shipping services across the Pacific to Hawaii, Alaska, Guam, Micronesia, the Pacific islands, China, and Japan.

History

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William Matson (1849–1917) founded Matson Navigation Company. He was born in Lysekil in Västra Götaland County, Sweden, and orphaned during childhood. He arrived in San Francisco after a trip around Cape Horn in 1867. Working aboard the Dickel family yacht, he struck up a friendship with tycoon Claus Spreckels, who financed many of Matson's new ships. In 1882, he sailed his three-masted schooner Emma Claudina into the Hilo Bay of the Hawaiian Islands.[3][4]

The enterprise began in the carrying of merchandise, especially of plantation stores, to the islands and returning with cargoes of sugar, later expanding interests at each end of the line.[5]

In 1924, Matson completed the Matson Building, designed by Bliss and Faville, at 215 Market Street in San Francisco.[6] It featured an observation tower and cupola at the northern corner of the building that enabled company executives to see its ships coming through the Golden Gate. The company later sold the building to Pacific Gas and Electric Company, whose general office was next door at 245 Market. PG&E has incorporated the former Matson Building into its general office complex, keeping Matson-specific details such as elevator doors with detailed maps of Hawaii on them.

For a brief period after World War II, Matson operated an airline using Douglas DC-4 aircraft between the Pacific Coast and Hawaii. The airline ultimately ceased operations because of political pressure from Pan American World Airways, which resulted in inability to obtain federal government scheduled operating authority.

On December 1, 2011, Matson's then-parent company Alexander & Baldwin announced that its board of directors approved a plan to split A&B and Matson into two separate companies. As part of the plan, Matson would leave Oakland, California, to become a Honolulu-based company. The two companies are now traded separately.[7]

In 2015, Matson, Inc., acquired Horizon Lines, formerly its main competitor in the United States domestic market, for $469 million.[8]

Historical image from Matson Lines promoting their Hawaiian hotels

Joining two Aloha-class freighter sister ships delivered to Matson in 2018 and 2019; in November 2022, the company again contracted Philly Shipyard to build three new 3,600 twenty-foot equivalent units (TEU) Jones Act compliant container ships at a cost of $1 billion.[9][10][11]

Passenger ships

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SS Lurline in the 1930s
SS Monterey during World War II

Primarily a conveyor of freight; from 1908 on, Matson introduced into service a number of passenger liners to capitalize on the burgeoning tourist trade.[12] In 1926, following the death of its founder, John D. Spreckels whose father, Claus Spreckels, had been Matson's earliest financier;[13] Matson took over the Oceanic Steamship Company (Spreckels Line),[14] operating three trans-Pacific liners, including the SS Sonoma.

From the early 20th century through the 1970s, Matson liners sailed from the west coast ports of San Francisco and Los Angeles to Honolulu and points beyond, including a handful of South Pacific ports of call as well as Sydney, Australia and Auckland, New Zealand. Two of their earlier cargo liners, Maui and Wilhelmina, were the first passenger ships to place their engines aft.

Among the "white ships of Matson" were Malolo (rechristened Matsonia), Lurline, Mariposa, and Monterey.[15] With the advent and expansion of routine air travel between the mainland and the islands, Matson's passenger service was greatly diminished, and the liners were eventually retired from trans-Pacific service and virtually gone by the end of the 1970s.[16]

Hotels

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In 1925, Matson acquired a controlling interest in the historic Moana Hotel on Waikiki on the island of Oahu. They constructed the nearby Royal Hawaiian Hotel in 1927. In 1952, they built the SurfRider Hotel (today a wing of the Moana), followed by the Princess Kaiulani Hotel in 1955. Matson sold the four properties to Sheraton Hotels in 1959.

Current fleet

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Matson's current cargo fleet of U.S.-flagged vessels include:[17]

  • Anchorage / Kodiak / Tacoma (sister ships)
  • Daniel K. Inouye / Kaimana Hila (sister ships - Aloha Class)[1]
  • Imua II / Liloa II (sister ships)
  • Kamokuiki
  • Lihue
  • Lurline / Matsonia (sister ships - Kanaloa Class)[2]
  • Manoa / Mahimahi (C9 sister ships)
  • Manulani / Maunawili / Manukai (sister ships)[18]
  • Maunalei[19]
  • Mokihana (C9 with garage conversion)
  • Papa Mau
  • R.J. Pfeiffer
  • Haleakala
  • Mauna Loa
  • Waialeale

See also

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References

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Further reading

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[edit]
Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia

Matson, Inc. is a Honolulu-headquartered American ocean transportation and logistics company founded in 1882 by Captain William Matson, who initiated operations with the schooner Emma Claudina sailing from San Francisco to Hilo, Hawaii. The firm specializes in Jones Act-compliant shipping services to Pacific island economies, including Hawaii, Alaska, Guam, Micronesia, and parts of the South Pacific, functioning as a primary freight lifeline for these regions by transporting containerized cargo, vehicles, and household goods via containerships, roll-on/roll-off vessels, and barges.
Matson pioneered in the Pacific with the launch of the S.S. Hawaiian Merchant in 1958, revolutionizing efficient cargo handling and contributing to its dominance in U.S. domestic ocean trades. Following a period as a of from 1969 to 2012, the company re-emerged as an independent publicly traded entity on the under the ticker MATX, expanding through acquisitions such as Horizon Lines' operations in 2015. Its operations encompass not only vessel-based transport but also stevedoring via Matson Terminals, Inc., established in 1925, and logistics services including intermodal transport, warehousing, and through Matson Logistics. Complementing its core freight services, Matson maintains terminal interests, including a 35% stake in SSA Terminals operating at eight U.S. West Coast facilities, and continues fleet modernization with three new LNG-powered Aloha-class containerships under construction for delivery starting in 2026, underscoring its commitment to sustaining reliable service amid evolving trade demands. While facing antitrust scrutiny in past litigation over Guam route practices—ultimately resolved in its favor by federal courts in 2025—Matson's market position remains anchored in its long-standing role supporting isolated U.S. territories without notable operational disruptions.

Company Overview

Founding and Corporate Structure

Matson Navigation Company originated on April 10, 1882, when Captain William Matson, a Swedish-born seafarer, sailed his three-masted Emma Claudina from to , initiating commercial shipping services between the U.S. mainland and the primarily for cargoes. The venture began modestly with Matson's personal vessel, chartered initially for transport to and return voyages laden with , establishing the foundation for what would become a dominant Pacific carrier. Matson, Inc., the parent , emerged from the 2012 restructuring of Holdings, Inc., which rebranded to emphasize its core ocean transportation operations, with the name change effective June 2012. Headquartered in , Matson, Inc. functions as a publicly traded entity on the (NYSE: MATX), focusing on maritime while divesting non-core assets previously held under the umbrella. The corporate structure centers on wholly-owned subsidiaries: Matson Navigation Company, Inc. (MatNav), responsible for ocean freight services to , , , and other Pacific islands; Matson Terminals, Inc., handling stevedoring, container maintenance, and terminal operations; and Matson Logistics, Inc., providing intermodal and . Matson also maintains a 35% equity stake in SSA Terminals, LLC, a with Carrix, Inc., for additional terminal and stevedoring capabilities at key U.S. West Coast ports. This setup enables integrated control over shipping, port handling, and logistics, supporting Matson's specialized Jones Act-compliant services.

Principal Business Activities

Matson, Inc. conducts its principal business activities through two segments: Ocean Transportation and Logistics. The Ocean Transportation segment, operated primarily by its subsidiary Matson Navigation Company, Inc., focuses on providing ocean freight transportation services to domestic non-contiguous U.S. economies such as Hawaii, Alaska, and Guam, as well as international routes to island economies in Micronesia, the South Pacific, Japan, and China. These services include lift-on/lift-off (LO/LO) and roll-on/roll-off (RO/RO) container handling for a diverse cargo mix, encompassing dry containers of mixed commodities, refrigerated goods, food products, beverages, building materials, automobiles, and household goods, thereby serving industries like retail, construction, and automotive without heavy reliance on any single customer or cargo type. Operations adhere to the U.S. Jones Act, mandating U.S.-flagged vessels crewed by U.S. citizens, which ensures domestic market exclusivity but imposes higher costs compared to foreign-flagged competitors. Complementing ocean services, Matson provides terminal operations through Matson Terminals, Inc., handling container maintenance, stevedoring, and storage at ports in Hawaii and Alaska, while holding a 35% equity interest in SSA Terminals, LLC, which manages eight U.S. West Coast facilities including Long Beach, Oakland, and Tacoma to support inbound and outbound cargo flows. As of December 31, 2022, the segment utilized a fleet of 20 owned vessels (primarily containerships and combination container/RO-RO ships), six chartered vessels, two owned barges, and one chartered barge, enabling scheduled weekly sailings such as from Long Beach to Honolulu and expedited premium service from China to Southern California. The Logistics segment, managed by Matson Logistics, Inc., delivers asset-light, integrated supply chain solutions across and , including rail intermodal , highway brokerage, warehousing, distribution, freight consolidation, less-than-truckload (LTL) services, and international freight forwarding. These activities emphasize (3PL) such as less-than-container-load (LCL) consolidation, customs brokerage, and end-to-end visibility tools, often leveraging Matson's ocean network for hybrid ocean- offerings while mitigating risks through diversified services rather than vessel ownership. This segment extends Matson's reach to origin operations in 18 Asian locations for cargo preparation and destination services for final-mile delivery and clearance.

Historical Development

Inception and Early Expansion (1882–1929)

Matson Navigation Company originated on April 10, 1882, when Captain William Matson departed San Francisco Bay aboard the three-masted schooner Emma Claudina, carrying 300 tons of lumber, food, and plantation supplies to Hilo, Hawaii. Financed through a loan from Claus Spreckels, a prominent sugar magnate, Matson targeted the burgeoning demand for reliable transport to support Hawaii's sugar plantations. The voyage marked the inception of regular freight services between California and the Hawaiian Islands, establishing Matson's foothold in Pacific commerce. In 1887, Matson sold the Emma Claudina and acquired the brigantine Lurline, which doubled the cargo capacity and enabled more efficient operations. By the early 1900s, the fleet expanded with vessels like the Rhoderick Dhu, featuring cold storage and electric lights for perishable goods, and the Enterprise, the first oil-burning steamship in the Pacific, signaling a transition from sail to powered propulsion. These acquisitions enhanced reliability and capacity, supporting Hawaii's economic growth amid increasing sugar exports. The 1910s saw further modernization following Matson's death in 1917, by which time the fleet comprised 14 modern ships. Post-World War I, Matson added the SS Manulani and SS Manukai, the largest freighters in the Pacific at the time, bolstering freight volumes. Passenger services emerged with ships like the 1908 Lurline II (accommodating 51 passengers) and the 1910 S.S. Wilhelmina (146 passengers), rivaling transatlantic liners and fostering tourism. Expansion accelerated in the 1920s, with the 1925 establishment of Matson Terminals, Inc., to handle stevedoring and terminal operations in Hawaii. The 1927 launch of the S.S. Malolo, capable of 22 knots and the fastest ship in the Pacific, significantly boosted passenger traffic and tourism infrastructure. By 1929, Matson's integrated freight and emerging passenger lines solidified its dominance in Hawaii-Pacific routes, driven by empirical demand from agricultural exports and leisure travel.

Passenger and Freight Integration (1930–1969)

During , Matson Navigation Company intensified its integration of passenger and freight services by commissioning a series of luxury ocean liners known as the "White Fleet." These vessels, including the SS Mariposa launched in 1931, SS Monterey in 1932, and SS Lurline in 1932, were designed for high-speed passenger transport between the U.S. West Coast and , while also accommodating substantial freight cargoes to support Hawaii's export economy, particularly and . The liners featured modern amenities to attract affluent tourists, thereby boosting freight volumes through increased economic activity in the islands. World War II disrupted operations as the U.S. government requisitioned Matson's passenger liners for military use, converting them into troopships and cargo carriers. Ships such as the Lurline, Monterey, Mariposa, and Matsonia transported over 300,000 troops across the Pacific, with Matson managing their maintenance and operations under War Shipping Administration contracts. This wartime role underscored the dual-purpose design of the fleet, where passenger accommodations were repurposed for military logistics, highlighting the company's strategic value in combining civilian and freight capabilities. Postwar resumption in the late 1940s saw Matson refit and redeploy its liners for civilian service, with the Lurline returning to Hawaii routes in 1948 amid material shortages that delayed full operations. Passenger traffic surged initially due to pent-up demand and Hawaii's growing appeal as a destination, sustaining integrated services where liners carried both tourists and commodities. However, by the 1950s, Matson began shifting toward containerization to enhance freight efficiency, pioneering the practice in the Pacific with the SS Hawaiian Citizen in 1960 as the first fully containerized vessel on the California-Hawaii route. This innovation reduced handling costs and damage for freight, while passenger services continued on traditional liners to complement cargo loads. The 1960s marked the onset of decline for passenger operations due to competition from jet aircraft, which shortened travel times dramatically. Matson laid up the Matsonia in 1962 and retired the Lurline in 1963, reflecting falling bookings as air travel captured market share. By 1969, amid rising containerized freight dominance, Matson sold its remaining passenger vessels and suspended non-Hawaii passenger services, pivoting fully to cargo-focused operations to align with evolving trade demands. This transition preserved the company's freight integration while acknowledging the obsolescence of luxury liners in a container era.

Restructuring and Modern Cargo Focus (1970–2009)

In 1970, Matson Navigation Company restructured its operations by selling its passenger vessels, including the S.S. Lurline, and suspending Far East service to concentrate exclusively on Pacific Coast-to-Hawaii freight transportation. This shift marked the end of Matson's passenger liner era, driven by the rise of commercial air travel and the need to prioritize efficient cargo handling amid growing containerization trends. Concurrently, the company divested non-shipping assets, such as its Waikiki hotels sold to Sheraton, to streamline focus on core maritime activities. By that year, Matson achieved a fully containerized fleet with the entry into service of the S.S. Hawaiian Enterprise and S.S. Hawaiian Progress, both 23,800-ton displacement containerships built for Hawaii routes. Throughout the 1970s, Matson undertook a major vessel construction and modernization program, converting its fleet to containerized and roll-on/roll-off (RO/RO) configurations to enhance efficiency and reduce costs in operations. This included building high-speed containerships and integrating intermodal capabilities, aligning with broader industry shifts toward standardized containers that minimized labor-intensive break-bulk loading. The emphasis on Jones Act-compliant U.S.-flag vessels ensured protected domestic trade lanes, particularly to , where Matson maintained a dominant position in delivering essential goods. By the decade's end, these investments had transformed Matson into a specialized carrier, with operational efficiencies supporting sustained revenue from freight volumes. In the 1980s and 1990s, Matson expanded ancillary services while reinforcing its cargo infrastructure, forming Matson Intermodal System, Inc. in 1987 to integrate rail and truck transport across North America. The fleet saw additions like the diesel-powered containership MV R.J. Pfeiffer in 1992, improving fuel efficiency on Hawaii runs. Terminal management evolved with the 1999 appointment of SSA Terminals for West Coast operations, optimizing stevedoring and container handling. These steps supported route stability amid economic fluctuations, with Matson's Hawaii service handling critical imports like petroleum and foodstuffs under regulatory protections. The 2000s featured strategic fleet renewal and selective international outreach, including a $500 million program from 2002 to to construct four new vessels for enhanced capacity. In , Matson launched the China-Long Beach Express (CLX) service, connecting and to Long Beach and providing feeder links to , marking a cautious entry into transpacific while prioritizing domestic strengths. By 2009, CLX expanded to include Xiamen, boosting export-import flows but remaining secondary to core U.S. insular routes. This period solidified Matson's modern cargo orientation, leveraging technological upgrades and intermodal networks for resilient supply chain performance.

Fleet Renewal and Strategic Growth (2010–Present)

In 2012, Matson separated from , Inc., becoming an independent publicly traded company listed on the NYSE under the ticker MATX, which allowed it to pursue focused strategic initiatives in ocean transportation and . This restructuring positioned Matson to invest in fleet modernization and geographic expansion, leveraging its Jones Act-compliant operations in noncontiguous domestic trades. Matson's Hawaii fleet renewal began in 2013 with orders for two 3,600-TEU Aloha-class containerships, Daniel K. Inouye and Kaimana Hila, built at Philly Shipyard for delivery in 2018 and 2019, respectively; these vessels incorporated fuel-efficient designs to reduce emissions and operational costs. In 2016, the company ordered two 3,500-TEU Kanaloa-class combination container/roll-on/roll-off (con-ro) ships, Lurline and Matsonia, from General Dynamics NASSCO, delivered in 2019 and 2020, completing a four-vessel program that enhanced capacity, efficiency, and reliability on Hawaii routes while enabling a reduction from 10 to nine vessels overall. This $900 million initiative modernized aging assets and supported sustained service to Hawaii, Guam, and related trades. Strategic growth included the 2013 acquisition of Reef Shipping, establishing Matson South Pacific for service to New Zealand, Fiji, and other islands, followed by the launch of South Pacific Express in 2016 linking Honolulu with Samoa and American Samoa. In 2015, Matson acquired Horizon Lines' Alaska operations for $469 million, gaining control of ports in Anchorage, Kodiak, and Dutch Harbor, seven Jones Act vessels, and upgraded infrastructure like a 65-ton gantry crane, expanding its footprint in Alaska trades. Complementing this, Matson Logistics acquired Span Alaska in 2016 for $197.6 million, bolstering less-than-container-load freight services in the region. Recent expansions feature three new LNG-capable Aloha-class containerships ordered in 2022, with construction starting in 2024 at Philly Shipyard for approximately $1 billion, designed for the China-U.S. trade lane to match existing fleet speeds and capacities while complying with Jones Act requirements; these vessels aim to enhance Matson's competitiveness in Asia-Pacific routes upon delivery in the mid-2020s. Hull assembly on the first vessel commenced in 2025, underscoring ongoing investment in fleet expansion amid evolving trade demands.

Core Operations

Pacific Shipping Routes

Matson Navigation Company, a subsidiary of Matson, Inc., operates a network of container shipping routes primarily across the Pacific Ocean, serving U.S. territories, states, and international destinations with a focus on Jones Act-compliant domestic services. These routes support the transportation of freight, vehicles, and logistics services, connecting U.S. West Coast ports to Hawaii, Alaska, Guam, and Micronesia, while extending to South Pacific islands and select Asia-Pacific trade lanes. The company's fleet includes combination container/roll-on/roll-off vessels designed for efficient cargo handling in these lanes. Domestic Pacific routes form the core of Matson's operations, with weekly or bi-weekly sailings from mainland U.S. ports such as Long Beach, Oakland, and Tacoma. To Hawaii, Matson provides seven vessel arrivals every 14 days, linking West Coast gateways to ports including Honolulu, Kahului, Nawiliwili, and Hilo, facilitating the bulk of inter-island and U.S. mainland supply chains for consumer goods, vehicles, and bulk commodities. Alaska services connect Tacoma to Anchorage, Kodiak, and Dutch Harbor, with integrated truck, rail, and barge options for interior distribution, emphasizing reliable delivery amid challenging Arctic conditions. Guam routes originate from West Coast ports, with onward connections to Saipan in the Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands, the Republic of Palau, and the Federated States of Micronesia (Yap, Chuuk, Pohnpei, and Kosrae), supporting military logistics and island economies. International extensions include South Pacific services from Australia and New Zealand to Fiji, Samoa, American Samoa, Tonga, and the Cook Islands, utilizing regional ports for reefer and general cargo. Asia-Pacific lanes feature expedited services like the China-California Express (CCX) and China-Long Beach Express+ (CLX+), linking Chinese ports to U.S. West Coast hubs, alongside routes to Japan and Okinawa. These operations leverage Matson's U.S.-flagged vessels to comply with cabotage laws in domestic trades while competing in select transpacific markets. Vessel schedules are updated dynamically, with interactive tools available for tracking sailings.

Supply Chain and Logistics Services

Matson Logistics, a wholly owned subsidiary of Matson, Inc., operates as a third-party logistics (3PL) provider, offering asset-light services that integrate with the parent company's ocean shipping network to support domestic and international supply chains. Established in 1987 initially for intermodal marketing, it has expanded to encompass transportation brokerage, warehousing, distribution, and value-added services tailored for retailers, manufacturers, and distributors across North America and Asia. These offerings emphasize efficiency through customized technology and internet-based platforms, enabling smaller enterprises access to advanced supply chain execution previously limited to large-scale operations. Core services include rail intermodal drayage, highway brokerage for full truckload (FTL) and less-than-truckload (LTL) shipments, and freight consolidation, with specialized capabilities in transloading, cross-docking, and foreign trade zone operations at facilities such as the Savannah Logistics Center. International components feature less-than-container-load (LCL) consolidation, non-vessel operating common carrier (NVOCC) services with guaranteed space on weekly sailings from ports like Ningbo and Shanghai to Long Beach, and Asia-Pacific supply chain management integrated with Matson's Pacific routes. Warehousing and distribution are enhanced by dedicated, seasonal storage, ecommerce fulfillment, and value-added packaging, often combined with ocean freight for end-to-end solutions from sourcing to delivery. The subsidiary's model leverages Matson, Inc.'s assets alongside third-party capacity for flexible, hybrid networks, including agent services for independent freight forwarders and project-specific hauling like flatbed . As of 2023, key subsidiaries under Matson Logistics include Matson Logistics Services, LLC, and Matson Logistics Warehousing, Inc., supporting operations primarily from but extending nationwide. This structure positions Matson Logistics to mitigate disruptions by combining maritime reliability with terrestrial flexibility, though it remains subordinate to the company's core ocean freight revenue.

Fleet and Infrastructure

Active Vessel Inventory

Matson, Inc. maintains a fleet of 22 owned, U.S.-flagged vessels as of August 2025, consisting primarily of containerships with some combination container and roll-on/roll-off (ConRo) capabilities, designed for Jones Act-compliant service on Pacific routes including Hawaii, Alaska, Guam, and China. These vessels vary in size from smaller feeder ships and barges to larger mainline containerships, with capacities ranging from approximately 300 to over 3,500 twenty-foot equivalent units (TEUs) and deadweights up to 51,000 long tons. The fleet supports Matson's core operations in inter-island and long-haul cargo transport, emphasizing reliability and efficiency under domestic cabotage laws. Vessels are grouped by class or route service, with key specifications including length, maximum speed, deadweight tonnage (DWT), and TEU capacity where applicable. The following table summarizes the active inventory:
Vessel Name(s)LengthMax Speed (knots)Max DWT (LT)TEU CapacityNotes
Anchorage / Kodiak / Tacoma710 ft2037,4731,668Alaska service, sister ships
Daniel K. Inouye854 ft23.550,7943,211Mainline containership
Kaimana Hila854 ft23.550,9813,021Mainline containership
Imua / Liloa II388 ft 6 in158,071630Smaller containerships
Kamokuiki411 ft 11 in168,490700Containership
Lurline869 ft 5 in2351,2573,500Mainline containership
Matsonia869 ft 5 in2350,5623,500Mainline containership
Manoa / Mahimahi860 ft 2 in2330,1872,824Sister containerships
Manulani / Maunawili / Manukai711 ft 11 in2329,5172,378Sister containerships
Maunalei681 ft 1 in2233,7711,992Containership
Mokihana860 ft 2 in2329,4841,994ConRo; 1,323 autos
Papa Mau381 ft145,364521Smaller containership
R.J. Pfeiffer713 ft 6 in2327,1002,245Containership
Haleakala362 ft 6 inN/A11,678699Containership/barge
Mauna Loa350 ftN/A4,657335Barge-like containership
Olomana397 ft 1 in18.38,252N/AContainership
This inventory excludes chartered vessels not in active owned service and upcoming newbuilds, such as the three Aloha-class containerships (each 3,600 TEUs) under construction for delivery in 2026–2027 to replace older units. Fleet operations require approximately 370 billets across these vessels as of late 2024, reflecting crewing for sustained Pacific deployments.

Modernization and Technological Upgrades

Matson has invested heavily in fleet modernization, particularly through the development and deployment of Aloha-class containerships featuring advanced propulsion and efficiency technologies. Between 2018 and 2019, the company introduced the initial Aloha-class vessels, including the Daniel K. Inouye and Frank B. Matsuda, each with a capacity of 3,220 TEU, dual-fuel engines capable of operating on conventional marine fuels or future low-emission alternatives, and optimized hull designs for reduced fuel consumption. These ships, built at a cost exceeding $500 million per vessel, incorporated "green ship technology" to lower emissions while maintaining speeds over 23 knots for Pacific routes. In September 2024, construction began on three additional LNG-powered Aloha-class vessels at Philly Shipyard, representing a $1 billion investment to replace older ships in the China-Long Beach Express service. These 854-foot ships, with 3,600 TEU capacity, feature dual-fuel engines explicitly designed for liquefied natural gas (LNG) operation, alongside hybrid battery systems from Corvus Energy for enhanced energy management and reduced auxiliary engine runtime. Integrated systems from Kongsberg provide propulsion control, navigation, and automation, enabling speeds exceeding 23 knots and contributing to Matson's emissions reduction targets under 2030 and 2050 climate goals. Hull optimizations and LNG readiness are projected to cut fuel use by up to 20% compared to legacy vessels, supporting operational efficiency amid Jones Act constraints. Terminal infrastructure upgrades complement vessel advancements, with nearly $1 billion allocated to Honolulu's facilities since 2019, including expanded capacity, new electric rail-mounted gantry cranes (RTGs), and digital gate systems for accelerated cargo processing. Phase 1 of the Sand Island project, completed in 2020, installed three electric RTGs to minimize diesel emissions, while ongoing enhancements integrate real-time tracking and automated handling to improve throughput. Capital expenditures reached $320 million in 2023, directed toward these vessel and terminal modernizations. In logistics, Matson introduced 53-foot containers equipped with GPS-enabled monitoring devices in recent years, enabling precise location tracking, temperature control, and supply chain visibility for perishable Hawaii-bound goods. These upgrades align with broader sustainability efforts outlined in Matson's 2023 report, emphasizing technology-driven efficiency over regulatory compliance alone.

Affiliated Entities

Key Subsidiaries

Matson Navigation Company, Inc. (MatNav), a wholly-owned subsidiary of Matson, Inc., serves as the primary entity for ocean transportation operations, delivering containerized freight services to Hawaii, Guam, and other Pacific destinations under the Jones Act framework. Founded in 1882 and headquartered in Hawaii, MatNav operates a fleet of modern vessels and maintains critical infrastructure for non-contiguous domestic trade routes, contributing the majority of Matson's ocean segment revenue as of December 31, 2024. Matson Terminals, Inc., established in 1921 as a wholly-owned subsidiary, specializes in terminal management, stevedoring, container maintenance, and related services at ports including Honolulu, Oakland, and Long Beach, supporting Matson's maritime logistics efficiency. This subsidiary handles over 1 million container lifts annually across its facilities, integral to the company's Pacific supply chain. Matson Logistics, Inc., another wholly-owned subsidiary, provides end-to-end logistics solutions including intermodal transportation, warehousing, distribution, and freight forwarding, with operations spanning the U.S. mainland and international networks. As of July 1, 2025, it reported expanded leadership to drive growth in regional trucking and rail services, complementing Matson's core shipping by optimizing inland movement for customers in retail and e-commerce sectors. Matson Ventures, Inc., a wholly-owned subsidiary, facilitates strategic investments, notably holding a 35% equity interest in SSA Terminals, LLC (SSAT), a joint venture with Carrix, Inc., focused on terminal and stevedoring operations at major West Coast ports since 2000. SSAT enhances Matson's port throughput capacity, processing millions of TEUs yearly, though Matson's minority stake limits direct control while providing operational synergies.

Divested or Historical Operations

Matson initiated passenger liner services in 1908 with the introduction of the L.S. Lurline II, accommodating 51 passengers, followed by the S.S. Wilhelmina in 1910 with capacity for 146. These operations expanded significantly in the interwar period, featuring luxury vessels such as the S.S. Malolo launched in 1927 at 22 knots, and subsequent ships including the Mariposa, Monterey, and Lurline between 1930 and 1932, which bolstered Hawaii's tourism industry through the iconic "White Ships" fleet. Passenger services were suspended in 1970 amid competition from commercial air travel and a strategic pivot to containerized freight, with all passenger vessels sold off to concentrate on Pacific Coast-Hawaii cargo routes. Complementing its maritime passenger efforts, Matson developed hospitality assets, including the Royal Hawaiian Hotel in Waikiki opened in 1927 to support tourism synergies, which was sold to Sheraton in 1959 as the company streamlined operations away from non-core real estate management. Far East shipping services, active post-World War II, were also discontinued in 1970 to refocus resources on domestic Jones Act trades. In a major restructuring, Matson separated from Alexander & Baldwin Holdings, Inc. on June 29, 2012, divesting its historical entanglements in real estate via A&B Properties, Inc. and agribusiness segments, which were retained by the restructured A&B focused on land development. This spin-off enabled Matson, Inc. to operate independently as a pure-play ocean transportation and logistics provider, unburdened by diversified holdings that dated back to A&B's investment in Matson since 1908. Prior to the separation, Matson had functioned as a subsidiary within A&B's broader portfolio since 1969.

Economic and Financial Profile

Revenue Streams and Performance Metrics

Matson, Inc. generates revenue primarily through its Ocean Transportation segment, which encompasses container shipping services across Pacific routes including Hawaii, Alaska, Guam, and China, supplemented by terminal operations and fuel sales. In fiscal year 2024, this segment produced $2.81 billion in revenue, representing approximately 82% of the company's total consolidated revenue of $3.42 billion. Revenue in this area is driven by freight rates, container volumes measured in forty-foot equivalent units (FEUs), and ancillary services, with significant contributions from the expedited China service launched in 2022, which boosted volumes and rates amid supply chain disruptions. The Logistics segment, accounting for the remaining 18% or $612 million in 2024, includes transportation brokerage, freight forwarding, warehousing, distribution, and supply chain management services, often supporting inter-segment freight from Ocean Transportation. This segment's revenue has shown relative stability but faced headwinds from lower brokerage volumes offset by gains in supply chain consulting. Key performance metrics for 2024 reflect robust growth in Ocean Transportation amid favorable trade dynamics. Consolidated revenue increased 11% year-over-year to $3.42 billion, with Ocean Transportation operating income rising 70% to $530 million, propelled by a 16% revenue uptick in the fourth quarter alone due to elevated China freight rates and volumes. EBITDA reached $739 million, while net income climbed 60% to $476 million, yielding earnings per share of $13.93. Logistics operating income remained modest at around $44 million for the year, with quarterly figures hovering between $9 million and $15 million.
Segment2024 Revenue ($ millions)Share of TotalOperating Income ($ millions)
Ocean Transportation2,809.782%530
Logistics612.118%44
Consolidated3,421.8100%551
Into 2025, early indicators show mixed performance; first-quarter Ocean Transportation revenue grew 10% year-over-year, but subsequent quarters faced pressures from U.S. tariffs on Chinese imports, reducing trans-Pacific volumes and contributing to a decline in second-quarter net income. Overall, Matson's metrics underscore its reliance on Jones Act-protected domestic routes for stability, with episodic boosts from international services vulnerable to geopolitical trade shifts.

Market Position and Shareholder Information

Matson, Inc. maintains a dominant position in the U.S. domestic Pacific shipping market, particularly for non-contiguous routes serving Hawaii, Guam, and Alaska, where it operates as the largest U.S.-flag container carrier. This market leadership stems from strict adherence to the Jones Act (Merchant Marine Act of 1920), which requires vessels in domestic trade to be U.S.-built, U.S.-owned, and crewed by U.S. citizens, effectively creating high barriers to entry and limiting foreign competition. As a result, Matson benefits from a quasi-monopolistic structure in these trades, with stable market share in Hawaii and expectations of modestly higher volumes in 2025 amid regional economic growth. The company's focus on these insulated routes has supported consistent performance, though it remains sensitive to U.S. policy changes, such as tariff proposals impacting Pacific trade dynamics. Regarding shareholder composition, institutional investors hold approximately 87% of Matson's outstanding shares as of mid-2025, underscoring broad professional ownership. Key institutional stakeholders include BlackRock, Inc. (15.6% ownership), The Vanguard Group, Inc. (12.15%), and Dimensional Fund Advisors LP (6.32%), with over 789 institutions reporting positions via SEC filings. Insider ownership accounts for about 7.6%, led by executives such as CEO Matthew Cox (0.6%), providing material alignment between management and shareholders. Retail and individual investors comprise the remaining 5.6%, with total shares outstanding at roughly 31.8 million. Matson's NYSE listing under ticker MATX reflects this structure, with high institutional concentration signaling perceived stability in its Jones Act-protected operations.

Jones Act Adherence and Implications

Matson, Inc. operates its domestic shipping services in full compliance with the Jones Act, formally the Merchant Marine Act of 1920 (46 U.S.C. § 55102), which requires that merchandise transported by water between U.S. ports be carried on vessels built in the United States, owned by U.S. citizens, and crewed by predominantly U.S. citizens or permanent residents. The company's fleet for routes serving Hawaii, Alaska, Guam, and other non-contiguous U.S. territories meets these criteria, with all relevant vessels documented under U.S. registry and maintained to satisfy citizenship and operational standards. Matson has demonstrated ongoing commitment through fleet investments, including four Jones Act containerships delivered by Philly Shipyard between 2003 and 2006, and more recently, construction of three LNG-powered Aloha Class vessels initiated in September 2024 at the same yard, each measuring 854 feet with 3,600 TEU capacity and a $1 billion total investment. Adherence to the Jones Act affords Matson a competitive barrier against foreign-flagged carriers, effectively limiting domestic route rivals to a small number of U.S.-compliant operators and fostering a near-monopolistic position in trades like West Coast to Hawaii, where Matson holds dominant market share. This protection supports consistent service reliability, U.S. seafarer employment (Matson crews over 1,000 U.S. mariners), and potential military sealift readiness, as Jones Act vessels can be activated for national defense under programs like the Maritime Security Program. However, compliance imposes elevated costs: U.S.-built ships command premiums estimated at 5-8 times foreign equivalents due to domestic shipyard inefficiencies and labor standards, while higher U.S. crew wages—averaging 100,000100,000-200,000 annually per position—exceed international norms, contributing to freight rates 2-3 times global averages on affected routes. For Hawaii consumers and businesses, these dynamics translate to annual economic burdens, with one analysis attributing $531 million in added costs solely to U.S. shipbuilding mandates, exacerbating goods prices in a state reliant on imports for 90% of its food and energy needs. Matson has countered reform efforts, issuing statements against waivers in 2019 and intervening in a 2025 federal lawsuit challenging the Act's constitutionality, arguing that deregulation would undermine domestic maritime capacity without cost savings, as foreign operators face U.S. port fees, fuel taxes, and regulatory hurdles that could offset advantages. Empirical critiques, often from free-market oriented groups, highlight that Jones Act routes sustain fewer vessels overall—U.S. domestic fleet numbers have declined 20% since 2000—potentially risking supply disruptions, as evidenced by aid delays post-2023 Maui wildfires where foreign waivers were sought but limited. Despite such tensions, Matson's Jones Act alignment has underpinned revenue stability, with Pacific domestic trades generating over 60% of its ocean transportation income in recent quarters.

Antitrust and Competitive Disputes

In July 2021, American President Lines, LLC (APL), a subsidiary of CMA CGM, filed an antitrust lawsuit against Matson Navigation Company, Inc. and Matson South Pacific, Ltd., subsidiaries of Matson, Inc., in the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia, alleging monopolization and attempted monopolization of the U.S. mainland-to-Guam container shipping route under Section 2 of the Sherman Act. APL claimed Matson maintained its dominant position—handling over 90% of the route's volume—through exclusionary practices, including retaliatory actions against APL's entry into the Guam market around 2018 by limiting customer access to Matson's Hawaii and Alaska services for those using APL in Guam, and allegedly leveraging its acquisition of Horizon Lines' Alaska operations in 2015 to raise rates and harm competition. The court dismissed Matson, Inc. as a defendant in early proceedings, finding insufficient attribution of conduct to the parent company, but allowed claims against the subsidiaries to proceed following a September 2022 denial of Matson's motion to dismiss, where Judge Christopher R. Cooper held that APL plausibly alleged Matson's monopoly power and willful maintenance through anticompetitive conduct, such as service restrictions and predatory pricing threats. However, in March 2025, the court granted summary judgment to Matson, ruling that APL failed to provide evidence of anticompetitive harm in the Guam market from Matson's Alaska actions or of predatory conduct, attributing Matson's market share to superior efficiency, product differentiation, and customer preferences rather than exclusionary tactics. APL appealed the dismissal to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit in May 2025, arguing the district court erred in rejecting evidence of Matson's retaliatory intent and market foreclosure, but as of October 2025, the appeal remains pending without resolution. No damages were awarded, and the ruling underscored the challenges in proving antitrust violations in Jones Act-protected domestic routes where competition is inherently limited by cabotage laws. Matson's 2015 acquisition of Horizon Lines' non-Hawaii assets, including Alaska operations, underwent Hart-Scott-Rodino antitrust review by the U.S. Department of Justice, which granted early termination without challenge after Horizon divested its Hawaii business to The Pasha Group to mitigate overlap with Matson's dominant Hawaii market position. This transaction reduced competitors in Alaska from two to one (Matson), but faced no formal antitrust enforcement, as the DOJ focused on preserving some post-merger competition via the Hawaii divestiture. No other significant antitrust or competitive disputes involving Matson have resulted in adverse findings or penalties as of 2025.

Environmental and Sustainability Efforts

Operational Emissions and Mitigation Strategies

Matson, Inc.'s operational emissions primarily consist of Scope 1 greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions from the combustion of marine fossil fuels in its owned vessel fleet, accounting for approximately 98% of total Scope 1 emissions at 1,080,900 metric tons of CO₂ equivalent (mt CO₂e) in 2023. Scope 2 emissions from shoreside electricity and fuel use totaled 12,500 mt CO₂e in the same year, while Scope 3 emissions, largely from upstream fuel production, chartered vessels, and transportation, reached 1,288,500 mt CO₂e. The company has established a target to reduce Scope 1 GHG emissions from its owned fleet by 40% by 2030 relative to a 2016 baseline, with a longer-term commitment to achieve net-zero Scope 1 fleet emissions by 2050. As of 2023, Matson reported a 19% reduction in Scope 1 fleet emissions compared to the 2016 baseline. Additionally, Scope 1 and 2 GHG emissions intensity fell by 27% from an 2018 baseline through 2023, driven by operational efficiencies. Mitigation strategies emphasize fleet modernization and technological upgrades. Between 2018 and 2020, Matson invested $900 million in four new LNG-capable Jones Act vessels for its Hawaii service, which are projected to reduce GHG emissions by about 24% relative to conventional marine fuels. A further $1 billion investment supports three Aloha Class container vessels, scheduled for delivery in 2026 and 2027, equipped with Tier 3 engines that cut nitrogen oxide (NOx) emissions by up to 80% compared to older Tier 1 engines. LNG retrofits have been completed on the Daniel K. Inouye in 2023, with ongoing work on the Manukai and Kaimana Hila targeting 2024 completion. Complementary measures include alternative maritime power (AMP) shore power connections at ports in California and China to minimize auxiliary engine use, emissions capture barges in California, engine performance monitoring software, battery energy storage systems, and shaft generators for enhanced efficiency. Matson also supports industry-wide research into zero-carbon fuels and technologies.

Stakeholder Critiques and Industry Context

Environmental stakeholders, including the state of Hawaii and federal regulators, have critiqued Matson for its role in the September 2013 spill of approximately 233,000 gallons of molasses into Honolulu Harbor from a loading pipe malfunction during ship operations. The incident caused significant marine mortality, including fish, crabs, and corals, due to oxygen depletion in the water column, prompting public outcry over inadequate spill prevention measures. Matson pleaded guilty to two federal misdemeanor charges under the Clean Water Act and Rivers and Harbors Act, resulting in $400,000 in federal fines and $600,000 in restitution for affected parties like the Waikiki Aquarium. In a separate civil settlement with Hawaii, Matson paid over $15 million to cover state cleanup costs, environmental restoration including coral nursery development, and shutdown of its Honolulu molasses operations, marking one of the largest environmental violation settlements in state history. These events highlighted operational risks in bulk liquid handling and drew attention to potential lapses in Matson's port safety protocols. Broader critiques from policy analysts and economic think tanks target Matson's adherence to the Jones Act, arguing that the requirement for U.S.-built, -owned, and -crewed vessels fosters inefficiency, higher fuel consumption per ton-mile, and elevated emissions compared to international alternatives. This protectionist framework limits fleet options and modernization pace, potentially exacerbating the environmental footprint of domestic shipping routes to Hawaii and Alaska by discouraging competition from more fuel-efficient foreign vessels. While Matson has countered these concerns through fleet investments, such as four new Jones Act-compliant vessels with Tier 3 engines reducing emissions, critics maintain the Act delays broader industry shifts to low-carbon technologies. In the maritime industry context, ocean freight carriers like Matson operate amid mounting pressure to address shipping's 2.9-3% share of global greenhouse gas emissions, with projections indicating a potential rise to 5-8% by 2050 absent accelerated decarbonization. Key challenges include the slow scaling of alternative fuels like LNG or hydrogen, geopolitical disruptions hindering supply chains for green technologies, and inconsistent global regulations, as evidenced by the International Maritime Organization's (IMO) net-zero ambitions facing implementation gaps. Environmental NGOs and investors criticize the sector's incremental progress, noting that despite commitments like the IMO's 2050 targets, financial and infrastructural barriers—such as high costs for retrofits and port electrification—persist, with Jones Act routes adding domestic constraints on efficiency gains. Matson's reported 19% Scope 1 emissions reduction in 2023 aligns with industry trends toward dual-fuel vessels but underscores ongoing reliance on fossil-based operations amid these systemic hurdles.

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