The secretive shipping magnate set to gain control of Britain’s biggest port
The Port of Felixstowe in Suffolk
MSC’s spending power could provide a major boost to Felixstowe - Joe Giddens/PA

Italian shipping magnate Gianluigi Aponte pulled off one of the transport deals of the decade with his $23bn (£18bn) agreement to buy 45 ports from Hong Kong billionaire Sir Li Ka-shing.

The acquisition, announced this month, will establish Aponte’s Mediterranean Shipping Co. (MSC) as the world’s biggest ports operator – continuing the rise of a once obscure company that last year overtook Danish rival Maersk to become the number one shipping line.

The purchase, backed by US investment house BlackRock, includes two key ports on the Panama Canal, and in so doing will effectively remove the vital link between the Pacific and Atlantic oceans from China’s sphere of influence.

It came weeks after Donald Trump complained that ownership of the ports by Sir Li’s Hong Kong-based Hutchison Group meant the canal was under de facto Chinese control, and indicated that he planned to address the situation.

Gianluigi Aponte
Gianluigi Aponte’s MSC will soon become world’s biggest port operator - Thomas Samson/AFP

Press coverage has largely focused on the Panama Canal portion of the deal given its link to Trump. However, the transaction will also impact the UK, with the Port of Felixstowe, Britain biggest, among the clutch of ports set to change hands.

The transaction comes at a challenging time for the 175-year-old complex at the mouth of the River Orwell in Suffolk, as it struggles to add capacity while suffering from a relative lack of investment compared with faster-growing rivals. The takeover has sparked hopes that Felixstowe’s publicity-shy new billionaire owner could revive its fortunes.

Mr Aponte, 84, was born in Sorrento and worked as the captain of a Naples to Capri ferry before buying his first cargo vessel in 1969 and founding MSC the following year.

The company moved its base to land-locked Switzerland in 1978, adding the cruise arm for which it is best known among the wider public a decade later and making a first foray into port operations in 2000. In the last few years it has even opened its own cargo airline.

The growth trajectory has seen Mr Aponte’s personal fortune swell to $37bn, according to Forbes, almost exactly the same as Sir Li’s.

While Mr Aponte remains MSC’s owner and chairman, the company has been led for a decade by his son Diego, who said of the Hutchison deal that it represented “a very viable investment”.

That qualified almost as verbose for MSC, which has a long history of eschewing public pronouncements.

The family and MSC executives almost never give interviews, while the group’s financial results were not made public until 2022, when documents relating to a bid for a rail company revealed that it had that year generated a net profit of €36bn on €86bn in turnover.