Sponsored By

The tides of MarchThe tides of March

The economics of most of the shipping industry continue to ebb away from any profitability, temporary or sustained. The tanker sector is the only major one that seems to be maintaining operating profits in both crude and products despite the uncertainty of the crude oil price.

Marcus Hand, Editor

March 27, 2016

3 Min Read
Kalyakan - stock.adobe.com

The substantial drop in the crude oil price last year has not however increased demand but adjusted some routes. The US allowing its crude to be exported has had little or no effect on shipping as the US oil is expensive and is of a type that has limited refining options.

China has reduced its consumption in line with its reduced manufacturing and its new five-year plan indicates no return to the recent levels in any of their commodity imports.

Efforts by OPEC to freeze production, and thereby stabilize the oil price has not been successful, and the return of Iran to the markets, with its own tanker fleet and a new orderbook, has so far failed to stabilize the crude oil markets.

The dry bulk markets remain grossly oversupplied with ships at this time when almost all the commodity markets and the principal producers are facing historic lack of demand. There can be no recovery in sight for dry bulk shipping whilst this continues and once again it is the Chinese demand that has collapsed.

Enormous losses are being faced by the equity and hedge funds, along with many banks, because of the reckless ordering of new dry bulk ships without any contractual employment for them or any clear idea what the ships would do apart from “trade in the spot markets”.

The commodity owners and their customers are profiting from the absurd rates that some owners are accepting for their ships and efforts need to be made to at least not accept rates below operating break-even.

Laying up a ship is cheaper than trading it at daily losses of several thousand dollars and with no recovery in sight the other alternative is to sell the ship.

The container sector is also in deep trouble as it continues its questionable focus on the projected economics of scale by ordering more giant ships that can only operate in a few deep-ocean ports, and have limited backhaul cargoes.

Currently several million teu of ships are laid-up and even some of the giants are “out of service”. Once again we have fleets built without regard for demand and now facing the effects of a global economic recession.

Shipping is a servant to world trade and given the enormous problems in the Middle East, the slow-down in China and the recessions in Europe and South America it needs to trim its own sails accordingly.

Well established owners with strong financials will be able to secure time charters, the key contracts of the industry, with charterers who recognize the need for quality shipping.

Past shipping recessions have produced strong profitable shipping companies that provide the services that are essential to the charterer and recognize the variables that can occur in operating ships.

Simply looking at the possible variables in the ship’s values is a pure gamble that has caused most of today’s problems and more so because it has been dome publicly.

About the Author

Marcus Hand

Editor

Marcus Hand is the editor of Seatrade Maritime News and a dedicated maritime journalist with over two decades of experience covering the shipping industry in Asia.

Marcus is also an experienced industry commentator and has chaired many conferences and round tables. Before joining Seatrade at the beginning of 2010, Marcus worked for the shipping industry journal Lloyd's List for a decade and before that the Singapore Business Times covering shipping and aviation.

In November 2022, Marcus was announced as a member of the Board of Advisors to the Singapore Journal of Maritime Talent and Technology (SJMTT) to help bring together thought leadership around the key areas of talent and technology.

Marcus is the founder of the Seatrade Maritime Podcast that delivers commentary, opinions and conversations on shipping's most important topics.

Conferences & Webinars

Marcus Hand regularly moderates at international maritime events. Below you’ll find a list of selected past conferences and webinars.

Get the latest maritime news, analysis and more delivered to your inbox
Join 12,000+ members of the maritime community

You May Also Like