Oil-tanker companies may demolish the most ships
since 2003, lifting charter rates from their lowest in at least 14 years, as
values of older vessels trade 36% above the price of scrap.
The cost of 15-year-old tankers fell 48% to
$23.5 million this year as scrap values advanced 3% to $17.25 million, the
narrowest gap in at least 5 years, according to data from the world’s 2 largest
shipbrokers. Owners may break up 5% of the fleet within 18 months, the most in 9
years, said Michael Pak, an analyst at Clarkson Capital Markets LLC in Houston .
While scrapping would reduce the glut and raise
rates, it won’t be enough to make ships profitable. Freight derivatives, traded
by brokers and used to bet on future rates, anticipate a 68% jump to $12,817 a
day in 2013 compared with the average so far this year. That’s still 43% of
what Frontline Ltd., the biggest operator, says it needs to cover costs. 16 months
of unprofitable charters and falling ship values are lowering expectations from
as recently as 3 months ago, when analysts anticipated fewer demolitions.
“Owners’ perceptions are changing as we speak,”
said Charlie Fowle, chairman of London-based shipbroker Galbraith’s Ltd. “Even
those who are more bullish will think it’s not worth buying 15-year-old ships
if this market continues.”
Owners scrapped 8%of the very large crude carrier
fleet in 2003, according to Clarkson Research Services Ltd., a unit of Clarkson
Plc, the world’s biggest shipbroker. Rates surged 87%to $98,323 the following
year, its data show.
Crude Carriers:
Single-voyage rates for very large crude carriers,
hauling about 20% of the world’s oil, averaged $7,627 a day this year, compared
with $32,006 in 2010, according to the London-
based Baltic Exchange, which publishes costs along more than 50 maritime
routes. Rates settled at $12,200 yesterday. Longer-term contracts are also
unprofitable, with a 15-year-old tanker earning $16,000 a day on a one-year
accord, according to London-
based Clarkson.
Vessels in service since 1996 or earlier comprise
14% of the global fleet, which expanded 11 percent to 554 ships since the end
of 2008, according to data from Redhill, England-based IHS Fairplay. Owners
ordered the most new vessels in 4 decades in 2007 and 2008, when returns in the
spot market were 14 times higher than now. Hamilton , Bermuda-based Frontline will report
its 1st annual loss in 9 years for 2011, analyst estimates compiled by
Bloomberg show.
Double Hulls:
Owners will probably start demolishing older
double-hulled tankers before the end of this year, said Jens Martin Jensen, the
Singapore-based chief executive officer of Frontline’s management unit. It
would be the first time for the vessels, built with an extra layer of steel to
reduce the risk of spills, according to IHS Fairplay. Frontline’s fleet
includes three double-hulled tankers built in 1995.
Scrapping may be postponed should earnings improve.
Daily rates on the benchmark route to Japan from Saudi
Arabia jumped 19-fold to $10,479 last week after oil
companies and traders booked the most tankers to load Persian
Gulf cargoes in at least 7 years, according to data from
Galbraith’s. That’s 65% below Frontline’s break-even level.
Vessel Speeds:
Rising returns may encourage shipping companies to
sail faster, effectively increasing the number of ships competing for business.
The average VLCC is proceeding at 10.4 knots, compared with as much as 12.2
knots in 2008, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. Owners cut speeds when
rates decline to limit fuel costs.
Freight derivatives indicate the past week’s gains
won’t be sustained. While the December contract trades at $15,117 a day, 24%
more than now, rates are projected to decline for the next few months to $8,245
by April, according to data from Marex Spectron Group, a London-based broker of
the contracts.
The slump in tankers is being mirrored in ships
carrying other commodities and manufactured goods. Daily rates for capesizes,
hauling iron ore and coal, averaged $13,839 this year, below the $20,000 they
need to break even, Baltic Exchange data showed. An index reflecting charges
for 6 types of containers fell 38% since the start of April, data from the
Hamburg Shipbrokers’ Association showed.
Frontline Stock:
Shares of Frontline slumped 77% this year in Oslo , reducing its market
value to 2.66 billion kroner ($466 million) from 27.7 billion kroner in June
2008. The company will report a net loss of $112.7 million for this year, the
worst result since at least 1996, according to the mean of 19 analyst estimates
compiled by Bloomberg. The MSCI All-Country World Index of equities retreated
8.1% since the start of January.
Double-hulled tankers that were 15 years old were
sold for as much as $114 million in 2008, according to data from London- based Simpson, Spence
& Young Ltd., the second-largest shipbroker. The incentive to demolish the
ships now may be higher than suggested by the narrowing premium to scrap.
Clarkson’s assessment of the demolition value is
based on single-hulled tankers. Those with double hulls would be worth more
because they yield more steel, said Calum Kennedy, an analyst at the
shipbroker’s research unit in London .
The vessels also need surveys of seaworthiness every five years, which can cost
$1 million to $2 million, potentially adding to costs for buyers of older
transports, said Pak in Houston .
Tanker Scrapping:
Anyone buying an older tanker may also have more
difficulty in winning cargoes. Oil companies are increasingly favoring newer
vessels, which tend to be better maintained, said Per Mansson, the managing
director of Norocean Stockholm AB, a shipbroker in the Swedish capital.
“Owners have a challenging economic decision ahead
of them,” said Pak. “If your view is that we are going to be in this situation
for the next couple of years, if your horizon is a two- to three-year outlook
of depressed earnings, the decision becomes more and more compelling to scrap
the ship.”
To contact the reporter on this story: Alaric
Nightingale in London
at anightingal1@bloomberg.net
Source: Bloomberg.com. By Alaric Nightingale 15 November 2011
http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2011-11-15/oil-tanker-rates-seen-rising-as-scrap-values-speed-up-demolitions-freight.html
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