August
19, 2012: The financial weather forecast
for the shipping industry continues to show turbulence ahead. It was a
challenging period for the industry last quarter and the outlook remains the
same for the coming quarters.
Bruised
by a slump in trade, subdued freight rates and high fuel costs, shipping
companies reported moderate to flat growth last quarter. Industry experts say
the uncertainty in Europe and oversupply of new tonnage would continue to
squeeze the margins of ship owners at least for the next few months, with a lot
depending on how Chinese trade moves forward.
LONG-TERM BENEFITS
However,
ship owners, who tilted more in favour of long-term contracts, could manage to
get better yields, as the spot market continued to be relatively more
depressed.
For
instance, almost the entire fleet of Essar Shipping, which reported a 186 per
cent increase in its first quarter net profit at Rs 53.9 crore, is in the
long-term market. “This (strategy) is keeping us going strong. A tanker on a
one-year time charter, for instance, earned between $18,000 and $21,000 a day,
while the same asset on the spot market could hardly get $4,000 a day,” A.R.
Ramakrishnan, Managing Director of the company, said.
Great
Eastern Shipping, on the other hand, has 78 per cent of its dry bulk fleet and
44 per cent of its tankers on the spot market.
“Time
charter rates have not improved significantly, but (even then) we decided to
fix a couple of ships at reasonable rates for three to five years period. Some
of these vessels were in the Aframax asset class,” G.Shivakumar, Group Chief
Financial Officer (CFO), said in a post-results analysts conference call.
TEMPORARY GAINS
The
April-June quarter started off on a brighter note, both for tanker and dry bulk
ship owners. Tanker rates inched up in the first half of the quarter as Saudi
Arabia stepped up crude production and the Iran tension heightened, prompting
refineries to tank up additional oil. But this increase in rates was soon
quelled as new vessels entered the market to chase this marginal rise in demand
for crude movement — there was an estimated six per cent year-on-year fleet
addition. In the dry bulk segment, a slight revival in steel and minor bulk
trades moved up rates for smaller vessels a tad.
However,
slowdown in iron ore exports from Brazil to Asia kept the bigger ships at bay.
This got reflected in the movement of Baltic Dry Index, which tracks cost of
movement of dry bulk cargoes across key ocean routes. The index rose from an
average of 1,021 in April to 1,101 in May and then slid to 937 in June.
Similarly, in the tanker segment, rates for a very large crude carrier rose
from an average of $13,348 a day in March 2012 to $17,368 in April, only to
slip to $16,362 in May and $7,085 in June.
TYC LOWER
Although
relatively less volatile, the average TCY (Time Charter Yield) for the quarter was
also lower across segments. For dry bulk ships, the TCY slipped from $16,569 a
day in the first quarter of 2011-12 to $11,076 last quarter, a fall of 33 per
cent.
Similarly,
product carriers saw their TCY dipping 16 per cent to touch an average $13,770
during the first quarter of this fiscal from $16,326 in the year-ago period.
For
crude carriers, the fall was comparatively less at four per cent — from $20,097
to $19,302 in the first quarter of this fiscal. Ship owners see no marked
improvement in rates in the rest of the year. “Overall, I think for both the
dry bulkers and tankers, freight rates are going to be under pressure in the
next few months,” Ramakrishnan said. In the tanker category, analysts feel that
any disruption in the Strait of Hormuz by Iran could have an impact on the
tanker movement in the region. OPEC expects oil demand to grow only by 0.82
million barrels a day (mb/d) in 2013, as compared to 0.9 mb/d in 2012. A senior
official of Shipping Corp of India (SCI) expected the freight market to pick up
only from the second quarter of 2013.
“Bunker
costs have gone up substantially compared to the year-ago period. Given the
current market scenario, we have done our best,” he said.
SCI
reported a net loss of Rs 54.87 crore for the quarter, the second successive
quarter the firm was in negative territory. Experts agree that supply of new
vessels and scrapping of old vessels will play a crucial role in movement of
freight rates for the rest of the year.
“Scrapping
activity is continuing, but is still not a very significant number. On and off
you see 16 to 17-year-old ships getting scrapped, but unfortunately scrapping
activity has not really picked up.
Scrapping
for the first half of the year is about 6.5 million tankers, which is not a
very large number,” Shivakumar pointed out.
While
on the one hand scrapping was lesser than expected, new vessels continued to
join the existing fleet chasing the same cargo. It is estimated that the
product tanker fleet grew three per cent year-on-year (yoy), while the dry bulk
fleet saw 15 per cent yoy additions during the quarter.
ASSET PRICES FLAT
The
industry has not seen any significant improvement in asset prices due to these
inadequate scrapping trends.
Asset
prices are mostly flat and were marginally down by five to 10 per cent only
across certain segments, prompting ship owners to be cautious in their
acquisition programmes.
The
bottom-line for the shipping industry is thus clear — it will have to sail
through a rough weather at least for some more months, before expecting clear
blue skies again.
Source: Hindu Business Line. By Amit Mitra (amitmitra@thehindu.co.in). 19 August
2012
http://www.thehindubusinessline.com/industry-and-economy/logistics/article3795855.ece
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