Tanker Market A Mixed Bag During May

2017-06-16

Dirty tanker market sentiment was diverse in May reflecting a variation in average spot freight rates for different reported routes. Dirty spot freight rates’ movement varied on each reported class. VLCC rates dropped, Suezmax rates were flat and Aframax rates rose from those registered in the previous month. In May, VLCC rates declined by 15% as a result of tonnage oversupply in many regions combined with limited loading requirements. Suexmax spot freight rates managed to maintain rate stability despite general thin activities. Furthermore a reduction in transit delays added to the vessels’ spot availability and prevented average rates from registering any gains despite some improved sentiment towards the end of the month. Aframax, in contrast, showed improved rates in May compared to the previous month, reflecting higher rates on most routes on the back of port delays, replacements and higher chartering requirements, mainly in the Caribbean. The clean tanker market showed weakened sentiment in both directions of Suez as a result of thin tonnage demand for different classes of the market.

Spot fixtures

Preliminary May data shows that OPEC spot fixtures went up by 6.9%, compared with the previous month, to average 12.47 mb/d. Global spot fixtures rose as well by 3.6% in May, compared with the previous month, to average 17.66 mb/d. Fixtures on the Middle East-to-East route were up by 0.6% and on the Middle Eastto-West routes by 0.4 mb/d. In general, global chartering activity was up by 14.3% in reported destinations compared to the same month in 2016.

Sailings and arrivals

OPEC sailings rose by 0.36 mb/d, or 1.5%, in May compared to the previous month and were up by 0.12 mb/d compared to last year. Middle East sailings went up from the previous month by 0.25 mb/d and by 0.15 mb/d in comparison to last year. According to preliminary data, arrivals at the main importing regions in North American, European and West Asian ports showed an increase from the previous month, rising by 0.5%, 0.2% and 2.6%, respectively. While vessel arrivals in the Far Eastern ports declined by 1.8% in May compared to the previous month.

  

VLCC

The month started with VLCC freight rates edging down on several trading routes as activities in the market waned and tonnage list was prolonged. The weak sentiment had the greatest impact on VLCC spot rates, which despite occasional recoveries saw average spot freight rates in May drop by 15% compared to the previous month to stand at WS47 points. The VLCC rate decline in May came on the back of limited market activity as the number of stems was low combined with an increased surplus of ships. Spot freight rates came under further pressure even when June requirements came onto the market as the tonnage build up was increasing, therefore Middle East-to-East freight rates dropped by 14%, to stand at WS55 points, which was a decrease of 12% compared to the same month a year ago. Middle East-to-West freight rates followed the same pattern, though they experienced a higher drop of 16%, to stand at WS29 points, which is 25% lower compared to the same month in 2016. Freight rates for tankers operating on the West Africa-to-East route also dropped by 15% from the previous month. In general, the VLCC market in May suffered from a clear lack of demand and an oversupply of ships.

Suezmax

Unlike what was seen in the VLCC sector, Suezmax spot freight rates managed to maintain rate stability in May, despite generally thin activity and a discouraging chartering environment, as the cargo requirements were scarce, while the tonnage build up kept growing. These facts, combined with a reduction in transit delays in the Turkish straits, prevented freight rates from increasing during the month. As a result, average Suezmax spot freight rates stood at WS72 points, similar to the previous month. In West Africa, spot freight rates for tankers operating on the West Africa-to-US Gulf Coast route dropped by 3% to stand at WS75 points as activity dropped mainly for third decade loadings allowing charterers to exert further pressure on rates. Spot freight rates for tankers operating on the Northwest Europe (NWE)-to-US Gulf Coast (USGC) route went up by 5% to average WS69 points on the back of an occasionally strengthening market in the USGC and the Caribbean. Despite the monthly drops, Suezmax rates on both routes remained higher than those registered on the same routes in the previous year.

Aframax

Aframax fright rates were the only class in the dirty tanker segment, which showed improved rates in May compared to the previous month. On average, Aframax freight rates increased by 11%, as rates on most reported routes reflected growth in May. The higher rates for Aframax encouraged Suezmax chartering as an economic alternative as it suffered from a lack of orders.

The markets in the Black Sea and the Mediterranean strengthened in May as chartering activity picked up, leading to thinner vessel supply. Furthermore, replacement requirements and delays at the Italian port supported the gains in the Mediterranean area. Therefore, freight rates for tankers operating on the Mediterranean-to-Mediterranean and Mediterranean-to-NWE routes edged up by 11% and 15% to average WS116 and WS113 points, respectively. In the Caribbean, rates showed the highest growth during May in comparison to other regions. Spot freight rates went up on the Caribbean-to-US East Coast (USEC) route by 20% from the previous month to stand at WS123 points and higher rates were registered on the back of replacements fixtures combined with a pickup in activity levels. In contrast, Aframax freight rates to eastern destinations were the only exception to the general trend in May, dropping by 4% for tankers trading on the Indonesia-to-East route to average WS97 points.

Source: Nikos Roussanoglou, Hellenic Shipping News Worldwide

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