Small Ships the Potential Bright Spot in Miserable Dry Bulk Market
The
latest Dry Bulk Freight Forecaster from Maritime Strategies
International (MSI) reports a deterioration of the consultancy’s
cautiously optimistic view for improvement in the dry bulk market in the
next six months.
Misery piled on misery for dry bulk owners in January as spot and
timecharter rates reached new lows. Demand plummeted for a majority of
dry cargoes and in the iron ore markets, a temporary hiatus in activity
at Tubarao briefly dented Brazilian exports, whilst Australian exports
were curtailed by weather disruptions during the cyclone season.
The beginning of the year is typically marked by a spike in
recorded vessel deliveries, and January 2016 was no exception.
Deliveries surged to 7.2m dwt, more than double average monthly
deliveries during 2015. This was partly offset by a jump in vessels
scrapped to 4.6 m dwt, the largest total since 5.6 m dwt was demolished
in April 2015.
Positive news is limited to the demand side and centred around
strong expectations for grains exports from Latin America. The
International Grains Council forecasts a year on year increase of 14% in
the 2015/16 crop year, the impact of which will be concentrated in Q2
and likely to magnified by technical factors.
MSI also expects iron ore trade will improve beyond March as
supplies improve from Australia and Brazil, prices fall and Chinese
production declines.
Will Fray, Senior Analyst at MSI said, “MSI’s assessment has taken a
step back given recent news over the state of the coal market, in
particular Indian imports; without a recovery in coal trade this year,
it is unlikely that spot rates will reach double figures for any bulker
benchmark over the next six months, even Capesize vessels.”
The positive impact of stronger Latin American grains trade will be
leveraged by increased port congestion. In 2013, delays reached nearly
100 days at Paranagua port and whilst measures have been taken to
prevent a repeat occurrence, port waiting times are already up to 50
days.
This will be partly offset by Malaysia's three-month ban on Bauxite
mining, which came into effect on the January 15. Port stockpiles will
continue to be shipped, but overall MSI expects a delayed removal of
about 1.5-2m tonnes of short-haul exports per month.
MSI remains cautiously optimistic for geared bulkers when compared
with the very weak outlook presented by the current FFA curve,
forecasting Supramax spot rates of $6,000/day in July, compared with
current July contracts in the FFA market of $4,900/day.
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