News was prepared under the information support of Online Daily Newspaper on Hellenic and international Shipping "Hellenic Shipping News". |
29 Aug 2008
The cost of shipping Middle East crude to Asia may advance from a three-week high as owners delay leasing their vessels and demand strengthens. An increase in vessel bookings since last week has reduced the supply of carriers that can load cargoes next month, Charlie Fowle, a director at London-based shipbroker Galbraith's Ltd., said in an e-mailed note Friday.
``Owners now have the confidence to take it up and hold off offering,''
Fowle said. Recent gains are taking the market ``to what it should be''
after the benchmark rate for Saudi Arabian cargoes to Japan plunged as
much as 73 percent between July 1 and Aug. 21, he said.
Sinochem Corp., China's largest chemicals trader, hired the tanker
Darab for 90 Worldscale points, according to a report today from
Athens-based Optima Shipbrokers. That's little changed from the Baltic
Exchange's benchmark rate of 90.31 points for cargoes to Asia.
Worldscale points are a percentage of a nominal rate, or flat rate, for
more than 320,000 specific routes. Flat rates for every voyage, quoted
in U.S. dollars a ton, are revised annually by the Worldscale
Association in London to reflect changing fuel costs, port tariffs and
exchange rates.
Each flat rate assessment gives owners and oil companies a starting
point for negotiating hire rates without having to calculate the value
of each deal from scratch.
A rate of 90.31 Worldscale points equates to daily rental income after
fuel and port fees are paid out of $27,705 a day for the average very
large crude carrier, or VLCC, according to the London-based Baltic
Exchange.
The index fell to 65.94 points on Aug. 21 from 244.53 on July 1. Daily
rental income from the ships dropped to about $5,290 on Aug. 22,
according to the exchange.
Frontline Ltd., the world's biggest VLCC operator, said Aug. 21 it
needs $31,400 a day, including finance costs, to break even on each of
its supertankers. Excluding fuel and port costs, daily expenses such as
crew, insurance and routine repairs total $11,500 per ship, Frontline
said.
Source: Alaric Nightingale, Bloomberg