• 2012 February 2 10:44

    Baltic Dry Index down 58% in January

    A leading indicator of the state of global trade - whose biggest dips have come just before global recessions -- is dropping like a lead anchor, International Business Times reports.
    Since the first business day of the year, the Baltic Dry Index, a proxy for worldwide business activity that gauges international shipping costs, has fallen 58.1 percent. At its current level of 680 index points, it is also only a few percentage points away from dropping below an all-time low of 663, a mark plumbed during the worst of the post-Lehman 2008 financial crisis.
    "The market has gone for a complete ball of sh-t," said Matthew Addington, a Johannesburg, South Africa-based dry cargo shipbroker for global shipping concern Clarksons PLC.
    The steep, sudden drop in the wonky index, which surveys companies involved in ship chartering along 26 globally significant sea routes and assesses the price of moving commodities through those lanes, is giving pessimistic market forecasters ammunition. Since the price of moving commodities goes up when the world economy is expanding, a move in the opposite direction, some market strategists are saying, should sound alarm bells.
    "This collapse looks similar to the falls we saw in the Baltic Dry ahead of the recessions of the late 1970s and early 1990s -- but this drop is actually steeper," Nick Bullman, managing partner at risk consultant Check Risks recently told Financial News, a Dow Jones & Co. Web site.
    "We don't really know" how well the index reflects the macroeconomic picture, said Frode Mørkedal, an Oslo-based shipping analyst for shipping-focused investment bank RS Platou Markets, whose views on the subject reflect those of other analysts, shipbrokers, chartering managers and commodity traders.
    The main reason why the index might no longer be a proper indicator of the near-term economic future: a glut in the number of ships introduced this month, which has produced an excess supply in shipping services and chopped shipping costs.
    "We've seen a big increase in supply, which has not helped, partly because of the fleet growth of new ships coming on," Mørkedal said, referring to a lagging buildup that persisted from the boom years but has been made much worse this month. A quirk in the way vessel prices are estimated has led shipowners to hold back on using just-delivered vessels during the last quarter of 2011, only to let a huge number set maiden voyages during the first few days of 2012.
    "If the ship is delivered in December, you want to postpone (using) it to January," Mørkedal said.
    Yet another market quirk, this one related to how iron ore is priced, has also affected the index, said Tim Jones, chief executive of France-based cargo brokerage Barry Rogliano Salles.
    The change in the pricing mechanism for that commodity "has meant that a lot of people at the end of the year were trying to get in as much as they could. There was a rush of iron ore in the last three months of the year and the market was really strong and then dropped off dramatically," said Jones.
    Other unusual developments have also piled on to make January a terrible month for the index. Bad weather in Brazil and Australia reduced harvests of agricultural commodities, depressing demand for ships. An unexpected ban on iron ore exports from one of India's mining regions, enacted earlier this month, had the same effect.
    And then there's the Chinese New Year, which took place earlier than usual, what some experts see as the worst of all possible times.
    "China has been off the market, basically. This is a one-week holiday where they close down everything," said Mørkedal. "They have been away, and they had been very active in the market during the autumn, especially for iron ore."
    Different For Each Country
    Because the Baltic Dry Index is global in scope, it also incorporates further "noise" from factors unique to specific countries. Such is the case of Brazil.
    A São Paulo-based chartering manager for a major international ship-owning group, who asked that his name be withheld as he was not authorized to discuss official business, explained how the situation in Brazil had decoupled from that facing other international markets, at least for a while.
    "Hedge-related chartering kept things pretty good through the 15th of January," the manager noted, "then it dropped." Still he was not worried about oversupply, which he said "affects lines in the Pacific first," as much as he was about commodity inflation, or a slowdown in the Brazilian economy.
    "I think it's the combination of everything" that drives the market, he said.
    Going Forward
    In the near future, experts expect the depressed scene in shipping to improve.
    "This week and next week when people (in China) are coming back to work again, you should assume that activity will pick up and rates will go up again," Mørkedal, the Oslo shipping analyst, said. "If things stay weak next week and onwards, then there's something wrong."
    The Brazilian shipping manager was optimistic as well, though he noted the agriculturally sensitive shipping lanes he deals with will probably take until March to really see shipping recover.
    Until then, those that follow worldwide shipping barometers, used to seeing their fortunes rise and fall with the wider economy, will keep living through the quirks in their industry one question at a time.
    "If you find someone that can tell exactly what's going on, do let me know," Addington, the Johannesburg shipbroker, said.

2024 July 16

18:02 China extends visa-free transit policy to 37 ports
17:25 Works on schedule for the Ravenna regasifier, with the plant operational in the first quarter of 2025
17:05 STX Heavy Industries changes name to “HD Hyundai Marine Engine”
16:45 OOCL's revenue rises 14pc to US$2.2bln
16:20 Saltchuk acquires all of the outstanding shares of Overseas Shipholding Group
15:57 EU sets four conditions for the port of Piraeus inverstments
15:41 Serbia to open tender for Prahovo port overhaul in 2024
15:37 EIB lends €90 million for sustainable expansion of the Port of Livorno
15:34 Crew of capsized oil tanker off Oman still missing
15:14 Lomarlabs signs with Cargokite to develop a new ship class of micro ships
14:47 Greece extends naval drills that deter Russian oil transfers - Bloomberg
14:08 The Official Journal of the European Union publishes the first-ever EU regulation to reduce methane emissions
13:24 High cat fines found in the Amsterdam-Rotterdam-Antwerp region bunker fuel samples, alerts CTI-Maritec
12:58 Yangzijiang Shipbuilding works to acquire over 866,671 sqm of land for new clean energy ship manufacturing base
12:42 GTT entrusted by Samsung Heavy Industries with the tank design of a new FLNG
10:47 Maersk signs an MoU for ship recycling in Bahrain

2024 July 15

18:06 European Shipowners and Maritime Transport Unions launch initiative to support shipping and seafarers in the digital transition
17:35 APM Terminals Mumbai switches to 80% renewable electricity
17:05 Seaspan Shipyards welcomes the formation of the “ICE Pact”
16:41 World’s first entirely hydrogen-powered ferry welcomes passengers in San Francisco Bay
16:26 FMC issues request for additional information regarding Gemini Agreement
16:24 Saipem awarded two offshore projects in Saudi Arabia worth approximately 500 million USD
16:12 Pecém Complex selects Stolthaven Terminals and GES Consortium as H2V Hub green ammonia operator
15:43 Singapore's bunker sales rise 8.5% in the first half of 2024
15:27 TORM purchases eight and sells one second-hand MR vessel
14:55 Adani plans to build port in Vietnam
13:35 Regulator gives conditional nod to HD Korea Shipping's purchase of stake in STX Heavy
13:02 HD Korea Shipbuilding wins US$2.67 billion order to build 12 container carriers
12:51 Maersk introduces SH3 ocean service between China and Bangladesh
12:24 ABS to сlass two new Seatrium FPSOs for Petrobras
11:42 CSP Abu Dhabi Terminal surpasses throughput of 5 mln TEUs
11:11 Fincantieri launches the seventh PPA “Domenico Millelire” in Riva Trigoso
10:51 India's first transshipment port receives its first container ship
10:35 The “Egypt Green Hydrogen” project in SCZONE wins a contract worth € 397 million to export green fuel to Europe

2024 July 14

15:17 FMC issues request for additional information regarding Gemini agreement
13:06 Lummus and MOL Group begin engineering execution on advanced waste plastic recycling plant in Hungary
10:51 Chinese line launches new Arctic container service to Arkhangelsk
09:49 Malta PM tours Abela toured MSC World Europa officially inagurates Valletta shore power

2024 July 13

15:47 €11 million for 1-MW Dynamic Electrolyser Unit
14:11 PSA Group and Singapore mitigate impact of global supply chain disruptions
12:23 NREL: Offshore wind turbines offer path for clean hydrogen production
10:06 MMMCZCS releases a technical, environmental, and techno-economic analysis of the impacts of vessels preparation and conversion

2024 July 12

18:00 Qingdao Port International to buy oil terminal assets for $1.30 billion
17:36 Saipem signs framework agreement with bp for offshore activities in Azerbaijan
17:06 AG&P LNG and BK LNG Solution signs an agreement to bring BKLS's first LNG spot cargo into China
16:31 Allseas removes final Brent platform with historic lift
15:58 ZPMC Qidong Marine Engineering launches the world’s largest FPSO bow section for Petrobras
15:25 MSC acquires Gram Car Carriers
14:58 ABP boosts marine capability through pilot launch upgrades
14:34 Fincantieri receives ISO 31030 attestation from RINA
13:52 Second new dual-fuel fast Ro-Pax ferry to enter service for Balearia after successful sea trials
13:24 ADNOC deploys AIQ’s world-first RoboWell AI solution in offshore operations
12:59 ABS issues AIP for new gangway design from Pengrui and COSCO
11:38 Port of Long Beach data project receives $7.875 mln to speed goods delivery
11:15 ZeroNorth to provide its eBDN solution on 12 barges operated by Vitol Bunkers in Singapore
10:46 Seatrium secures customer contract agreement from Teekay Shipping for the repairs and upgrades of a fleet of vessels
10:14 Liquid Wind and Uniper enter into strategic partnership to accelerate the development of eFuels

2024 July 11

18:06 Yanmar and Amogy to explore ammonia-to-hydrogen integration for decarbonized marine power
17:36 COSCO Shipping receives first 7500 CEU LNG dual-fuel PCTC
17:06 Monjasa adds two tankers and targeting West Africa’s offshore industry
16:34 Biden administration announces funding for 15 small shipyards in 12 states
16:10 Iran's Ports and Maritime Organization attracts nearly $1.7bln of investment in ports, maritime sector
15:52 The added value of Chinese port cities up to US$869.05 bln in 2023
15:25 HD Hyundai becomes first Korean shipbuilder to sign MSRA with US Navy
13:41 NovaAlgoma orders the world’s largest cement carrier
13:21 Steerprop selected to provide comprehensive propulsion systems for world's largest cable-laying vessel
12:41 Integrated Wartsila propulsion package supports decarbonisation and efficiency goals for James Fisher tankers
12:36 MABUX: Bunker Outlook, Week 28, 2024
12:10 Valencia Port Authority signs an agreement with C.N.E. Hydrogen and Fuel Cells to promote hydrogen research
11:41 Long Beach, Los Angeles ports partner for zero-emissions future