• 2012 August 27 16:49

    Samsung Heavy bonds to boost shipyards’ record

    Samsung Heavy Industries Co.  plans to offer 500 billion won ($440 million) of bonds next month as South Korean shipyards sell a record amount of debt to cope with a funding squeeze, Bloomberg reports.

    The company is preparing for the sale, it said in an Aug. 22 e-mail, without elaboration. Hyundai Heavy Industries Co.  , the world’s biggest shipyard, may also raise 1 trillion won through bonds, loans and other means, according to a Newspim report, citing unidentified industry officials. The shipbuilder declined to comment.
    South Korea’s three biggest shipyards have raised 2.4 trillion won in the bond market this year as a move away from building container and commodity vessels toward more time- consuming drill ships and offshore units leaves them waiting longer to get paid. Less money is also coming in because the economic slowdown is damping orders and letting customers win lower down payments.

    “There’s a temporary glitch in the cash flow,” said Um Kyung A, an analyst at Shinyoung Securities Co. in Seoul. “Orders have fallen drastically and there are no major deliveries scheduled this year.”

    Samsung Heavy, based in Seoul, dropped 0.3 percent to close at 38,100 won, the lowest since Aug. 3, on the city’s stock exchange. It has gained 37 percent this year. Hyundai Heavy climbed 1.3 percent today and Daewoo Shipbuilding & Marine Engineering Co.  fell 0.4 percent.
    Low Yields

    The shipyards are also taking advantage of near-record low bond yields to refinance maturing debt sold in 2009, according to Lim Jungmin at Woori Investment & Securities Co. in Seoul. That was the previous record year, with the three big shipbuilders raising 1.5 trillion won to cope with customers canceling or delaying orders amid the global recession.

    “The shipyards are opting to issue bonds at cheaper costs than bank loans,” Lim said. “They need to refinance the maturing bonds and they are pre-emptively raising capital to secure liquidity as the industry is in a downturn.”

    South Korean yields for three-year AA- corporate bonds, the benchmark according to the Korea Financial Investment Association, reached a record-low 3.35 percent on Aug. 3 after the central bank lowered the benchmark rate in July for the first time in three years. That compares with 5.67 percent for loans as of June, according to data from the Bank of Korea.
    Hyundai Heavy

    Hyundai Heavy has been the biggest seller of corporate bonds in South Korea this year, raising 1.75 trillion won, including 550 billion won through its refining unit. The Ulsan- based company, whose shipbuilding arm hadn’t sold any bonds since 2009, also raised 705 billion won selling part of its stake in Hyundai Motor Co. last month.

    The company’s shipbuilding and offshore orders fell 53 percent in the first seven months of the year. Full-year deliveries will also be the lowest since 2010, with the company and its affiliates handing over 135 vessels, predominately container vessels and tankers. There won’t be any deliveries of more lucrative drill ships and offshore units.

    Next year, the company will hand over five drill ships, which are used to explore for oil in deep waters. It will also install a $2.06 billion liquefied natural gas processing facility in Australia for Chevron Corp., completing a four-year project.

    Floating production units and drill ships account for almost 50 percent of order backlogs at Hyundai Heavy, Samsung Heavy and Daewoo Shipbuilding, the world’s three largest shipbuilders. That compares with about 30 percent at the end of 2010.
    Drill Ships

    Drill ships take about two years to build compared with about eight months for a capesize commodity vessel. They sell for about $600 million, more than 10 times the price of the capesize.

    The greater investment and time needed to build a drill ship can squeeze shipyards as customers traditionally pay in installments as work progresses, leaving the shipbuilder to finance each stage.

    The global order slump has exacerbated this trend as shipyards are offering more generous payment terms to win business, said Kim Hong Gyun, an analyst at Dongbu Securities Co. in Seoul. For instance, customers may get to pay 70 percent of the contract price on completion instead of spreading payments during the work, he said.

    “Shipyards don’t have the negotiating power like they used to,” Kim said. “Orders have slumped and financing has become more difficult. Things are more difficult now than in 2009.”

    Global shipbuilding orders fell 56 percent from a year earlier in the first seven months to 24.6 million deadweight tons, according to Clarkson Plc, the world’s biggest shipbroker. That was the lowest tally for the period since 1999.
    Samsung Heavy

    Samsung Heavy got $6.5 billion of orders in the first seven months, compared with $14.9 billion for the whole of 2011. The company sold 700 billion won of three- and five-year bonds in February with 4.16 percent and 4.39 percent coupons, respectively. It will deliver more than 10 drill ships next year compared with four this year.

    Daewoo Shipbuilding sold 500 billion won of bonds last month. The sale was to take advantage of low interest rates and to increase the availability of funds, it said by e-mail. The company is working on 20 of the world’s largest container ships, which were ordered by A.P. Moeller-Maersk A/S. The first five are due to be handed over next year, starting in June.

    The pickup in deliveries should end the funding squeeze for the shipyards, according to Park Moo Hyun, an analyst at E*Trade Securities Co. in Seoul.

    “The shipbuilders are going through a transition,” he said. “Liquidity issues will be resolved next year as more orders are completed and shipyards receive payments.”


2024 June 26

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17:31 NTU Singapore, PSA Singapore and Chiyoda Japan begin dehydrogenation demonstration for green heavy vehicles
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16:57 Russia's Sovcomflot says its ship rescued crew from tanker off Yemen
16:13 Venture Global launches its first LNG vessel
16:06 Solstad announces a new five-year contract for the CSV Normand Ocean with Prysmian Powerlink
15:46 Crowley christens the first fully electric tugboat in the U.S. at the Port of San Diego
13:52 ABP and Plug and Play to launch Energy Ventures Accelerator
13:15 AGR secures resourcing frame agreement with Repsol Norge
12:42 Seadrill completes divestment of jack-up rigs
12:19 NYK signs MoU with subsidiary of Pertamina for cooperation in liquefied CO2, LNG transportation and ship management
11:53 Cedar LNG announces positive final investment decision
11:24 Singapore port congestion shows global ripple impact of Red Sea attacks
10:44 Port Houston welcomes arrival of hybrid-electric cranes
09:59 OOCL names its latest 24,188 TEU eco-friendly vessel “OOCL Denmark”

2024 June 25

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15:56 Liquipar Operações Portuárias to invest $106m in the Port of Paranaguá
15:33 GTT receives an order from Hudong-Zhonghua Shipbuilding for the tank design of ten new very large LNG carriers
14:53 Hamburg Commercial Bank acquires NIBC’s shipping business
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13:22 TMC to supply ALS compressors to NYK’s LNG carriers
12:40 Danske Commodities and Solar Park Kasso sign agreement to optimise world’s largest commercial Power-to-X facility
12:03 Australian Government orders an additional two Guardian-class Patrol Boats for Pacific Maritime Security Program
11:44 Port Houston container volumes up 21 percent to 364,866 TEUs in May
11:03 Kongsberg Maritime expands its retractable thruster line
10:30 China-made icebreaker research vessel delivered in Guangzhou
10:10 Finnlines upgrades route between Sweden and Germany
09:46 Blue World completes successful testing of 200 kW maritime fuel cell system to run on green methanol

2024 June 24

18:06 World’s first methanol dual-fuel retrofit container ship delivered
17:10 New eco-friendly bulk carrier delivered to GOGL
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15:42 Global offshore wind capacity reaches 75 GW
15:26 Yemen's Houthis claim attack on four ships at Israel's Haifa port
14:56 Wison New Energies signs the EPCIC contract with Genting Group for the delivery of a FLNG facility
13:56 India's GRSE signs an agreement with Carsten Rehder Schiffsmakler and Reederei for the construction and delivery of four multi-purpose vessels
12:58 EU adopts 14th package of sanctions against Russia
12:33 Port of Valencia container volumes up 12.05% to 516,674 TEUs in May 2024
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11:32 Western Baltija Shipbuilding starts construction of the first hydrogen-electric ship for Klaipeda State Seaport Authority
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2024 June 23

15:42 Auramarine inks representative agreement with Hagedorn Products & Systems GmbH and Hagedorn Service & ENgineering GmbH, Germany
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2024 June 22

15:47 MSC launches new Dahlia service for Asia to Mexico trade
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2024 June 21

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17:53 Chinese shipyards’ plans for next-generation ships
17:41 Emanuele Grimaldi re-elected as Chairman of the International Chamber of Shipping
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12:43 Fincantieri and Viking sign contracts for two cruise ships
12:25 First of two new-generation emergency response vessels delivered to Hong Kong Fire Service
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