‘Shipshape 10’ News for Week Ending April 22nd, 2017

‘Shipshape 10 List’, a list of news and articles published in the current week that a senior executive in shipping, shipping finance, commodities, energy, supply chain and infrastructure should had noticed; news and articles that are shaping the agenda and the course of the maritime industry.

Sometimes seemingly tangential, periodically humorous, occasionally sarcastic, sporadically artistic, inferentially erotic, but always insightful and topical.

And, this week’s ‘Shipshape 10’:

The dry bulk and commodities market had a difficult week overall; high inventories and weakening demand are the short-term drivers to blame :

1a.Baltic Dry Index Falls Almost 4%, Biggest Loss Since Mid-December (Reuters via gCaptain)

1b. Dry Bulk Freight Market: The Best Is Yet To Come (Seatrade Maritime)

1c. Iron Ore Price Tumbles To A Near Six-Month Low (Financial Times)

In the tanker market, a legal twist to the market consolidating forces; the article in Lloyd’s List quoting Basil Karatzas:

2a. Tanker Wars — The Empire Strikes Back (Lloyds’s List)

2b. Frontline Sues DHT (Splash 24/7)

3c. U.S. Court Rejects Frontline’s Last-Minute Bid To Stop BW-DHT Deal (gCaptain)

An iconic name in the German shipping world is in restructuring while one of their sponsored companies has been on the block; lots of head-scratching for the logic supporting the acquisition and the price paid for it; but shipping is a gutsy industry:

4a. Rickmers Group Reaches Restructuring Agreement (Maritime Executive)

4b. Navios Partners Buys Bankrupt Rickmers Maritime Boxship Fleet For $113m (Seatrade Maritime)

And, speaking of consolidation, a Korean shipbuilder got a new lease on life:

5a. Korea Avoids Daewoo Shipwreck (Bloomberg)

5b. Keeping DSME Afloat Bondholders Enforced To Agree On Reviving Daewoo Shipbuilding (Business Korea)

An interesting in-depth article in the Wall Street Journal on the Port of Lazaro Cardenas on the west coast of Mexico; APM’s ambitious terminal to build a strong base just outside the US to by-pass any Jones Act requirements have been cut short by a possible border import tax:

6. Trump’s Trade Plans Spell Uncertainty For Mexican Port (The Wall Street Journal)

Keeping an eye on a crucial commodity for shipping, grains, still at the intersection of government policy:

7a. U.S. Farmers, Who Once Fed The World, Are Overtaken By New Powers (The Wall Street Journal)

7b. Russian Agriculture Sector Flourishes Amid Sanctions (Financial Times)

7c. American Farm Belt Anxious About Trump Trade Threats (Financial Times)

Keeping an eye on another crucial-to-shipping commodity, oil, where it seems there are diverse opinions on the state of the market; good luck to the tanker owners deciphering the market, while the Eni-Libya article should emanate good news for the aframax tanker market:

8a. Oil’s Slide Towards $50 A Barrel Slows (Financial Times)

8b. Oil Dives Below $50 As Confidence In Opec Wavers (Financial Times)

8c. OPEC Sees A World That Still Has Too Much Oil (Bloomberg)

8d. Eni-Operated Libya Oil Field To Re-Open After Two-Year Halt (Bloomberg)

8e. Saudi Aramco Chief Warns Of Looming Oil Shortage (Financial Times)

And, shipping, besides financial, market and regulatory risks, definitely have to deal with operational risk too; two million barrels of crude oil in a supertanker grounded can easily turn into a nightmare:

9. Salvors Working To Refloat Grounded VLCC In Java Sea (gCaptain)

Taking a looking on the US domestic commodities, energy and shipping markets, some strong headlines point to very diverse directions:

10a. Blackstone To Buy Permian Basin Pipelines For $2 Billion (Bloomberg)

10b. Coal Shipments Lift CSX Earnings In First Report With New CEO (The Wall Street Journal)

10c. Princess Cruises Sentenced To Pay $40 Million Fine For Pollution Scheme (Miami Herald)

And, for those with a literary bone to nourish:
Literature’s Arctic Obsession The Greatest Writers Of The Nineteenth Century Were Drawn To The North Pole. What Did They Hope To Find There? (The New Yorker)

And, for those with travel flexibility, please join us next week at George Town, Grand Cayman, Cayman Islands, for the 2nd Cayman Maritime Week; Basil Karatzas will present at the 5th Mare Forum Cayman Shipping and Yachting Summit on the implications of the Trump Administration to the shipping industry.

A pretty face of the cruising industry. Image credit: Karatzas Images


© 2013 – present Basil M Karatzas & Karatzas Marine Advisors & Co.  All Rights Reserved.

IMPORTANT DISCLAIMER:  Access to this blog signifies the reader’s irrevocable acceptance of this disclaimer. No part of this blog can be reproduced by any means and under any circumstances, whatsoever, in whole or in part, without proper attribution or the consent of the copyright and trademark holders of this website.Whilst every effort has been made to ensure that information herewithin has been received from sources believed to be reliable and such information is believed to be accurate at the time of publishing, no warranties or assurances whatsoever are made in reference to accuracy or completeness of said information, and no liability whatsoever will be accepted for taking or failing to take any action upon any information contained in any part of this website.  Thank you for the consideration.

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‘Shipshape 10’ News for Week Ending March 26th, 2017

‘Shipshape 10 List’, a list of news and articles published in the current week that a senior executive in shipping, shipping finance, commodities, energy, supply chain and infrastructure should had noticed; news and articles that are shaping the agenda and the course of the maritime industry.

Sometimes seemingly tangential, periodically humorous, occasionally sarcastic, sporadically artistic, inferentially erotic, but always insightful and topical.

And, this week’s ‘Shipshape 10’:

Talking about destruction of value for the sellers…
1. Borr Drilling to buy Transocean’s jack-up rig fleet for $1.35bn (Seatrade Maritime)

and, the riskiness of the offshore drilling markets…
2. Shell’s Titanic Bet: Can Deep-Water Drilling Be Done on the Cheap? (The Wall Street Journal)

when, oil majors start thinking beyond oil…
3. Big Oil Replaces Rigs With Wind Turbines (Bloomberg)

But, some shipowners too think cleaner energy
4a. World’s First LNG-Fuelled Aframax Tankers Ordered (The Maritime Executive)

4b. Crowley Launches LNG-Powered Con/Ro for Jones Act Trade (The Maritime Executive)

But, in the mainstream shipping world, another week, another bailout or blowout …
5a. Korean Shipbuilder Seeks Another Bailout (The Wall Street Journal)

5b. Daewoo Shipbuilding: deep water (Financial Times)

or a dugout…
6. Maersk Line, Hapag-Lloyd Among Carriers Subpoenaed in U.S. Price-Fixing Probe (The Wall Street Journal)

But, some publicly listed companies going long the market, but paying in paper mostly, no hard cash…
7a. BW Sells All Its VLCCs to DHT Holdings (Splash 24/7)

7b. Golden Ocean Inks Agreements to Buy Quintana Shipping’s Entire Fleet (Seatrade Maritime)

A highly recommended private equity fund implodes; only noteworthy to shipping since they were the first to enter shipping in JV-style post financial crisis looking for distressed value; Euromar platform with publicly listed Euroseas (Ticker: ESEAS)
8. Eton Park to Shut Down as $3 Trillion Hedge Fund Industry Faces Turmoil (The New York Times)

Looking for maritime college education, look no further than the State University of New York Maritime College at Fort Schuyler, just outside New York City.
9. The Young Mariners of Throgs Neck (The New York Times)

And, finally, a story when passion and avocation turn into a (profitable) vocation. We could not argue against seafood and especially New England lobster!
10. A Restaurant’s Sales Pitch: Know Your Lobster (The New York Times)

Sovcomflot’s Products Tanker MT ‘Anichkov Bridge’ entering the Upper New York Harbor with the Manhattan skyline in the background. Image credit: Karatzas Images.

© 2013 – present Basil M Karatzas & Karatzas Marine Advisors & Co.  All Rights Reserved.

IMPORTANT DISCLAIMER:  Access to this blog signifies the reader’s irrevocable acceptance of this disclaimer. No part of this blog can be reproduced by any means and under any circumstances, whatsoever, in whole or in part, without proper attribution or the consent of the copyright and trademark holders of this website.Whilst every effort has been made to ensure that information herewithin has been received from sources believed to be reliable and such information is believed to be accurate at the time of publishing, no warranties or assurances whatsoever are made in reference to accuracy or completeness of said information, and no liability whatsoever will be accepted for taking or failing to take any action upon any information contained in any part of this website.  Thank you for the consideration.

‘Shipshape 10’ News for Week Ending October 30, 2016

After some long absence, we return to our blog and hereby we are establishing Shipping’s ‘Shipshape 10 List’, a list of links to news and articles that were published in the current week that encompass all the information a top executive in shipping, shipping finance, commodities, energy, supply chain and infrastructure should had read in the week.

Sometimes tangential, sometimes humorous, sometimes sarcastic, but always insightful and topical.

Hope you enjoy it!                                                                                                                      
1. Reuters Exclusive: Deutsche Bank among bidders for HSH Nordbank’s debt portfolio (Reuters)                                                                                                      Another week, another shipping bank transaction

2. Wall Street Journal: Maritime Nations Agree to Cut Pollution From Ships in 2020 (Wall Street Journal Logistics Report)                                                                  Forcing lower emissions with the shipping industry, this IMO regulation can act as a catalyst for developments that should had happened sometime ago

3. IMO: No Final Climate Plan Until 2023 (The Maritime Executive)
Fast, but not so fast. SOx bad, COx can take longer… Go figure!

4. IMF Estimates Restructuring Cost at W31 trillion (US$ 27 billion) for S. Korea’s shipping and shipbuilding industries (Korea Times)                                                     S. Korea’s aggressive strategy  in  shipping and shipbuilding industries will need major resources to weather a bad cycle after developments with Hanjin Shipping, Hyundai Merchant Marine, Daewoo Shipbuilding and Marine Engineering, …

5. Blystad readies $100 million dry bulk bing with OTC filing at Oslo Bors (Splash 24/7)
Trying to crack open the capital markets in this weak market; hoping that more will emerge, successfully.

6. The Tale of Two Canals – Game Theory in Action (Splash 24/7)                               The Suez Canal announced a new payment structure for canal dues, trying to position more competitively against the new Panama Canal locks and capacity.

7. Maersk, MSC to Charter Nine Former Hanjin Ships (The Wall Street Journal Logistics Report)
Looking for solutions and cashflows in the wake of Hanjin’s receivership filing with strategically placed charterers; but at what price?

8. Hyundai Merchant Marine Bids for Hanjin (The Maritime Executive)
Hanjin assets and routes and business up for sale; co-patriot Hyundai Merchant Marine should logically be the strongest contestant in this weak market

9. Wind and solar advance in the power war against coal (The Economist)

10. Titanic locker key sold for £85,000 at auction (BBC News)
More than a century later, the ’unsinkable ship’ keeps captivating

Bonus Feature: Two Offen-linked MR Tankers on the Sales Block (Lloyd’s List) Karatzas Marine Advisors & Co and Toepfer Transport GmbH have been given joint-exclusive mandate by the Insolvency Administrator in Germany for the sale of MT ‘CPO Japan’ and MT ‘CPO Korea’

mv-kriti-i-8-bmk_7261

All the SOx and Nox and COx of the world… Not a day too soon for the IMO to act. Image credit: Karatzas Images


© 2013-2015 Basil M Karatzas & Karatzas Marine Advisors & Co.  All Rights Reserved.

IMPORTANT DISCLAIMER:  Access to this blog signifies the reader’s irrevocable acceptance of this disclaimer. No part of this blog can be reproduced by any means and under any circumstances, whatsoever, in whole or in part, without proper attribution or the consent of the copyright and trademark holders of this website.Whilst every effort has been made to ensure that information herewithin has been received from sources believed to be reliable and such information is believed to be accurate at the time of publishing, no warranties or assurances whatsoever are made in reference to accuracy or completeness of said information, and no liability whatsoever will be accepted for taking or failing to take any action upon any information contained in any part of this website.  Thank you for the consideration.

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