Houston Chronicle

Rates for oil tanker voyages soar amid geopolitic­al risks

- By Olivia Konotey-Ahulu and Firat Kayakiran

Nothing right now is stopping a surge in oil tanker rates that’s given owners of the vessels one of the biggest boosts in years.

Rates have rallied so high that a secondhand supertanke­r could theoretica­lly pay for itself in a couple of voyages, according to estimates from Clarkson Platou Securities AS. A normal payback period would often be about a decade. The combined market value of Frontline Ltd. and Euronav NV — two pureplay owners — has gained by 78 percent to $4.8 billion since mid-August.

Multiple forces, most of them geopolitic­al, are driving the rally in vessel earnings that reached a record on Friday. Probably the most important bull factor was U.S. sanctions on two units of a Chinese shipping company in September, placing a part of its fleet of oil carriers off-limits for traders. That fired up a freight market that had already gained due to increased Middle East tensions this year.

“This is an exciting dynamic that could create the foundation for a steady improvemen­t in rates and a sustainabl­e period of outsized cash generation,” said Robert Hvide Macleod, the chief executive officer of Frontline’s management company. “Given the geopolitic­al climate, we wouldn’t be surprised to see episodic periods where rates spike in the future as well.”

Daily rates for so-called very large crude carriers to ship oil to China from the Persian Gulf soared by 90 percent to $300,391 a day at the end of last week, according to data from the Baltic Exchange in London. Those same vessels, which can carry 2 million barrels of crude, were earning $25,000 a day just a month ago.

The latest surge began in late September following the Trump administra­tion’s sanctions on units of China COSCO Shipping Corp., the world’s largest merchant vessel owner. Traders were unclear about exactly which tankers were affected, making them wary of booking COSCO carriers even though only a unit was impacted.

The latest lift came from another moment of tension in the Middle East. Iran said on Friday that missiles hit one of the country’s ships in the Red Sea. The incident comes less than a month after an unpreceden­ted attack on Saudi Arabia’s oil industry, which prompted traders to rush for crude supplies from elsewhere.

Earnings for ships on the benchmark Persian GulfChina route began to pass the $100,000-a-day mark — already a very high level by historic standards — early last week. On Friday, the VLCC Ardeche, was booked for a journey in early November from the Middle East to Singapore at a rate equating to $327,853, excluding idle days, according to a fixture report listed by shipping pool Tankers Internatio­nal.

“It’s important to remember that rates were trending higher and well above our breakeven levels before the sanctions on COSCO added fuel to the fire,” Macleod said. “The fundamenta­ls were in place due to U.S. exports, falling vessel deliveries, the highest refinery growth in 40 years, and healthy oil demand.”

In addition to that, hundreds of tankers are to be fitted with equipment to help them to meet Internatio­nal Maritime Organizati­on sulfur-emissions rules that come into effect from January. Reports of some shippers shunning vessels that have called at Venezuelan ports in the past 12 months also played a part.

“Most people in the market haven’t seen this kind of market movement,” Jonathan Lee, chief executive officer at Tankers Internatio­nal, said of the rates rally. “It’s a unique situation but I think you’ve got to put this into perspectiv­e. What this is, is a cumulative effect of many things.”

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