Ship Owner Genco Says Commodity Freight Rates Set to Spike

An owner of commodity hauling freighters said rates for the ships could spike sharply higher and mirror an unprecedented surge in costs for transporting manufactured goods.

Spot rates for container ships to move manufactured products have surged for 20 straight weeks and now stand 731% above their seasonal average over the prior five years, according to Drewry Shipping. John Wobensmith, the president and chief executive officer of Genco Shipping & Trading Ltd., said that prices to move commodities — which have already rallied sharply this year — may follow a similar cycle in the coming years with not enough ships being built to meet demand.

“You do get to a point, and you’ve seen this in containers, where you hit a certain utilization rate and you start to go parabolic on rates,” he said in an interview. “I think we’re getting close to that period.”

Container rates have climbed because of snarled supply chains and extra trade that have strained the fleet’s capacity as economies emerge from the worst of Covid-19. The boom reached into every corner of the global economy because merchant fleet handles about 80% of the world’s traded goods.

With more than 5 billion tons of dry commodities moved each year in so-called bulkers — things like iron ore, coal, grains, steel and lumber — a surge in dry freight would affect industries that produce and process everything from raw materials and crops.

Rates for giant Capesize carriers had their biggest single-day surge since 2008 on Monday, reaching $52,908 a day. Wobensmith said demand is currently outpacing vessel supply, which will remain low for years with shipyard orders mostly led by container ships.

Earnings remain well below the 2008 peak — in excess of $200,000 a day just before the global recession hit — and Wobensmith doesn’t anticipate them to get that high this time around. He also expects the situation to calm down again early next year as demand troughs seasonally.

“You need very little demand growth to just continue to build off what we’ve seen this year,” he said. “It’s more about higher highs and higher lows than anything else.”

 

Bloomberg

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