Tuesday, December 27, 2011

A ship called ‘Arosa’


There has been an almost continuous series of headlines recently with eulogies for the death of early generation double-hull tankers, especially VLCCs.  No doubt that freight rates are low, and no doubt that asset prices have dropped by about 50% for this type of vessels in 2011.  But again, not all news is bad, and shipping life can be  as spicy as some of the Captain’s exotic port calls!

In 1993, the shipping company Neda Maritime of the Lykiardopulo Group received delivery of the good vessel MT ‘AROSA’, the second ever built double-hulled VLCC (291,000 DWT ordered at Hitachi Zosen in Japan.)  At that time, double hull vessels were still an avant-garde in shipping, without any record of expected commercial history or technical behavior, but mandated by OPA 90 and the Exxon Valdez accident.  At that time, newbuilding prices were in the low $90’s million, but the Lykiardopulo Group has had a reputation of building floating temples to the shipping gods, so the cost for this vessel was reported  at the time at just below $100 million (nominal prices).  Just a few weeks ago, the very same vessel under the same name and still under same ownership was sold to Thai interests at about $24 million for conversion to floating storage; similar vintage vessels had the unfortunate fate recently to face the ship breakers’ torch at a salvage price of around $20 million. 

If we were to assume that the vessel at her delivery was financed with standard terms of first preferred mortgage of about 60% leverage and eight year tenor at 6% annual interest, and employed on continuous one-year time charters (average rate over the last twenty years of about $35,000 per diem) and 95% utilization rate, and all other standard industry practices, the vessel would have generated less than 15% return for her owners, until her sale.  Not bad returns at all for such a shipping project, given that the vessel had to trade in the weak freight markets of late 1990’s and the first early years of this century, and of course the abysmal rates of the last couple of years.

It seems that despite the weak freight markets of recent and precipitous decline of asset prices, still long-term projects in shipping can be profitable on an operating basis if approached correctly: a good, traditional owner orders a high quality vessel from a good yard and trades the vessel through the cycles.  No ambitions of a) correctly timing the market, b) investing with a three-to-five year investment horizon (unlike some financial owners), c) utilizing the best financial engineering available or d) making money by building ‘cheap’ vessels.  So far, so good.

As it happens in shipping, there are often other aspects that make an interesting story even more so.  The calculations above are based on the assumption that the vessel was always employed at one-year rolling timecharters at prevailing rates.  In reality, there is at least one instance when this good vessel was fixed in the spot market to ExxonMobil in 2004 for a voyage from Middle East to Japan at about $230,000 per diem, or gross freight revenue of about $30 million; that’s proceeds from one trip!  And, sure there were a few similar equally profitable trades  during her career.  Thus, the IRR numbers above are good enough for forensic analysis without providing all the excitement and profits of the actual trading.

And, to reach deeply in the spice cabinet now, there have been rumors that at the top of the market, in early 2008, the owners had received offers for the sale of the vessel at $110 million, but such offer at the time was deemed to be on the low side and was accordingly rejected.  That’s true: a vessel delivered in 1993 at a cost of less than $100 million, fifteen years later, she was obtaining offers in excess of the construction cost (that’s the nature of shipping!) In retrospect, that would had been an ideal trade: cashing out on the vessel at the absolute top of the market after making a killing operating the vessel in the fertile years of the super-cycle (2004-2008) and just before the dive to the bottoms of the abyss.  But again, hindsight is always perfect.

In the Captain’s judgment, the moral of the story is that asset play and timing the market is always good but cannot always be depend upon to deliver ordinary returns.  But, it can deliver extra-ordinary returns! And, just because a vessel is sold in a bad market at a ‘perceived’ weak price, it doesn't mean that the owner necessarily lost money from the investment or they didn't make money!  Quite the opposite!

And a question to keep one up at night, whether for philosophical or commercial reasons: imagine the poor soul who made the offer to buy the vessel at the top of the market at the now exorbitant price of $110 million and the offer was rejected!  What would have happened today if they had bought the vessel?  How the investment return numbers above would look like?  Probably instead of profit, the very same sale price might have looked like the ‘haircut’ of the century! 

Was it luck? Was it karma?  Was it greed?  Was it perspicacity?  



© Basil M Karatzas, 2011.  No parts of this blog can be reproduced in any way by any means under any circumstances without the prior written approval of the owner of the blog.  Copyright strictly enforced.

This blog is only intended for entertainment and discussion purposes; no responsibility can be assumed for taking or failing to take any action upon information contained in any part of this blog.

Should you desire to discuss the content of the blog or obtain commercial advise or opinion, please feel free to contact us at info@bmkaratzas.com.

Friday, December 2, 2011

What would Onassis do?

Since the statement of 'What would X (please insert an unimpeachable authority of your choice) do?' has become a banality, the Captain could not resist the temptation but to ponder on what Onassis, a world renown shipping magnate and entrepreneurial figure par excellence would do in the present environment in shipping.

There is no question that freight rates are the lowest in the last decade, if not longer, and the dark clouds of poorly conceived and ill timed deliveries of new-built vessels compounded with a sickly world economic recovery make for a very inviting picture for investing in shipping.  The fact that shipping banks are plagued by a garden variety of banking problems of regulatorily deemed low capitalization and still high exposure to non-performing loans, whether real estate or elsewhere, and high political / sovereign / currency risk, especially in Europe, one would wonder why any reasonable investor wouldn't heavily be invested in shipping.  Something that even Onassis himself might be contemplating from a round corner in the big sky above the Scorpios Island right now.

Asset prices are as low as they have been in the last decade, at least. Ten-year old VLCC tankers trade at less than $40 million, at a time when their present salvage value is just below $ 20 million, and likely a newbuilding contract can be signed at $80 million or so. Based on a twenty-five year design life, a ten-year old vessel has fifteen years to trade.  The premium of today's market value over scrap is about $15 million, so, on a straight line, depreciation stands at one million dollars per annum, or about $3,500 per diem.  Assuming $10,000 per diem vessel operating expense, including dry-docking provision, the vessel has less than $15,000 per diem cash break-even point.  Wouldn't that low break-even be enticing enough to bring new buyers to the market?  

Of course, such game is not for everyone.  Charterers for VLCCs are very not very keen on tonnage right now, so buyers have to have deep enough pockets to add working capital to the project, as this may be required.  Additionally, a strong commercial name will be required to properly maintain, manage and assuringly trade the asset.  Any new comer will likely need to partner with an old shipping hand.  

And, of course, given that no banks today are keen to finance new clients, or even established clients, and definitely not ten-year old tankers, this is primarily a game for investors with their own equity, which in exchange, allows them to drive asset prices down.

It's tough to tell what Onassis would do under the circumstances.  There are tempting opportunities in shipping in terms of vessel pricing and vessel availability, just as when there were plenty of surplus vessels to be sold after WWII (Liberty vessels). Despite the gloomy prospects then, shipping minded and determined ship owners, including young upstarts, made out just fine.  This is what Onassis did then, but is THIS another exceptional entry point to the cycle? Sure, by the time shipping reaches the next port call, the answer will be clear...but likely by then the wind will be gone from the sails by then!



© Basil M Karatzas, 2011.  No parts of this blog can be reproduced in any way by any means under any circumstances without proper attribution or the prior written approval of the copyright holder of the blog.  Copyright strictly enforced.

This blog is only intended for entertainment and discussion purposes; no responsibility can be assumed for taking or failing to take any action upon information contained in any part of this blog.

Should you desire to discuss the content of the blog or obtain commercial advise or opinion, please feel free to contact us at info@bmkaratzas.com.