Tuesday, February 17, 2009
Some More Bad News For Dry Bulk Shippers
Posted by
Tyler Durden
at
2:42 PM
Excel Maritime came out with this bombshell earlier, claiming that two major charters have begun paying the company dayrates at half the agreed rate, and that Excel is seeking legal action. The Baltic Dry Index, which is a representation of blended spot and charter day rates for various bulk ships (Cape Size, Panamax, Handymax) has been easily the most volatile index in recent months, and a great representation of how investors can get the woodshed treatment when they lock in long-term prices when the underlying spot value can fluctuate by over 90%. This is exactly what has happened to charter customers of dry bulk shipping providers such as Excel, Genco and Eagle Bulk Shipping.
(Baltic Dry Index, aka roller coaster for masochists)
Where previously ore transporters would purchase day rates on charter instead of spot rate to establish a price ceiling (at a time when Day Rates were higher than $100,000/day for Cape Size tankers), now that spot day rates have dropped by over 80%, the charter customers find themselves overpaying by up to 100% relative to spot rates. And they are angry, kinda like renters in New York locked in with long term leases. If the Excel case is any indication, dry bulk companies that had been relying on charter rates to provide a downside price cushion, may now find themselves ensnared in lengthy and expensive litigation as more and more charters decide to simply pay whatever they feel. In the meantime, companies like Excel, which has $1.4 billion of debt to service, or Dry Ships, which has a staggering $3 billion of debt, are praying for decoupling and the skyrocketing of day rates, as their fleets currently operate at significantly cash flow negative levels.
As an aside, speaking of Dry Ships, the company's CEO is probably one of the most colorful executives (in a non-criminal sense) of any company today. After he sank his first company, he managed to grow Dry Ships from $10/share to $130, briefly entering the Forbes commodity billionaire club, and proceeded to ridicule all analysts and pundits who had previously made fun of his management skills at any and every possible venue, and provide ludicrous near-term profit projections. Ironically, with his stock at $4 again, a massively leveraged balance sheet, and bankruptcy staring him in the face, George has been somewhat quiet lately, proving his critics right once again. Sphere: Related Content Print this post
(Baltic Dry Index, aka roller coaster for masochists)
Where previously ore transporters would purchase day rates on charter instead of spot rate to establish a price ceiling (at a time when Day Rates were higher than $100,000/day for Cape Size tankers), now that spot day rates have dropped by over 80%, the charter customers find themselves overpaying by up to 100% relative to spot rates. And they are angry, kinda like renters in New York locked in with long term leases. If the Excel case is any indication, dry bulk companies that had been relying on charter rates to provide a downside price cushion, may now find themselves ensnared in lengthy and expensive litigation as more and more charters decide to simply pay whatever they feel. In the meantime, companies like Excel, which has $1.4 billion of debt to service, or Dry Ships, which has a staggering $3 billion of debt, are praying for decoupling and the skyrocketing of day rates, as their fleets currently operate at significantly cash flow negative levels.
As an aside, speaking of Dry Ships, the company's CEO is probably one of the most colorful executives (in a non-criminal sense) of any company today. After he sank his first company, he managed to grow Dry Ships from $10/share to $130, briefly entering the Forbes commodity billionaire club, and proceeded to ridicule all analysts and pundits who had previously made fun of his management skills at any and every possible venue, and provide ludicrous near-term profit projections. Ironically, with his stock at $4 again, a massively leveraged balance sheet, and bankruptcy staring him in the face, George has been somewhat quiet lately, proving his critics right once again. Sphere: Related Content Print this post
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2 comments:
brilliant post - this is exactly the kind of clarifying comment that people need when they look at the BDIY as an indicator of recovery. Thanks Tyler.
Virtual Memory sure is becoming cheaper these days. I'm curious as to when we will eventually reach the rate of 1c to 1 Gigabyte.
I'm eagerly anticipating the day when I will finally be able to afford a 20 TB drive, hahaha. But for now I guess I will be happy with having a 32 GB Micro SD in my R4i.
(Submitted using NetBrowze for R4i Nintendo DS.)
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