TradeWinds said:Interest in floating storage contracts has helped lift VLCC time charter activity to an 18 month high, according to data from Charles R Weber.
The shipbroker counts deals for eight big tankers, including a ULCC, concluded or on subjects from the start of 2015 up until 9 January.
Weber says the figure, which includes two tankers specifically for storage, is already the highest monthly figure since the third quarter of 2013.
It believes open interest has been expressed on a further nine tankers, suggesting further time charters will be concluded in the coming weeks.
In its weekly report, Weber said the widening of contango in Brent futures has raised the prospects for VLCCs markedly.
However, the brokerage says the economics of storage remain challenging.
The strong freight market is one obstacle, it explained. A triangulated VLCC voyage is currently worth $82,931 per day over 115 days, meaning owners are reluctant to part with their ships for storage deals without a premium fee, Weber says.
“We are presently assessing one to three month VLCC period rate at $70,000 daily with the six month rate at $55,000 daily, basis delivery Singapore or the Middle East,” Weber said.
“Basis these assessments and including all operational, insurance and capital costs, the economics to support floating storage appear to be absent from storage contracts less than three months.
“For greater than three months, opportunities rise in line with the declining daily cost of the time charter,” it added.
As TradeWinds reported this morning, Vitol has hired the laid-up 441,000-dwt TI Oceania (built 2003) for an 11 month period at a rate of around $40,000 per day.
Last week Navios Maritime Acquisition fixed out the 300,000-dwt Nave Synergy (built 2010) for a year at $34,125 daily net.
Chief executive Angeliki Frangou said: “We chartered out one VLCC for a one-year period at a rate we believe may be the highest VLCC rate since 2010.”
To compliment the above:
VLCCs used for storing crude could soon make their reappearance