Weekly Container Briefing March 17, 2015 Time Charter Sale and Purchase Vessel (TEU/HOM) Index +/- 700/440TEU (GL) 17.5 k 3.76 ► 0.00 1,043/660TEU (GL) 18 K Eco 5.31 ► 0.00 1,100/715TEU (G) 19 k 8.67 ► 0.00 1,700/1,125TEU (G) 19.5 k 8.63 ► 0.00 1,740/1,300TEU (G) 20.5 k 8.75 ► 0.00 1,714/1,250TEU (G) 19k Bkk Max 6.51 ► 0.00 2,500/1,900TEU (G) 22 k 4.11 ► 0.00 2,800/2,000TEU (GL) 22 k 4.25 ► 0.00 3,500/2,500TEU (GL) 23 k 2.22 ► 0.00 4,250/2,800TEU (GL) 24 k 4.70 ▲ 0.03 5,500/4,200TEU (GL) 25 k 3.17 ▲ 0.42 8,500/6,600 (GL) 25 k 4.06 ► 0.00 64.13 ▲ 0.45 BOXi Total A busy week for the container market this week with 11 sales recorded and a number of sales candidates on the market. To this end 3 x 2010 Chinese built 5,000TEU vessels came onto the market, although not the ideal specification, with a shortage of Panamax candidates on the market we expect there to be notable interest in these vessels and it will be interesting to see what prices they achieve. In addition rumours that German sellers have committed the Cape Maas and Cape Madrid (2,747TEU built 2011 Wenchong) at $16Mn each have also circulated. In the smaller sizes it is rumoured that a B170 (1,730TEU built Szczechin 2001) has been committed at a price in excess of $5Mn and another 1997 built sister has been sold to a liner operator for $3.75Mn. Finally, two 2003 built CV1100 types were sold by an insolvency administrator to Asian buyers for an en-bloc price of $8Mn, one of the vessels has a short term time charter attached. Braemar ACM’s Demometer - Container Ship Deliveries Sales Last 30 days Total Demolished 2015YTD Total in Same Period 2014 Total Demolished 2014 Total NBs Delivered 2015YTD 13,000TEU (7 Vessels) 57,000 TEU (28 Vessels) 133,500TEU (45 Vessels) 398,500 (164 Vessels) 251,000TEU (37 Vessels) Vessel Deliveries Wk11 TEU Shipyard Ow ner Deployment Comment Hanjin Bosal 10,000 Jiangsu Yangzijiang Seaspan Asia-USWC-Asia 11/25 Hanjin CHKYE PSX Service Dali 9,669 Hyundai H.I. Oceanbulk Group Asia-ECSA-Asia 2/8 Maersk Line SEAS1 SITC Fujian 1,805 CSBC (Taiw an) SITC Intra-Asia 3/12 Japan-Vietnam Total TEU 21,474 Macroeconomics Headlines EUROPEAN Commission President Jean-Claude Juncker has criticised the slow pace of progress in talks over Greece's debt, since last month's interim deal. At a meeting with Greek Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras in Brussels, Mr Juncker said he was "not satisfied". Mr Tsipras needs EU support for reforms to unlock vital funds, avoid possible bankruptcy and a eurozone exit. CMA CGM set to order 20,000TEUs. World number three shipping line CMA CGM is reportedly looking to join the 20,000TEU club with market reports suggesting the French line has signed a letter of intent for ships of this size. Brokers are reporting that the shipping line has gone to Hanjin Heavy Industries for three ships of 20,000TEU at the shipbuilder’s Subic facility with delivery set for 2017.(LL) RUSSIA’S central bank has cut its key interest rate by one percentage point to 14per cent, as concerns over inflation recede as Russia's economy falters. The move, which was widely expected, comes as the rouble stabilises following its radical 46per cent decline in 2014. That drop prompted the bank to increase rates up to 17per cent in an effort to halt the plunge. The rate rise strengthened the rouble against the dollar. SEASPAN chief executive Gerry Wang has said he does not foresee commercially viable solutions for containerships fully fuelled on liquefied natural gas, mainly due to costs and supply issues. With tightening environmental regulations and low gas price, some yards have offered interested owners the option to enable their ships to fuel on LNG and received positive feedbacks. (LL) The EURO has fallen to its lowest level against the US dollar in 12 years after the European Central Bank (ECB) began its government bond buying programme. It fell as low as $1.0560, before recovering a little. But many traders expect it may soon be worth the same as a dollar. The US economy added 295,000 jobs in February, while the unemployment rate fell to 5.5 per cent from 5.7 per cent, according to Labor Department figures. It was the 12th month running that the economy added more than 200,000 jobs, the longest such run since 1994. CHINA economic data shows more signs of weakness. Industrial output, fixed investments, property sales and retail sales miss forecasts in January and February Industrial production, which is seen as a proxy for the country’s economic growth, grew 6.8 per cent in the first two months, its lowest level since the 2008 financial crisis. FREIGHT rates on the main east-west trades continued to decline last week and are still below last year’s level. The latest Shanghai Containerised Freight Index figures show that prices on services from Shanghai to Northern Europe declined by $108/TEU on a week earlier to reach $708/ TEU.(LL) HYUNDAI HEAVY INDUSTRIES (HHI) has revealed new orders fell 50 per cent in the first two months of 2015. It said fresh business totalled $2.1Bn in January and February. The company had already revealed a 28 per cent decline in orders during 2014, but marine business fell by only 7.66 per cent at $6Bn. Seoul-listed HHI has said it is aiming for new contracts worth $22.95Bn in 2015. (TW) Indicators S ha ngha i C o nt a ine ris e d F re ight Inde x F T S E 10 0 Inde x D o w J o ne s Indus t ria l A v e ra ge Inde x B re nt C rude O il P ric e $ / bbl S inga po re B unk e r P ric e 3 8 0 $ / t o nne 888 ▼ 6,804▼ 17,945▼ 52.80 ▼ 325▼ Braemar ACM Shipbroking - London - Singapore - Shanghai Email: teu.snp@braemar.com London Office: Tel: + (0) 203 142 4250 Singapore Office: Tel: + 65 65 169588 Every effort as been made to ensure the information contained within this report is accurate, Braemar ACM Shipbroking cannot accept responsibility for error, omission or consequence therefrom
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