Malaysian coal procurement firm TNB Fuel Services (TNBF) has awarded two freight tenders on 23 February, to move about 910,000t of imported coal for delivery in March.
The first freight tender from TNBF, a subsidiary of Malaysia's state-owned utility TNB, consisted of five shipments from Indonesia. The first cargo was awarded at $5.74/t for a 70,000t shipment from Balikpapan to Lumut with a 1-8 March laycan. The second cargo was awarded at $6.12/t for a 70,000t shipment from Balikpapan to Lumut with a 16-23 March laycan. The third cargo was awarded at $5.17/t for an 80,000t shipment from Taboneo to Lumut with an 11-18 March laycan. The fourth cargo was awarded at $5.57/t for an 80,000t shipment from Adang Bay to Lumut with a 12-19 March laycan. The fifth cargo was awarded at $3.18/t for a 150,000t shipment from Taboneo to Jimah East Power with a 1-8 March laycan.
The second freight tender consisted of six cargoes, of which four shipments will be from Indonesia, one from South Africa and another from Australia. The first cargo was awarded at $5.67/t for an 80,000t shipment from Balikpapan to Jimah East Power with a 3-10 March laycan. The second cargo was awarded at $5.78/t for a 70,000t shipment from Muara Pantai to Jimah East Power with a 4-11 March laycan. The third cargo was awarded at $4.44/t for an 80,000t shipment from Taboneo to Tanjung Bin Energy with a 4-11 March laycan. The fourth cargo was awarded at $14.67/t for a 70,000t shipment from Richards Bay Coal Terminal to Kapar with a 12-19 March laycan. The fifth cargo was awarded at $5.77/t for an 80,000t cargo from Tanjung Bara Coal Terminal to Lekir with a 1-8 March laycan. The sixth cargo was awarded at $12.64/t an 80,000t shipment from Newcastle to Tanjung Bin Power with a 1-8 March laycan.
The cargo sizes for these shipments have a 10pc tolerance, more or less at the shipowner's option.
The tenders will be done electronically using a reverse auction system where shipowners, operators and/or trading firms will provide their offers on TNBF's online platform.
In the southeast Asian market, rates from Indonesia to south China moved up by 10¢/t from the previous day to $6.20/t on 22 February. An uptick in industrial activity over the past week supported China's power demand. This in addition to reduced coal spot availability, as output from mines was minimised to only meet term contract volumes as domestic coal prices were low, led to increased coal and Panamax demand.
Time charter levels for a modern Kamsarmax for an Indonesian round voyage jumped to about $7,000-8,000/d on 23 February from the high-$6,000s/d the previous day on firm fundamentals, and as Panamax forward freight agreements for March jumped by $1,000/d at 16:30 Singapore time (08:30 GMT).
The results for TNBF's Indonesian shipments were concluded at about $5,000/d in comparison, market participants said. But freight rates and time charter levels concluded at the start of the day are unlikely to be repeated, and shipments to Malaysia are typically concluded at lower levels as the country is considered a favourable redelivery location.

