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US Gulf MR freight dives on nearby replenishment

  • Market: Biofuels, Oil products
  • 05/09/25

An influx of medium range (MR) tankers into the US Gulf coast following weeks of Mexico and Caribbean-dominated spot market demand has dropped rates from the year-to-date highs reached in August.

Oil major ExxonMobil put the PS New Orleans MR tanker on subjects today for a US Gulf coast-Europe voyage from 10 September at WS155, dropping the rate on the route by WS20 to that level, its lowest since 19 August. That rate has plunged by 42pc from its year-to-date high of WS267 on 28 August.

Most of the physical activity in the US Gulf coast spot market since 18 August was comprised of east coast Mexico and Caribbean-bound voyages. East coast Mexico-bound voyages are especially short, and demand from that region can often hit the spot market in waves, scooping up five to seven MR tankers within a single trading day, resulting in strong upward pressure on rates in late August.

However, these waves of vessels will quickly rejoin the US Gulf coast tonnage pool after they are split between the various east coast Mexico ports like Tampico, Tuxpan and Dos Bocas and finish discharging. The resulting influx of vessels transiting back from this region and from Caribbean discharge ports boosted tonnage supply after the long US holiday weekend on 2 September, kicking off the rate retreat.

There were 13 and 18 MR tankers available to load within the five and seven-day windows on 2 September, according to a shipbroker, much higher than the four and 12 MRs available within the same respective windows on 25 August.

The nearby Latin America-dominated trade in that period meant that European and west coast South American buyers were mostly along for the ride as local supply-induced volatility gripped the market. Buyers from those regions paid significantly less for equivalent voyages today compared to the week before despite otherwise steady European and west coast Americas demand since mid-August.

Oil major Chevron put the STI Mighty on subjects on 3 September for a US Gulf coast-Chile voyage at $2.2mn lumpsum, down significantly from the 14-month high the rate on the route hit at $3.1mn on 28 August. Chevron had previously put the Maersk Tokyo on subjects on 27 August at $2.275mn for a much shorter US Gulf coast-west coast Central America voyage, demonstrating how quickly the rate landscape shifted for west coast Americas-bound voyages in just under a week. The Argus-assessed rate for a US Gulf coast-west coast fell to $1.575mn by 4 September.


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