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MR freight bookings up ahead of US deployment

  • Market: Biofuels, Oil products
  • 12/11/25

Freight rates for refined oil products shipments loading onto medium range (MR) tankers in the US Gulf coast are rising on unusually strong demand from Caribbean and east coast Mexican buyers ahead of the growing US military deploymentnorth of Venezuela.

A charterer put an MR tanker on subjects for a US Gulf coast-Caribbean voyage at $875,000 lumpsum on Wednesday, nearly doubling from a near six-month low hit on 5 November at $440,000.

Charterers put at least 18 MR tankers on subjects for US Gulf coast-loading voyages on 11 November alone, an exceptionally high amount of physical activity for the region and representing nearly 6mn bl of refined product demand from a single trading day. For comparison, the US Gulf coast exported 2.3mn b/d refined products in August, according to US Energy Information Administration data. The "majority of" these voyages were for "short-haul runs", according to a shipbroker. Buyers throughout the region may be concerned about supply disruptions if US military operations offshore Venezuela and Colombia escalate.

The US Navy confirmed that the Gerald R. Ford carrier strike group reached Caribbean waters on 11 November, and that the strike group was comprised of the USS Gerald R. Ford aircraft carrier, two guided-missile destroyers and an integrated air and missile defense command ship. The carrier group is joining an amphibious ready group (ARG) that had been sitting southeast of Puerto Rico since 2 September, according to the US Navy's fleet tracker. The ARG is comprised of flagship USS Iwo Jima and two amphibious transport dock ships, the stated mission of which is to "safely embark Marines ashore".

US president Donald Trump has suggested that airstrikes on Venezuela are a possibility ahead of the build-up of US naval forces in the region. The military operation is ostensibly focused on striking designated narco-terrorists in international waters, which the Pentagon said it has done seven times off the coast of Venezuela and twice near Colombia's Pacific coast by late October.

Meanwhile, Colombian president Gustavo Petro announced the end of intelligence sharing with the US on Wednesday. Petro has called the US attacks on boats operating within Caribbean waters illegal.

Colombia's Pozos Colorados port was the third most active destination port for US Gulf coast-loading refined products in the last 12 months, behind only the ports of Coatzacoalcos and Tuxpan on Mexico's east coast, according to Vortexa data. Buyers in Pozos imported 3pc of all US Gulf coast-loading products in that time, averaging 82,000 b/d.

Caribbean buyers are the single largest drivers of demand by shipping region for US Gulf coast refined product exports, averaging a plurality of 22.2pc of all shipments at 580,200 b/d in the last 12 months, according to Vortexa. A flare-up in military activity and potential US strikes on mainland targets launched from the region could further disrupt flows to Panama, Bahamas, Honduras and Costa Rica among other countries in the region.


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