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Viewpoint: China to keep dragging on shipping rates

  • : Freight
  • 24/12/30

Low appetite for crude oil and dry bulk commodities in China will keep a lid on next year's shipping rates, which are steaming toward their lowest fourth quarter since pandemic-hobbled 2021.

China remains the world's top oil importer, receiving about a quarter of what oil tankers carry on a given day, but the country's oil consumption is slowing. China's turn toward electric vehicles, LNG-powered trucks and high-speed rail will continue to eat into the country's oil demand, even as its economy continues to grow.

China's economy is expected to expand by 4.7pc in 2025, below this year's 4.9pc, but the country's oil demand is set to rise by only 2pc.

In September-November this year, China's waterborne crude imports dropped by the equivalent of 10 2mn bl very large crude carriers (VLCCs) per month. And with the Chinese government's decision to cut rebates for refined product exports to 9pc from 13pc, the country's refiners will be further discouraged from importing crude.

The lack of China-bound cargoes has lowered the average VLCC rate on the Mideast Gulf-China route to $1.64/bl so far in the fourth quarter, its lowest fourth quarter level since 2021 and down by 25pc year over year.

While longer-haul tanker voyages resulting from Houthi attacks in the Red Sea and sanctions on Russian oil will continue to exert upward pressure on the tanker market into next year, barring any geopolitical breakthroughs, the lack of crude cargoes to the world's top oil importer will keep crude freight rates subdued.

VLCC weakness is trickling down

Rates for 1mn bl Suezmaxes and 700,000 bl Aframaxes are feeling the pain too as those segments compete with VLCCs in many regions such as the US Gulf coast, west Africa and the Middle East.

Like the Mideast Gulf VLCC market, the US Gulf coast-Europe Aframax rate for 90,000t cargoes is on track for its lowest fourth quarter average since 2021 as well, falling by 20pc to $3.47/bl from a year earlier.

The weakness will not be confined to the dirty tanker market. Next year, low dirty tanker rates will likely continue to encourage ship operators to move more VLCCs into clean freight service. This typically rare practice has become more common this year and is putting downward pressure on the product tanker market. So far in the fourth quarter, the Mideast Gulf to Asia-Pacific clean long range (LR1) rate is down by 31pc year over year and the US Gulf coast-Chile clean medium range (MR) rate is down by 29pc.

With shipyards delivering 2-3pc of existing tanker capacity to the water next year, the tanker fleet is likely to be sufficiently supplied to meet the world's ocean-going oil transportation demands unless tanker scrapping activity accelerates. Demand for older tankers plying sanctioned trades and middling scrap steel prices are keeping mass tanker demolitions in check.

Dry bulk operators feel China housing blues

In the dry bulk market, fleet growth of around 3pc will be enough to accommodate what is expected to be modestly increased demand for shipping dry commodities such as iron ore, coal, and grains next year.

China plays an even more outsized role in the dry bulk market because it receives nearly 45pc of the world's dry bulk cargoes. The country's bearish real estate sector threatens the dry bulk market's largest demand driver, iron ore.

A 10pc decline in investment in its real estate sector this year spells weak construction demand in the next and bodes poorly for dry bulk ship operators hoping for a resurgent appetite for iron ore to make steel.

Sluggish growth in China-bound iron ore shipments has already helped pull the Brazil-to-China Capesize iron ore freight rate down by 15pc to $21.30/t so far in the fourth quarter from a year prior. Capesize operator earnings have fallen below $10,000/d, near operating expense levels, for the first time since August 2023.


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25/02/13

US wholesale inflation holds near 2-year high in Jan

US wholesale inflation holds near 2-year high in Jan

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Транзит контейнеров по ТМТМ может удвоиться


25/02/13
25/02/13

Транзит контейнеров по ТМТМ может удвоиться

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Texas ports reopen after fog: Update


25/02/11
25/02/11

Texas ports reopen after fog: Update

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Persistent fog disrupts ports in Texas, Louisiana


25/02/11
25/02/11

Persistent fog disrupts ports in Texas, Louisiana

Houston, 11 February (Argus) — Dense fog halted marine pilot service at Texas ports again on Tuesday, a ship agent said. The Houston Pilots Association, which services vessels entering or departing the port of Houston, resumed boardings for only outbound traffic at 10:45am ET Tuesday after suspending all vessel traffic on Monday evening, the US Coast Guard said. Pilots also suspended service at the nearby ports of Galveston and Texas City. The port of Freeport, Texas, remained open, the ship agent said. Pilots halted boardings at the Sabine-Neches Waterway on the Texas-Louisiana border early Tuesday, the third consecutive day with intermittent fog closures. The waterway was last open from 8:30am Monday before closing at 12:30am ET Tuesday. Vessel traffic resumed at the Louisiana port of Lake Charles at 4:45am ET Tuesday, the ship agent said. Traffic there has been halted every night since 2 February due to dense fog but has remained open during the day. The October-March period that brings cooler weather to the US Gulf coast also brings periods of dense fog that can disrupt area ports, as warmer humid air collides with colder onshore air masses. Port closures can persist for several days, leading to delays and vessel congestion. Weather forecasts indicate a moderate to high chance of fog in Texas and Louisiana through Thursday morning. By Tray Swanson Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2025. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

EU prepares GHG rules for transshipment


25/02/07
25/02/07

EU prepares GHG rules for transshipment

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