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By:
Jonathan
Yates
Contributor, Stock Traders Daily
(La Jolla, CA) In a precursor of
troubled waters ahead for the shipping industry,
Frontline Ltd, the world’s largest operator of
supertankers, recently cancelled orders for two
supertankers and four supermaxes, a total value of $556
million. The chairman of Frontline, Jens Martin Jensen,
predicted that moves by other shippers will “emerge in
the next weeks” that could result in as much as
one-third of all orders for new oil tankers being
cancelled or delayed due to the slacking global thirst
for crude. The stock price of Frontline Ltd (NYSE:
FRO) has fallen from a high of $72.36 in the past
year to $24.32.
This negative
sentiment greeted t he
recent public offering of 4 million common shares of
stock priced at $32 by Nordic American Tanker Shipping (NYSE:
NAT). Designed to raise cash for acquisitions, the
stock is now trading at $30.69. When the announcement
of the offering was made, it was at $35.49.
While the price of
oil has more than doubled since February 2009, it has
largely been the work of speculators and investors
fleeing the weak dollar for commodities. The global
demand for crude has actually declined from the economic
downturn, crippling the tanker industry. The
International Energy Agency expects the first drop in
overall oil demand in consecutive years since 1983. In
the past year, the share price of USO, (NYSE:
USO) the exchange traded fund for petroleum, has
fallen from $119.17 to $37.41.
Orders at shipyards
worldwide have collapsed: a 42.3% fall in the last year
alone. Ye Zhigang, an analyst with Haitong Securities,
predicts that the global demand for shipping will remain
low until 2013. He expects large government owned
shipyards to endure with many of the smaller private
ones being forced into bankruptcy or gobbled up by a
stronger competitor.
As a result of the
slack in demand, the rental price for a supertanker,
based on shipping rates from Saudi Arabia to Japan, is
now so low that many are being used for storage. There
are now about 60 supertankers only holding oil, a
one-third increase since April of this year. The
benchmark rental rate for supertankers in the first
quarter of 2009 was at its lowest rate since the third
quarter of 2002. The Claymore Delta Global Shipping
Index, (NYSE:
SEA) the exchange traded fund for the shipping
industry, is at $11.46, down from a year high of $26.05.
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