EURONAV Releases 1st Quarter Results

EURONAV Releases 1st Quarter Results

EURONAV Releases 1st Quarter Results

Euronav reported its preliminary financial results for the three months ended 31st March 2013

For the first quarter 2013, the company had a net loss of USD – 10.7 million or USD – 0.21 per share (first quarter 2012: USD -9 million and USD -0.18 per share). EBITDA for the same period was USD 43.5 million (first quarter 2012: USD 47.8 million).

euronav-1stQ


The average daily time charter equivalent rates (TCE) can be summarized as follows:

euronav-1stQ-2

THE TANKER MARKET

The first quarter has seen moderate growth in cargoes comparing 2013 over 2012 and, due to changes in trading pattern, a greater increase in ton-miles. Nevertheless the overall returns for tanker shipping measured in TCE were lower. The supply side of the market remains the fundamental problem. The world fleet continues to increase as the newbuildings contracted up until 2010 are being delivered albeit on a delayed schedule compared to the original contractual delivery dates. More importantly owners of older vessels do not yet scrap them, whereas higher scrapping activity is fundamental to any potential rebound in the market.

This oversupply is exacerbated by the market structure. Charterers and their brokers continually pressure owners to accept lower rates to reduce the cost to charterers without a second thought to the return to the owner. The levels reached today are no longer sustainable even for an owner with fully written down assets as net freights often are not enough to pay for basic ship operations let alone longer term maintenance or dry docking. Owners have taken all the measures available to them such as slow steaming and engine retrofitting but the market structure simply absorbs these savings and passes them on to the charterers.

The risks associated with shipping crude oil have not reduced or gone away but the companies responsible for managing those risks are not being paid sufficiently to take the steps necessary to do so. In any market this will result in the risks going unmanaged. “The market is playing Russian roulette and on one voyage one day one charterer will find out there was a bullet in the gun after all. When that happens, do not call the broker!” commented Paddy Rodgers, CEO of Euronav.

So far in the second quarter, Euronav VLCC fleet operated in the Tankers International pool has earned on average USD 12,300 per day and 45% of the available days have been fixed. 

Euronav’s Suezmaxes trading on the spot market have earned on average USD 17,150 per day and 40% of the available spot days have been fixed.

Source: EURONAV

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Posted by on April 18, 2013. Filed under All news, Business, Company News, Latest news, World. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0. Both comments and pings are currently closed.