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Some Idiot Sold NOL and Now Freight is Booming

Dump diesel engine ship... hold on.... EV ship coming, then render diesel engine ship worthless..
 
NOL should have been made into a not-for-profit shipping line.

NOL building became Fragrance Empire building.

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pls lah, you think all these paper generals go for MBA in Ivy League already means can run any business? proven time and time again that they are useless
 
The fat fuck can’t even run a monopoly.

U know how hard it is to screw up a monopoly business ? Haha
Fat fuck argued that his cake is being eaten by google and other online giant.Someone like him cannot run business and he is full of shit and excuses.
 
U all cannot blame him.HE No management experience,No commercial experience.He only can charge up the hill and eat grass.What do u expect from him ?
 

World's shippers are earning the most money since 2008​

Whether its giant container ships (above), bulk carriers or specialised vessels, earnings are soaring for ships of almost every type.


Whether its giant container ships (above), bulk carriers or specialised vessels, earnings are soaring for ships of almost every type.PHOTO: AFP

SEP 12, 2021

LONDON (BLOOMBERG) - The global shipping industry is getting its biggest payday since 2008 as the combination of booming demand for goods and a global supply chain that is collapsing under the weight of Covid-19 drives freight prices ever higher.
Whether its giant container ships stacked high with 40-foot steel boxes, bulk carriers whose cavernous holds house thousands of tons of coal or specialised vessels designed to pack in cars and trucks, earnings are soaring for ships of almost every type.
With the merchant fleet hauling about 80 per cent of world trade, the surge reaches into every corner of the economy.
The boom back in 2008 brought with it a huge wave of new vessel orders, but the rally was quickly undone by a demand collapse when a financial crisis triggered the deepest global recession in decades.
This boom's causes are twofold - an economic reopening after Covid-19 that has spurred surging demand for goods and raw materials. Alongside that, the virus continues to cause disruption in global supply chains, choking up ports and delaying vessels, all of which is limiting how many are available to haul goods across oceans.
That has left the majority of the shipping sector with bumper earnings in recent months.

The bonanza is centred around container shipping - where rates are spiralling ever higher to new records, but it is by no means limited to it.
The shipping industry is posting its strongest daily earnings since 2008, according to Clarkson Research Services, part of the world's biggest shipbroker. The only laggards are the oil and gas tanker markets, where more bearish forces are at play.
"I'm not really sure the perfect storm covers it - this is just spectacular," said Mr Peter Sand, chief shipping analyst at trade group Bimco. "It's a perfect spillover of a red-hot container shipping market to some of the other sectors."
Container shipping remains the star. It now costs US$14,287 ($19,000) to haul a 40-foot steel box from China to Europe. That is up more than 500 per cent on a year earlier and is pushing up the cost of transporting everything from toys to bicycles to coffee.

Those gains are already showing in the earnings of A.P. Moller-Maersk, the world's largest container line, which hiked its estimated profits this year by almost $5 billion last month.
In a sign of just how profitable the industry has become, CMA CGM - the world's third-largest carrier - said it is freezing its spot rates to preserve long-term client relationships. In other words, the company is turning away profit.
While the demand for retail goods is lifting container markets, a recovering global economy is also churning through more raw materials - boosting the revenues of bulk ships that carry industrial commodities.
In that sector, earnings recently hit an 11-year high and are showing little sign of abating down the line with consumption expected to remain firm for the rest of the year.
"Strong demand for natural resources combined with Covid-related logistical disruptions" are supporting spot and future freight rates, Mr Ted Petrone, vice-chairman at Navios Maritime Holdings which owns a fleet of bulk carriers, said on an earnings call last week.
"Supply and demand fundamentals going forward remain extremely positive."
Such is the extreme strength across shipping that some bulk carriers have even turned to carrying containers on their decks.
Golden Ocean Group is among the companies that said it is looking at the idea. While it could spur additional profits in an already windfall year for owners, its not without its risks as bulk carriers are not designed to carry the giant boxes.
"It tells a story about the special situation we are in", in the container market, Golden Ocean chief executive Ulrik Andersen said earlier this month.

While for many shipping sectors Covid-19 has brought a boom, for oil tankers it has meant loss-making trades for much of this year and owners effectively subsidising the shipment of crude oil.
With OPEC+ still keeping a chunk of supply offline there are too many ships and too few cargoes, keeping earnings depressed. That has burned one of the hottest trades in the sector at the start of the year - bullish oil tanker positions in the hope of a summer surge in oil demand.
Still, with on land oil inventories declining, analysts continue to anticipate a rebound.
Rates could begin to move higher next month as stockpiles dwindle and demand for tankers grows, Pareto Securities analysts including Mr Eirik Haavaldsen wrote in a note to clients.
But for now, the tanker market remains the only blot for an industry where freight capacity is ever tightening.
The ClarkSea Index, which tracks daily earnings across a diverse range of shipping sectors, has already posted its longest run of monthly gains on record.

Those bumper earnings are also being seen in more esoteric markets. Car carriers now cost the most to hire since 2008. Rates for general cargo ships with heavy equipment are also surging, adding to a boom that is being led by container and bulk shipping.
"The charter rates reported in containers are crazy and it's the same for dry bulk," said Ms Alexandra Alatari, a shipping analyst at Arrow Shipbroking Group. "The fundamentals are so strong they support rates that would be the peak of any other year."
 
an economic reopening after Covid-19 that has spurred surging demand for goods and raw materials. Alongside that, the virus continues to cause disruption in global supply chains, choking up ports and delaying vessels, all of which is limiting how many are available to haul goods across oceans.
So ships get higher freight but are stuck in ports due to covid Sop's. It comes to the same thing.
 

Old is gold: Sky-high cost of ageing ships sounds inflation SOS​

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Container capacity jumped 4.5 per cent last year, but it hasn't been enough to cool prices yet. ST PHOTO: CHONG JUN LIANG


JUN 21, 2022

SINGAPORE (REUTERS) - Shipping companies are transforming rust buckets into gold mines in a modern-day alchemy that could fuel already rampant inflation for years to come.
The disruption to world trade caused by pandemic lockdowns and a shortage of new cargo vessels has pushed freight rates for ageing container ships to record highs.
Cashing in on the boom, shipping firms are locking in long-term leases lasting three to four years, which means consumers could carry on paying the price for the surge in costs until hundreds of new ships on order come into service.
Take the Synergy Oakland, a mid-sized vessel flagged in Cyprus that can carry more than 4,200 20-foot steel containers. Greek firm Euroseas bought it in 2019 for US$10 million (S$13.8 million) when it was already a decade old.
As world trade spiralled into chaos last year, it raked in US$21 million in just over 100 days at the highest daily freight rate in history for a ship of its size. It squeezed in one more short-term charter earning around US$10 million in the space of two months before going out on a four-year lease for US$61 million in May, a sixfold return in itself on the purchase price three years ago.
"That was almost the perfect play in a rising market," Mr Symeon Pariaros, chief administrative officer of the shipping firm, told Reuters. "We've not seen something like that in the history of the container market."
The world's container ship fleet continued to grow in terms of capacity during the pandemic, rising 2.9 per cent in 2020 after increases of 4 per cent in 2019 and 5.6 per cent in 2018, according to shipping analytics firm Clarksons Research.

But the surge in demand for consumer goods during lockdowns, congestion at ports that tied up ships for longer than expected, and a slowdown in new shipbuilding, partly due to uncertainty about whether vessels would comply with new environmental rules, all contributed to the shipping crunch and record freight costs.
Container capacity jumped 4.5 per cent last year, mainly because ageing ships that might normally be headed for the graveyard kept on sailing, but it hasn't been enough to cool prices yet.
A Reuters review of more than 30 private transactions completed over the last six months showed that ship owners are leasing vessels on long-term charters at record rates to capitalise on the once-in-a-generation bull market. In May, the cost of locking in container shipments soared a staggering 30.1 per cent, a record monthly increase in long-term ocean freight rates, according to Xeneta's ocean freight index.

Record rates have already contributed to higher prices for everything from second-hand cars to dining tables to bicycles, and the pain for consumers is set to continue, experts say.
The International Monetary Fund estimates the container shipping boom in 2021 accounted for 1.5 percentage points of global price rises this year, or about a quarter of the US inflation rate.
While higher food and oil prices in the wake of Russia's occupation of Ukraine feed through to consumer prices within two months, it can take up to a year to feel the full effects of container shipping costs.
"The current still-high freight rates will continue to put pressure on consumer prices well into 2023," said Mr Jan Hoffmann, head of trade logistics at the United Nations Conference on Trade and Development. "I fear that freight rates will remain higher than pre-Covid for many more years."
"Container shipping markets in general remain in extraordinary territory," said Mr Stephen Gordon, managing director of Clarksons Research.
The container shipping industry as a whole made a mind-bending profit of US$59.3 billion in the first quarter this year, shipping expert John McCown said, up from US$19.1 billion in the same period a year ago.

US President Joe Biden said on June 9 that Congress should crack down on the outrageous prices being charged by shipping companies that control the market.
A record 503 second-hand container ships were sold last year, equivalent to 7 per cent of the global fleet, Clarksons said, with another 108 sold in the first five months of 2022.
With no container ships being scrapped this year, the average age of these vessels has risen to 13.9 years from 11 years back in 2017, Clarksons said. That means cargo ships that are 10 or 15 years old, an age at which they were being scrapped before the pandemic, are worth up to 10 times what they were two years ago, sales data shows.
Still, there are signs the boom could come to an end in the next year or two, when many of the giants of the sea ordered by the major companies enter service. In 2021, a record-breaking 555 container vessels worth US$42.5 billion were ordered and 208 vessels worth US$18.4 billion have been booked so far in 2022, according to the World Shipping Council, an industry group based in the United States.
 
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