In this list
Shipping

Suezmax rates in Med spike on support from USGC, West Africa

Shipping

Platts cFlow

Commodities | Crude Oil | Refined Products

How are crude prices reacting to a lengthening Atlantic Basin market?

Capital Markets | Commodities | Energy | Natural Gas | Natural Gas (European) | Natural Gas (North American) | Natural Gas Risk | Shipping | Leveraged Finance & High Yield | Materials | Building & Construction | Financial Services | Banking | Infrastructure | Structured Finance

LNG Conference, 20th

Agriculture | Shipping | Grains | Rice

Thai rice prices hit 2-month high on demand surge from Brazil, Mexico

Refined Products | Shipping | Marine Fuel

Bunker Fuel Price Assessment

Shipping | Metals | LNG | Crude Oil | Upstream | Agriculture | Ferrous | Steel | Oilseeds | Rice

Commodity Tracker: 6 charts to watch this week

For full access to real-time updates, breaking news, analysis, pricing and data visualization subscribe today.

Subscribe Now

Suezmax rates in Med spike on support from USGC, West Africa

Highlights

Med, Black Sea Suezmaxes firm in reaction to WAF strength

Many Med routes untested since start of Suezmax rally

Near-term Suezmax outlook steady to firm: trade

  • Author
  • Alec Kubekov
  • Editor
  • James Leech
  • Commodity
  • Shipping

Suezmax dirty tanker freight rates for deliveries on routes across the Mediterranean have spiked over the past week, in line with big rises in the US Gulf Coast region and West African markets, with the near-term prospects for the Suezmax sector remaining steady to bullish, trading sources said.

Not registered?

Receive daily email alerts, subscriber notes & personalize your experience.

Register Now

Platts, part of S&P Global Commodity Insights, assessed wet freight on the 130,000 mt Caspian Petroleum Consortium Terminal to Mediterranean route at Worldscale 125 on Oct. 17, up w52.5 from its rate of w72.5 a week earlier on Oct. 10.

Platts also assessed freight on the 130,000 mt Mediterranean to Mediterranean route at w125 on Oct. 17, up w55 from its rate of w70 a week earlier.

The rises in the Suezmax CPC-Med and Med-Med markets have been driven by higher rates being fixed in WAF, which is pulling vessels westward and therefore creating a tonnage crunch in the Mediterranean and Black Sea, a Europe-based shipbroker said.

"No one's going to restrict themselves to a shorthaul voyage when the demand for tonnage is the way it is in WAF, so I think [Med-Med voyages] will come with a premium," a UK-based Suezmax broker said.

The same broker also pointed to a firming Med-Med Aframax market as a reason for why Med-Med Suezmax sentiment has strengthened so much over the past week.

Platts assessed freight on the 80,000 mt Ceyhan-Med route at w215 on Oct. 17, nearly double its rate of w110 a week earlier.

Opaque market

Unlike in the West Africa to UK-Continent Suezmax market, whose recent rise was sparked by the announcement of a fixture agreed at w107.5 -- some 30 points higher than last-done levels -- on Oct. 11, no fresh fixtures have been reported for either the CPC-Med or Med-Med route since the Suezmax market began to spike.

Trading sources have stressed that this makes it difficult to gauge exactly where rates stand.

The same UK-based Suezmax broker said that "it is a nightmare to read this [the Med-Med Suezmax] market on a good day", referring to it as being "very opaque."

"The cross-Med market is always the toughest to call, but I think Aframaxes and Suezmaxes have stabilised -- at least for now," a Europe-based shipbroker said.

An additional difficulty when trying to determine the rate for the Med-Med Suezmax market is the large number of possible loading and discharge ports, sources added.

A shorter Med-Med run, such as from Arzew (Algeria) to Foz (southern France) would tend to be fixed at a w20 premium to a longer run, such as from Ceyhan (Turkey) to a port in the western Mediterranean, or from Algeria to the eastern Mediterranean, according to sources.