Showing posts with label shipping. Show all posts
Showing posts with label shipping. Show all posts

Monday, July 13, 2009

Baltic Dry Index Turning Bearish Again

I noticed that the shipping index ETFs have been amongst the most bearish of all over the past month or so.

from the Daily Telegraph:
“Port statistics are revealing. They were a leading indicator before the production collapse in the Japan, Europe, and the US over the winter, and they may be telling us something again.

“Amrita Sen at Barclays Capital says the number of Baltic Dry ships waiting to berth - mostly in China and Australia - has begun to fall after peaking at 154 in mid-June.

“The Capesize Iron Ore Port Congestion Index is replicating the pattern seen a year ago just before the commodity boom tipped over.

“‘The anecdotal evidence we are hearing is that vessel queues have been falling. There are reports of cancelled tonnage from China pointing to a slowdown in Chinese buying of coal and iron ore.

“‘We are definitely expecting a correction. People have been building stocks of iron ore too quickly in anticipation of the stimulus package in China,’ she said.

“The Baltic Dry Index measuring freight rates jumped 450% in the first half of the year on the China rebound, but has begun to fall back over the last two weeks. (Sen doubts freight rates will recover much since 1000 new ships are hitting the market this year and again next year, compared to 300 in normal years. There is obviously a horrendous shipping glut).”

Wednesday, March 25, 2009

Shipping Activity, Trade Down Broadly, No Sign of Recovery

From AP on Breitbart:
Cargo handler DP World said Wednesday that business at its ports dropped 8 percent in the first two months of this year as global trade evaporates because of the global economic slump.

The slowdown shows no signs of easing. The CEO of the Dubai-based company, one of the world's biggest and most geographically diverse port operators, said market conditions are changing on an almost daily basis, making it impossible to predict how badly business might suffer this year.

"Volumes are just disappearing," Chief Executive Mohammed Sharaf said in a round-table with reporters. "It's not that we are losing our business to our competition. ... It's just not there. It's gone."