28.2 C
Singapore
Friday, May 2, 2025
spot_img

Demolition Market in Disarray

Must read

The shipbroker added that “elsewhere, Indian and Pakistan buyers have demand but here to, price levels have reduced of recent times and with the monsoon rains now affecting the Indian sub-Continent, all markets look set to remain dormant for the next couple of months at least. The general feeling is that there will be little demand or activity from all three destinations until after the monsoon season, when maybe, price levels are expected to rebound. As we approach halfway through the year, recycling activity has been limited, with 201 units of 4.6m GT reported sold for recycling, down 27% y-o-y on an annualised basis”, Clarkson Platou Hellas concluded.

Meanwhile, in a separate note this week, GMS , the world’s leading cash buyer of ships said that “the degraded performance across the ship recycling sector over the last few (and painful) months shows few signs of abating just yet, as it has been a veritable tale of misery, even though prices remain at some of the firmest levels we have seen over the last decade. Down from the peaks of $/Ton, levels nearly USD /LDT lower have left a bad taste in most mouths in the industry. Certainly, the last time prices crashed from the psychological USD /LDT barrier was back in 2008, when even USD /LDT was briefly breached during the unprecedented boom years of the shipping industry, prior to the global financial collapse in September of that year. However, not for a while have we seen freight rates at such optimistic numbers, as all sectors (Dry Bulk, Tankers and Containers) continue to fly, giving a healthy collection of these aging ladies, an extended chance at life in their respective global trading fleets.

As such, it remains a bit of a conundrum for the ship recycling sector, while candidates remain sparse and their incoming volume unlikely to pick up any time soon, even with prices having declined by over USD /LDT and having left sentiments on the ground in pieces, levels of over USD /Ton seems insufficient to tempt vessels towards the shores of recycling. Steel prices have actually recovered a little in Pakistan, as they stabilize in India to an extent, ending the week at levels similar to those at the beginning of the week. However, it is the currency that continues to afflict Recyclers globally and this is leading to an overall lack of confidence in offering afresh on tonnage. Perhaps a period on the sidelines could reinvigorate sub-continent markets and bring demand back, of course, once steel prices and currencies settle at an acceptable level. On the far end, Turkey manages to finally wrest the unending slide of nearly 6+ weeks that has seen levels plummet about USD /MT, as both import and local steel plate prices record improvements of their own”, GMS concluded.

spot_img
- Advertisement -spot_img

More articles

spot_img
spot_img
- Advertisement -spot_img

Latest article