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Greek shipowners take US$18bn gas gamble: Shipping giants future-proofing portfolios by heavy investment in LNG and LPG

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Greek shipowners have spent an unprecedented US$18bn on newbuild gas vessels since 2021 as companies diversify their portfolios away from traditional tanker, bulker and container asset classes according to new research by VesselsValue, the data intelligence arm of maritime data and freight management solutions provider Veson Nautical.A new report: ‘Greek Speculative S&P Investments’ states that ~US$13.8bn of the figure has been spent on 59 liquefied natural gas (LNG) vessels, and ~US$4bn on 41 liquid petroleum gas (LPG) vessels. This compares to Greek shipowners spending ~US$12.2bn on 167 tanker vessels, ~$US4.1bn on 109 bulkers, and ~US$3.1bn on 39 container ships.

“In a decade defined by volatile markets and seismic shifts in shipping dynamics, Greek shipowners have taken bold investment stances that could shape the future of global trade,” says Dan Nash, Associate Director of Valuation & Analytics at VesselsValue. “Greek shipowners are clearly planning for future increases in gas and LNG supply in the global energy mix with these speculative investments.”

Capital leading the way

The report names the Piraeus-based Capital Ship Management (Capital) the most speculative with 15 large LNG vessels, two very large ammonia carriers (VLAC), eight medium gas carriers (MGC), and four carbon dioxide (CO2) vessels for a combined spend of ~US$4.7bn. Capital is followed by the Athens-based Maran Gas Maritime (Maran), the LNG ship management company of the Angelicoussis Shipping Group, with a total spend of ~US$3.3bn that includes 15 large LNG carriers. The Athens-based Evalend Shipping is third, Spending ~US$3bn on 12 very large gas carriers (VLGC), two MGC’s, two VLAC’s and six large LNG vessels.

Offshore oil & gas market also attracting interest

The report adds that offshore values for five-year-old, large anchor handling tug supply (AHTS) vessels, which are used to anchor and secure oil and gas platforms have spiked by ~97% since 2021. Platform supply vessels (PSV’s) have spiked by 67%. Prices have been supported by a low orderbook of ~2%-3%.

The rise in values prompted Capital to pay US$180m for four PSV units to China’s Fujian Mawei Shipbuilding in June with repeat options. This was swiftly followed by two medium PSV orders (4,4700 from the same shipyard in September.

“Vessel prices in the offshore market have risen by a huge margin since 2021, but Capital are clearly anticipating a strong forward curve going forward,” Nash says.

Newbuild prices to remain high across all asset classes

The report also states that newbuilding prices across sectors have reached their highest level since the 2008 financial crisis with the most recent upward pressure commencing in 2021. The high ordering activity for container and LNG vessels in 2021/22 has exerted even more pressure on shipyard capacity and building periods. Due to the increase in orders, shipyards have held the upper hand in price negotiations and prices have climbed.

“Whilst we do not foresee a repeat of the ordering volumes from the pandemic years, we expect to see newbuilding prices for container vessels rising above the upward trendline of other sectors,” says Nash. “He adds that our expectations are for Container newbuilding prices to continue to rise in 2024 and into 2025 at a higher pace than that of the other sectors.”

He adds that unless container vessel earnings continue to increase, we expect container ordering demand to slow and the total orderbook to slowly subside.

“If sustained over some time, a declining total orderbook will remove capacity pressure from shipyards which typically leads to lower newbuilding prices,” Nash concludes. “However, this decline will be gradual and is probably 12-24 months out in time, therefore vessel prices are expected to remain in historically high territory.”

Source: Veson Nautical