BDI-Crude_110803.png
The Baltic Dry Index (BDI) tells us the average price to ship cargo on the high seas. WTIC is West Texas Intermediate Crude Oil price. The ratio of these two should show the health of the international shipping.
Once you have bought a ship, the operating costs are the crew and the Bunker C oil to run it across the water. If you can't get a cargo, you lay off the crew, and just have your overhead costs to pay. If you get a cargo, hopefully the price you can charge will pay for the crew, the fuel consumed, and the overhead/maintenance/depreciation on the ship.
BDI has been highly correlated to crude oil prices for some time. In the graph above, we see that the BDI has again dropped to as bad at it was in the economic meltdown of Nov. 2008.
This means very competitive rates, far below the sustainability point. This is good news in the short term if you must ship goods, but bad news if you are in the shipping business. Who will blink first? It won't be long before these shipping companies eat through their cash reserves, and start selling older ships for scrap metal.
Is world ship tonnage far in excess of what is needed? Has international shipping dropped like a stone?
The Baltic Dry Index (BDI) tells us the average price to ship cargo on the high seas. WTIC is West Texas Intermediate Crude Oil price. The ratio of these two should show the health of the international shipping.
Once you have bought a ship, the operating costs are the crew and the Bunker C oil to run it across the water. If you can't get a cargo, you lay off the crew, and just have your overhead costs to pay. If you get a cargo, hopefully the price you can charge will pay for the crew, the fuel consumed, and the overhead/maintenance/depreciation on the ship.
BDI has been highly correlated to crude oil prices for some time. In the graph above, we see that the BDI has again dropped to as bad at it was in the economic meltdown of Nov. 2008.
This means very competitive rates, far below the sustainability point. This is good news in the short term if you must ship goods, but bad news if you are in the shipping business. Who will blink first? It won't be long before these shipping companies eat through their cash reserves, and start selling older ships for scrap metal.
Is world ship tonnage far in excess of what is needed? Has international shipping dropped like a stone?
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