The Baltic Exchange's principal dry bulk freight gauge moved down to its lowest level since May 1 on Thursday after a setback in capesize vessel rates. The main Baltic index - which aggregates rates for capesize, panamax and supramax vessels - declined 42 points, or 1.5%, landing at 2,729.
The capesize index led the downtrend, dropping 161 points, or 3.7%, to 4,140. Average daily earnings for capesize vessels - the ships that typically carry about 150,000-ton cargoes such as iron ore and coal - fell $1,456 to $34,048.
Market participants noted that iron ore futures softened on Thursday. The article's reporting linked that move to continued increases in shipments and to weak steel demand in China, both factors cited as weighing on iron ore prices. Investors were also tracking developments concerning anti-dumping measures in Britain and India.
Not all segments moved lower. The panamax index rose by 40 points, or 1.8%, to 2,251, reflecting some pockets of strength within the dry-bulk complex even as larger capesize rates eased.
These shifts in freight rates and commodity futures underscore the volatility that can affect earnings for owners and operators of large bulk carriers, as well as the pricing environment for raw materials transported on those vessels. Capesize ships, which move large volumes of iron ore and coal, saw a notable reduction in daily revenue, while the broader Baltic benchmark settled at a level not seen since early May.
Summary
- The Baltic Exchange's dry bulk freight index fell to 2,729, its lowest since May 1.
- Capesize rates dropped significantly, with average daily earnings down $1,456 to $34,048.
- Iron ore futures declined amid rising shipments and weak steel demand in China; panamax rates gained.