The Baltic Exchange's dry bulk freight index eased on Wednesday as declines in capesize and supramax vessel rates put downward pressure on the overall gauge.
The primary Baltic index - which aggregates rates for capesize, panamax and supramax vessel classes - fell 33 points, or 1.2%, settling at 2,634.
The capesize segment registered the largest drop. The capesize index lost 96 points, or 2.4%, to 3,950, marking its weakest reading since June 18. Average daily earnings for capesize vessels declined by $870 to $32,322. Capesize ships typically move very large, roughly 150,000-ton cargoes such as iron ore and coal.
By contrast, the panamax market showed modest strength. The panamax index rose 26 points, or 1.3%, to 2,071. Average daily earnings for panamax vessels increased by $235 to $18,641. Panamax vessels usually carry cargoes in the range of 60,000 to 70,000 tons, commonly coal or grain.
The supramax sector was noted as slipping alongside capesize rates, contributing to the overall decline in the main Baltic measure, although specific supramax earnings were not provided.
Summary analysis
- The combined move left the main Baltic index down 33 points, or 1.2%, at 2,634.
- Capesize earnings fell to $32,322 per day, down $870, and the capesize index moved to 3,950 - its lowest since June 18.
- Panamax earnings rose to $18,641 per day, up $235, and the panamax index increased to 2,071.
Market participants monitoring freight costs for bulk commodities will note the split directional moves across vessel classes: while panamax rates improved slightly, the sharper fall in capesize and a drop in supramax rates were sufficient to pull the overall index lower on Wednesday.
No additional data on supramax average earnings was disclosed in the available updates.
For readers tracking implications, changes in these indices reflect shifts in earnings for shipowners that operate across these vessel classes and can influence transport costs for large-volume dry bulk commodities such as iron ore, coal, and grains.