Product tankers may not have a promising 2025: Analysis
Product tanker earnings will moderate in 2025 as demand fears and improving supply weigh on rates.
The journey of the humble product tanker has been full of surprises with rates surging since the start of the Russia-Ukraine war. Owners benefitted hugely from the surge in tonne-mile demand, but earnings started to fall in 3Q24 when rates began moderating due to slowing demand.
Factors such as high deliveries are likely to get triggered with the onset of 2025 and could derail the high earnings of product tankers, which were supported by tight tonnage amid stretched voyages in 2024. Around 85 product-capable MRs are scheduled to join the fleet in 2025, followed by 60 LRs with demolitions expected to gain momentum but remain soft. As a result, Drewry expects the fleet to expand in 2025, it said in an analysis.
It further elaborated:
Meanwhile, oil demand is expected to remain modest in 2025 due to a shift towards clean fuel with most of the growth attributed to naphtha and jet fuel, whereas the growth of diesel and gasoline will remain stable. Although the growth in seaborne trade is expected to be higher next year, fleet expansion could exceed this growth which will weigh on rates.
Major refineries to reshape MR trade
The clean tanker market is threatened by refineries reaching full capacity in 2025 in major importer countries. While Dangote is expected to reach full capacity by 1H25, which will slash the country’s import requirement and could turn it into a net exporter of refined products, the ramping up of refinery runs in Mexico’s Olmeca refinery will affect the US clean product flow, affecting MR demand. However, some support will come from refinery closures in Europe next year, which will increase the region’s dependence on imports, but will fail to lift the rates as European demand will be too soft to impact rates.
Nonetheless, LR rates have softened so far in 2H24 primarily due to the influx of bigger crude tankers into the products trade, but a rebound in LR rates is contingent on firming large dirty tanker rates, which would curb the dirty-to-clean switch.
Conclusion
In a nutshell, the picture doesn’t look rosy for product tankers in 2025 as the fleet expansion amid modest demand will weigh on rates. However, the resolution of the geopolitical issues is the biggest wildcard. Some of the key risk factors in 2025 are:
* A resolution of the Red Sea crisis will restore the transit via the conventional Suez Canal route, negatively impacting the product tanker tonne-miles, bringing the rates to the ground amid high fleet growth.
* Any possible disruption to the Strait of Hormuz will be a disaster for the product tanker market as it will significantly squeeze the global oil supply and trade.
* A resolution of the Russia-Ukraine war will switch trade patterns back to short-haul routes, softening rates.
* Any possible delay in ramping up the Dangote refinery will buoy exports of European refined products to West Africa, supporting MR demand.
Source: Exim News Service: London, Dec. 26