Why CMA CGM Buys As Many Ships As Possible?

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  • Ocean carriers are turning the heads of non-operating containership owners with “offers they can’t refuse” in their fervent buying spree.
  • Oslo-headquartered MPC Container Ships announced last week it had agreed the sale of six of its 74-vessel feedership fleet, reversing the stock exchange-listed company’s exponential growth strategy.

A recent news article published in The Loadstar by Mike Wackett states that Cosco bites the charter bullet, while CMA CGM buys more ships.

Sale of ships 

The sale of the 2007-2009-built 1,036 teu ships Anne SibumStefan Sibum and Grete Sibum, 2007-built 1,284 teu AS Federica and AS Faustina and 2012-built 1,496 teu AS Riccarda has been agreed for a total of $135m, more than twice their purchase price.

MPCC CEO Constantin Baack told an investor webinar the sales would complete in the fourth quarter, some of the vessels “had charters attached” and that some were “being sold to the current charterer”.

He said the sale had been a “strategic decision”, the firm considering forthcoming dry-docking cycles and future tougher IMO regulations.

Purchasers were not disclosed

While the purchasers were not disclosed, S&P brokers The Loadstar has spoken to are confident that CMA CGM has taken four ships, including Stefan Sebum and AS Federica which it has on charter.

“MPCC wasn’t selling, as they were happy locking-in long-term extensions with big increases in daily hire, but CMA CGM must have made an offer they couldn’t refuse,” one said.

“The deal probably came together during the charter renegotiations, when the line realised it would be cheaper to buy the ship than sign a new long-term charter,” he added.

MPCC intends to use the cash

While MPCC intends to use the cash to deleverage its balance sheet, in what Mr Baack described as a “transition from our growth stage”, it has also been active in locking in an ebit backlog of some $700m with its revised charter deals for the remainder of its fleet.

Mr Baack told investors that, since July, MPCC had agreed 13 new or extended fixtures on three-year deals at rates “north of $35,000 a day”.

He gave the example of the 2005-built 2,742 teu AS Constantina which, he said, had been fixed for three years at $40,000 a day for an ebit backlog of $44m; this is against a current valuation, according to Vesselsvalue, of $36m.

The charterer is Cosco Shipping

And, according to Vesselsvalue data, the charterer is Cosco Shipping, with the line this month taking the sub-panamax vessel on a three-year time charter at a rate of $39,900 a day.

Mr Baack ‘left the door open’ for further sales of the MPCC fleet, but said  in the interim the company would concentrate on its charter renegotiations with its liner customers.

He said that Q1 22 positions – when charters are due to expire – had already been covered and MPCC was now looking at Q2 and Q3 positions.

Mr Baack confirmed that, effective Q1 22, 75% of the shipowner’s quarterly net profits would be returned to shareholders in dividends.

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Source: The Loadstar