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SHIPPING COMPANY EONOMICS Financing ships and shipping companies Marina Zanne, M.Sc. Marina.Zanne@fpp.uni-lj.si
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Introduction Ships are expensive, shipping marekt is volatile, shipping companies can adopt less formal structures and choose their legal jurisdiction Who would be interested to finance a shipping company?
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Ship finance Investors prefer: Predictable earnings Well-defined corporate structures Well-defined ownership Consistent growth High yields
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Ship finance In 2007 investments in new ships were 187,5 billion $ In 2007 second-hand sales reached 53,5 billion $
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Ship finance Paradox: too much finance options Mortgages 150 banks targeting the ship finance market
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Ship finance Investment in merchant ships, 1997-2007; Stopford M. (2009), p.270
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History of ship finance Modern ship finance, 1850s: –“sixty-fourth” company; ship is registered as 64 shares. Shares held by: Individuals on their own account, Individuals organized into partnership or Investors in a joint stock company London, 1848: 554 vessels, 89% were owned by individuals, 8% by trading partnerships and 3% by JSC.
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History of ship finance Second half of century: JSC became preferred way of financing the ships –Limited Liability Act, 1862; protection of (small) investors Tyne Steam Shipping Company Ltd., 1864 – owner of the first bulk carrier John Bowes. Nominal capital: 300.000₤, 12.000 shares Family business; borrowing instead of having an investor
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History of ship finance Financing the business from accumulated depreciation reserves –Earnings are usually not enough to fund the expansion From 1950-1970 the return on British shipping companies shares was cca 6% while for all copanies it was 15%.
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History of ship finance Charter-backed finance, 1950s and 1960s –Industrial shippers; oil companies and steel- makers time charters as an incentive to order large ships instrument of transport costs reduction –Time charters & mortgage on the hull was used as a security to obtain a bank loan expansion of the bulk fleet with only a little equity of shipowners –The one-ship company: FOC, management handled through agencies
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History of ship finance –Newbuildings restricted by the availability of charters –Changes in trade structure –Small profits from long term contracts Asset-backed finance, 1970s –Bankers see ship as “floating real estate” –Petrodollars huge expansion of tanker fleet
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History of ship finance Mid 1980s shipping crisis –“Asset play” – buying at low and selling at high prices –New sources of finance were required; small mortgage loans Corporate finance in the 1990s –Privatr partherships providing finance for container ship operators
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History of ship finance Shipbuilding credit –Instrument of competition during recession period –Known in the 19 th century, later know as subsidized crediting
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Private funds Owner’s private resources: –Earnings from his business –Investments or loans from friends or family Widely used in the 19th century
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Bank loans The most important source of ship finance Quick acess to capital while ownership over ship remains intact –Limited size of the loan; 50-80% of ship’s value –Short repayment period of 5 to 7 years –Mortgage against the ship is mandatory
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Leasing ships Separation of use and ownership over the ship –Lessor = legal owner –Lessee Risks: –Revenue risk; will the leesor be paid in full for the asset he has purchased –Operating risk; who will pay if the ship breaks down –Residual value risk; who gets the benefit if the ship is worth more than expected at the end of the lease
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Leasing ships Typical lease finance model, Stopford (2009), p. 308
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14 options for financing merchant ships, Stopford (2009), p. 283
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Sources of investment funds: –Companies –Private investors –Financial institutions Markets where funds are traded: –Money markets –Bonds markets –Equity markets Intermediaries & risk-takers: –Commercial banks –Investment banks –Finance houses –Ship credit schemes Where the money comes from to finance ships, Stopford (2009), p. 277
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Example Financed by a loan: size of loan source of loan interest rate terms of loan
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Example Cash price = 45.000.000 $. Terms of loan: down payment 15.000.000 $ interest rate: 7% (per year) paying period: 5 years, repayments once a year, fixed instalment
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where r – interest rate (for adeqaute period of time) n – number of instalments
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No.PrincipalInstalmentInterests Partial principal 030.000.000,00 1 2 3 4 5
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Sources & further reading Stopford M. (2009), Maritime eonomics, Chapter 7
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