testata inforMARE
Cerca
18 May 2024 - Year XXVIII
Independent journal on economy and transport policy
17:29 GMT+2
LinnkedInTwitterFacebook
FORUM of Shipping
and Logistics


The Shipbuilding Market in 1998


Analysis by country

Japan

Kentaro Aikawa, President of the Shipbuilders Association, said in September 1998: "the Japanese shipyards have enough contracts to be fully occupied during the next two years, and they have no need to run all over the world looking for new orders". 

This statement sums up well enough the record figure of 20.1 million gt reached by the Japanese yards in the third quarter of 1998, maintaining their market share. It also shows their extraordinary reactivity in the face of their Korean rivals, which benefited from an unprecedented competitive devaluation. 

It is true that the financial crisis that forced Korea to seek help from the IMF in the fourth quarter of 1997 might initially have been of benefit to the Japanese yards. Shipowners naturally turned to them, given legitimate queries about the survival of the Korean yards and above all their temporary inability to conclude orders because of the failure of the banking system. 

The Japanese yards were also able to benefit from the gradual depreciation of the yen against the dollar, from 120-125 yen/$ at the beginning of the year to 140-145 yen/$ in September 1998. This devaluation also caused positioning by shipowners anticipating a still weaker yen. However, this trend stopped on 8 October, when the yen appreciated suddenly and unexpectedly from 140 to slightly above 111 yen/$. 

Of course the situation is not uniform, and affects small and medium-size yards differently. In April 1998 the Japanese government invited the large yards to help the small yards by sub-contracting jobs to them wherever possible. 

The output of many of them is acquired by domestic shipowners, whose investment capacity remains conditional on obtaining bank loans; the difficulties that the Japanese banks are encountering in turn is leading to credit restrictions and complicates loan syndication. 

Furthermore, many small Japanese shipowners customarily order against long-term charter parties, mainly from first-rank Japanese shipowners or from Western companies. The uncertainty, the reduction in growth and the contraction of international trade have reduced transport needs, leading to a fall in freight rates which again compromises investment options. Some orders have had to be cancelled. Confronted with this situation, the small yards have had to agree to further reductions. 

Orderbook Japan

Japan nevertheless has dynamic shipowners, and the share of domestic orders in the Japanese yards is still very high, at nearly 60% in 1998 compared to 40% for export. The Japanese trading companies play a predominant role. 

However, the yards must face up to another challenge. In order to continuously improve their competitiveness, most of them have considerably reduced their personnel wherever possible, and notably with regard to their engineering and project management resources. 

Some yards have focused their production on one or two types of ship, which they then build in series. This is the case of Oshima and Tsuneishi for bulk carriers and Onomichi for refined product carriers. 

Diversified and single-product Japanese yards
On order at

Kawasaki

Oshima

Onomichi

Bulkers

1

40

-

Tankers

8

-

8

Containerships

1

-

-

Roro

2

-

-

Gas carriers

6

-

-

These ships have excellent designs and, in the keen competition for dry bulk cargo transport, it can be affirmed that shipowners (hardly) make any attempt today to ask for changes in the specifications. In this sense the Japanese yards have won their wager to design an industrial product without major involvement by the customer, whose role during building is diminishing little by little. Some shipowners still want to build their own ships, incorporating the fruit of their experience, in order to maintain a competitive advantage through lower operating costs, reduced maintenance and a higher resale value. They do not always obtain a favorable response from these specialized yards. Price is perhaps not the only factor in the choice. 

It might be wondered what the more or less long-term impact of this policy on the market will be, in that the shipowners, losing an additional competitive advantage, will not have any other choice than to order and sell at the right times; a complex exercise in a deflationary period. 

But Kentaro Aikawa later declared in December 1998: "1999 will not be an easy year for the shipbuilders. I do not see any sign favoring a recovery in prices. The industry suffers from overcapacity and financing difficulties, while the yen has strengthened". 

This demonstrated the fragility of positions that were taken for granted; many economic parameters outside the direct control of the yards can influence the course of activities. 

1998 was a difficult year for the country, with a decrease in gross domestic product and increases in bankruptcies and unemployment. 

The banking difficulties and the decrease in the bulk carrier market should have a negative effect on the number of domestic orders. 

In addition, a stronger yen and the pressure from the Korean shipyards should reduce the number of export orders, unless of course the Japanese economy, the second in the world, picks up or the yen depreciates. 


Korea

1998 ended much better than it began. The Korean yards have again increased their orderbook in absolute value and maintained their market share. 

In November 1997 the country was literally in shock. Bankruptcies threw about 10,000 people a day onto the streets. The paralysis that blocked the Korean economy and doubt about the magnitude of the crisis at first rendered the yards incapable of taking new orders. No order was recorded in January 1998. 

This period of uncertainty did not last long, because the Koreans reacted very quickly under the impetus of their new president. Workers, managers and directors agreed to make enormous sacrifices in the form of overtime and large salary reductions. 

An equilibrium, still fragile, was achieved in the Spring. Whereas the exchange rate had increased from about 900 won/$ in November 1997 to almost 2,000 at the end of 1997, the won stabilized at the end of March and the beginning of April at about 1,400. 

With the notable exception of the Halla yards, the large Korean yards such as Hyundai HI, Daewoo and Samsung did not stop taking orders from that point on, with Hanjin following them a few months later. It is interesting to note in this context that the country's orderbook has increased. In 1998 Korea's nominal capacity was thus reduced for the first time, because of the absence of Halla, without diminishing or affecting the actual national production capacity, in fact just the contrary. 

While prices have already dropped by 15 to 30%, some are wondering about how important it is for the country to maintain this status quo, insofar as the reactivation of the Halla yards could contribute to a further fall in prices, to the detriment of the other yards and the national interest. Time will tell. 

The main difficulty has been in setting up down-payment refund guarantees acceptable to the shipowners and their banks. The bank guarantees issued by Kexim, the Korean import-export bank, have had to be counter-guaranteed by Western banks or insured by first-rank insurance companies. 

However, this has not always been the case, and some Middle East shipowners were satisfied with Kexim guarantees. Others found their own financing. 

The Korean yards got around the difficulty by, for the first time, applying payment terms shifted toward delivery, thus facilitating the setting-up of these counter-guarantees because of the smaller amounts, whereas previously the yards had always favored installment payments during construction, such as 5 x 20%. This resulted in additional costs for the yards, as interest rates in Korea were also higher (up to 17%). At the same time the face value expressed in dollars decreased. 

It appeared that a certain level of confidence had been restored in the Spring, and payments, cash or brought forward towards the signing of the contract, could be negotiated in order to give the shipowners additional discounts, calculated on the cash advances thus agreed at very high interest rates. This no doubt once again altered the market's perception of the prices obtained. Overseas Shipholding Group (OSG) concluded a contract with Hyundai HI for a VLCC at approximately $65 million on the basis of payments shifted towards delivery. 

The Korean yards thus recorded many more orders than they had initially estimated. 

Orderbook Korea

However, in 1998 they had to face up to the disappearance of their domestic market. Shipowners such as Hanjin Shipping and Hyundai Merchant Marine, which in previous years had contributed about one third of the orders placed with the Hanjin and Hyundai HI yards, were no longer present and all the orders taken were for export. 

It is interesting to note that the Korean yards also contributed to their own success. They did so by deliberately and continuously improving their productivity. For example, the Daewoo yards announced productivity gains of 24% in 1997. However, as Daewoo did not set up new production capacity, its productivity gains can be estimated by the number of ships or the tonnage delivered in recent years: in 1990 Daewoo delivered 13 ships totaling 1 million gt, while in 1996 it delivered 30 ships totaling 2.25 million gt. Over the same period the number of employees decreased. 

The Korean shipbuilders also showed great flexibility in understanding and implementing shipowner demands, resulting in better quality and greater recognition by the international community. 

There has been much speculation about the future of the Halla and Daedong shipbuilding yards. Daedong continued to take orders. Two thirds of Halla's debt was cleared. But the situation of this yard is still blocked and will probably remain so until complete settlement of its debt. 

Despite the drop in prices, the main shipbuilders Hyundai HI, Daewoo, Samsung, Hanjin and Daedong will post profits for 1998. The South Korean government, under pressure from the IMF, is pushing the chaebols to reorganize themselves. This reorganization is already under way in the automotive and electronic industries, but no movement has yet been observed in shipbuilding. 

Although prospects for 1999 are still somber, 1998 finished better than it began: 

  • Korea was to repay part of its debt to the IMF in Dec 1998. The Yonhap agency recently quoted a government source stating that Korea was going to buy dollars because the won was at about 1,200, judged too high. 
  • The balance of payments turned around from a deficit of $8.2 billion at the end of 1997 to a surplus of $40 billion. 
  • The Seoul stock market rose by 50%. 

Moreover, according to the latest estimates, orders in 1998 should exceed 10 million gt, while the Korean orderbook broke the 20 million gt barrier at the end of the year. The Hyundai Economic Research Institute forecasts more than 10.5 million gt of orders for the Korean shipyards in 1999


China

The big surprise in 1998 came from China. The shipyards were not able to maintain their orderbooks, which fell from 3.2 million gt at the end of 1997 (2.9 million gt in the third quarter 1997) to about 2.6 million gt in the third quarter of 1998. 

Their market share also decreased. This reduction is in clear contradiction with the objectives and development prospects of Chinese shipbuilding. 

Orderbook China

The main reason for this situation was the relative appreciation of the yuan against the other currencies of the region (Korea and Japan), leading to increased competi tion, mainly from Korea, on the export market, and lower reactivity of these yards to the crisis and to the fall in prices. 

It should not be forgotten, either, that the orderbook of the Chinese yards had benefited in 1994 from the 30% devaluation of the yuan and the increase in demand for newbuilding bulk carriers. 

The Chinese yards have always positioned themselves with respect to their closest competitors by quoting at very similar levels, which was more difficult this year in a very changeable market. 

Another explanation is that a tanker cycle has started and only the Japanese and Korean yards build VLCCs and Suezmax today. The only VLCC construction dock in China is at the Dalian New Shipyard, which up to now has never built tankers of this size. 

Furthermore, it should also be noted that many shipowners continue to prefer the Japanese and Korean yards, more experienced particularly in the building of ships demanding more know-how such as these tankers or very large containerships. 

The Chinese authorities have decided to react to improve the competitiveness of their yards and accelerate their reorganization. The commercial structure, China Shipbuilding Trading Co Ltd, which includes 25 yards, is to be split up into three regions around Dalian in the North, Shanghai in the center and Guangzhou in the South. VAT, levied on ships intended for the domestic market, is to be abandoned to promote the domestic market, in a context where the Chinese shipowners Cosco, China Shipping and Sinotrans placed major orders for Capesize and Panamax bulk carriers with Korean and Japanese yards in 1998. 

China still wants to occupy a first-rank position in the near future, as shown by the projects to build VLCC construction docks. At present there are seven such projects. Some have slowed down because of financing difficulties, but all these docks will probably be completed soon. The fact that these construction docks will be operational at the end of the tanker cycle does not bode well for the shipbuilding market. 

Finally, the stock exchange listing of the Guangzhou yard should be highlighted, illustrating as it does a very capitalist manner for the state to divest itself of its most profitable enterprises. 

 




Shipping and Shipbuilding Markets 1999

I N D E X

›››File
Ferretti inaugurates the renewed nautical construction site of La Spezia
The Spezia
The ligure establishment is dedicated to the production of the Riva yachts
Positive first quarter for Global Ship Lease
Athens
Revenue in growth of 12.7%
Launched by Interporto Padova the intermodal service of Trans Italy with the Interport of Livorno Guasticce
Padova
Initially it provides for two weekly circulations
Operating the new automated gate at Reefer Terminal of Going Ligure
Go Ligure
The drivers can carry out the loading and unloading activities without getting off the vehicle
Last month container traffic in the port of Hong Kong decreased by -10.2%
Hong Kong
In the first eventful four-year period 4.5 million teu (-4.7%)
DP World inaugurates new port infrastructure and logistics in Romania
Dubai
New terminals in the port of Costanza destined for cargo project and rotatable
In April, the growth of container traffic in the port of Long Beach continued.
Long Beach
In the first quarter of 2024, the increase was 15.8% percent.
Uniport Livorno buys three new port tractors
Helsinki
Kalmar will deliver them in the last quarter of 2024
They will rise from five to six the weekly rotations of the Melzo-Rotterdam service of Hannibal
Melzo
Increase in frequency as of June 10
In 2023, the revenues of Maritime stations increased by 18.5%
Genoa
Net profit to 1.7 million euros (+ 75.5%)
In the first three months of 2024, freight traffic in the port of Koper fell by -6.6% percent.
Lubiana
In March, the decline was -3.1% percent.
In April, freight traffic in the port of Singapore grew by 8.8%
Singapore
The containers were equal to 3.4 million teu (+ 3.8%)
Quarterly traffic of the growing containers for Eurogate and Contship Italia
Hamburg
In the first three months of 2024 the eventful volumes increased by 8.0% percent and 4.9% percent respectively.
Meyer Werft has delivered to Silversea the new luxury cruise ship Silver Ray
Papenburg / Vienna
It has a capacity of 728 passengers
In the first three months of 2024, new orders acquired by Fincantieri fell by -40.7% percent.
Rome
Stable the revenues
Call for tenders for the structural adjustment of a quay of the port of Ancona
Ancona
The amount of the contract is 16.5 million euros
Port operators in La Spezia call for a relaunch of the port
The Spezia
They solicit targeted and effective actions
In the first quarter of this year, the traffic of goods in Montenegrin ports grew by 1.8% percent
Podgorica
The flow to and from Italy has increased by 16.2%
GNV installs a system to ensure the stability of ships
Genoa
NAPA Stability, developed by Finnish NAPA, has been extended to ferries
Decided to drop -24.9% percent of goods in Croatian ports in the first quarter of this year
Decided to drop -24.9% percent of goods in Croatian ports in the first quarter of this year
Zagreb
The containers were equal to 92mila teu (-0.4%)
Vard will build two Commissioning Service Operation Vessel
Trieste
They are intended for a company in Taiwan
The new maritime station of the port of Termoli is running.
Termoles
In 2023 the Molisan climber handled more than 217mila passengers (+ 5%)
New line of CTN that links the ports of La Goulette, Livorno, Salerno and Rades
Genoa
Will be inaugurated on May 21
In the first three months of 2024 the revenues of Wan Hai Lines grew by 8.1%
Taipei
Net profit of approximately 143 million US dollars
The growth trend of Taiwanese Evergreen and Yang Ming is continuing.
Taipei / Keelung
In April, it increased by 42.4% percent and 35.3% percent, respectively.
Evergreen orders 10,000 new containers
Taipei
Committed 32.3 million to the Dong Fang International Container (Hong Kong)
Vard will build an Ocean Energy Construction Vessel for Island Offshore
Trieste
It will be delivered in the first quarter of 2027. Option for two more ships
SAILING LIST
Visual Sailing List
Departure ports
Arrival ports by:
- alphabetical order
- country
- geographical areas
Lombardy among the most virtuous regions in food transport
Milan
Over 50% of the controlled temperature vehicles are matriculated in classes 5 and 6
Positive quarterly economic performance by Wallenius Wilhelmsen
Lysaker / Oslo
Ad Emanuele Grimaldi on 5.12% of the capital of the Höegh Autoliners
In the first three months of 2024, container traffic in New York increased by 11.7%
New York
In March, growth was 22.1% percent
Inaugurated the road of connection with the new areas of the port of Piombino
Plunge
The infrastructure cost 10.1 million euros.
First quarter of the year hardship for Finnlines
Helsinki
Accentuated increase in operating costs
In 2023 the turnover of Fercam decreased by -6%
Bolzano
Established a company in Lithuania
ICTSI recorded record quarterly economic performance
Manila
In the first quarter of this year, the traffic of goods in Albanian ports increased by 3.4% percent
Tirana
Passengers decreased by -1.9%
Speeding up the times to make the port of the Spezia and its retroport the first ZFD
The Spezia
They ask for maritime agents, customs officers and freight forwarders
Air and passenger routing service in the ports of Olbia and Gulf Aranci
Cagliari
It will be managed by the Roman Italpol Fiduciary Services
Decision to drop -15.1% percent of goods in the port of Taranto in the first quarter
Taranto
The loads at the landing decreased by -21.0% and those at the embarkation of -8.7%
This year the national forum for rail freight transport Mercintrain will be held in Padua
Padova
It will take place within the scope of Green Logistics Expo
Inaugurated in Safaga, Egypt, a factory for the construction of tugboats
Safaga
Ten naval units will be carried out for Suez Canal Authority
PORTS
Italian Ports:
Ancona Genoa Ravenna
Augusta Gioia Tauro Salerno
Bari La Spezia Savona
Brindisi Leghorn Taranto
Cagliari Naples Trapani
Carrara Palermo Trieste
Civitavecchia Piombino Venice
Italian Interports: list World Ports: map
DATABASE
ShipownersShipbuilding and Shiprepairing Yards
ForwardersShip Suppliers
Shipping AgentsTruckers
MEETINGS
Tomorrow in Livorno a conference on the history of the city port
Livorno
It will be talked about architecture, trade and politics between the XVI and the twentieth century
On April 11, the sixth edition of the "Italian Port Days" will begin.
Rome
Also this year the project has been divided into two sessions : the first in the spring and the second from September 20 to October 20
››› Meetings File
PRESS REVIEW
Chabahar Port: US says sanctions possible after India-Iran port deal
(BBC News)
Iran says MSC Aries vessel seized for 'violating maritime laws'
(Reuters)
››› Press Review File
FORUM of Shipping
and Logistics
Relazione del presidente Mario Mattioli
Roma, 27 ottobre 2023
››› File
New Italy-Libya-Egypt service of Tarros and Messina
The Spezia / Genoa
It will be inaugurated in mid-June and made with two ships
Tomorrow PSA Venice will open the Venetian terminal to the port community and the city
Venice
Hannibal plans to activate a rail link between Italy, Hungary and Romania
Melzo
Two weekly rotations will be inaugurated by the end of 2024.
Approved the 2023 consuntive budget of the Central Tirreno's AdSP
Naples
Annunziata : the coming years, fundamentals to finalise the European investment of the PNRR
Sensitive increase in the production and sale of CIMC dry boxes
Hong Kong
Chinese firm responds to growth in demand
Approved the consuntive budget 2023 of the AdSP of the South Tyrrhenic and Ionian
Joy Tauro
May 6 meeting at MIT on the future of the Gioia Tauro Port Agency
The 2023 budget of the East Ligure Sea AdSP shows a primary surplus of six million
The Spezia
In the year new investments of around 17 million euros
Cargotec's quarterly net profit to 81.2 million (+ 11.8%)
Helsinki
In the first three months of 2024, revenues fell by -1.7% percent.
The negative trend of the economic performance of the ONE continues, less marked.
The negative trend of the economic performance of the ONE continues, less marked.
Singapore
In the first three months of 2024 the goods in containers carried by the fleet increased by 15.6%
The Genovese Messina has taken delivery of the largest ship in its fleet
Genoa
The "Jolly Verde" is a 6,300-teu container ship
The inclusion of the Civitavecchia port in the Core network of the TEN-T network is final.
Cyvitavecchia
On Wednesday the OK of the European Parliament
In 2023 the goods transported by Rail Cargo Group decreased by -11%
Vienna
Revenue in decline of -1.8%
Sustained quarterly growth of new orders acquired by Wärtsilä
Helsinki
In the first three months of this year, the group's revenues fell by -9.8% percent.
DIS orders two more new tankers LR1
Luxamburgo
New commits at the Jiangsu New Yangzi Shipbuilding Co.
An MSC container ship targeted with missiles and drones in the Gulf of Aden
San'a ' /Portsmouth
No damage to the ship and crew
Approved the consuntive budget 2023 of the Central Adriatic AdSP
Ancona
In the first quarter of 2024 the orders of port means produced by Konecranes fell by -51.6%
Hyvinkää
Grimaldi has taken delivery of the multipurpose ro-ro Great Abidjan
Naples
It is the fourth of six class ships "G5"
Baltimore attributes to owner and operator of the ship Dali the blame for the collapse of the Key Bridge
Baltimore
They would have been established dysfunction to the power supply on board that would cause a blackout
Grimaldi and IMAT have renewed the five-year agreement for the training of crews
Castel Volturno
Focus on new technologies installed on board ships
The quarterly economic performance of DSV is still declining
Hedehusene
In the first quarter of this year, the value of net profit decreased by -27.2%
Approved the consuntive budget 2023 of the AdSP of the Sardinia Sea
Cagliari
An administration surplus of 530 million euros, of which more than 475 tied for works in progress
- Via Raffaele Paolucci 17r/19r - 16129 Genoa - ITALY
phone: +39.010.2462122, fax: +39.010.2516768, e-mail
VAT number: 03532950106
Press Reg.: nr 33/96 Genoa Court
Editor in chief: Bruno Bellio
No part may be reproduced without the express permission of the publisher
Search on inforMARE Presentation
Feed RSS Advertising spaces

inforMARE in Pdf
Mobile