Tyler Durden has been pounding on the Baltic Dry Index plunge story. Here, here and here. I’m fascinated by this. Shipping is the backbone of global trade. So when a big index like this makes a big move in a short period of time there is almost always a message. But what message? One could easily read the drop in BDIY as a warning sign of a slowdown in global trade. Virtually every other barometer is pointing up. With that in mind, I ask the question; Is the BDIY an outlier, or should we be paying attention to what it is saying?
I called a friend in Athens who is in the shipping business. On the question, “Why the drop” I got the murky answer, “It’s a lotta things all at once”. Some specifics he mentioned:
I called a friend in Athens who is in the shipping business. On the question, “Why the drop” I got the murky answer, “It’s a lotta things all at once”. Some specifics he mentioned:
- The floods in Australia have tied up ports and cargos. Therefore there are many ships looking for a load while the country dries out. This puts downward pressure on the BDIY. This is a short-term phenomenon.
- Many new ships have come into service in the past 18 months. This is part of the boom/bust cycle in new construction/shipping rates. His words, “There is no shortage of ships today, prices look soft.”
- Maybe, maybe not. The biggest driver in shipping is China. They have been importing all manner of raw materials and finished goods for two years on a massive scale. That trend has slowed markedly in just the past sixty-days. There is no indication that it will resume at anytime soon.
- China trumps everything. It's not just shipping rates; all the froth in the commodities market is at risk.
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