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The Shipping Business

The Shipping Business. Tramp & Liner Trade Chartering & Brokering Freight Rates. Tramp Shipping. -- shipping service where carriers contract to haul cargo in shipload lots between ports designated by charterer.

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The Shipping Business

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  1. The Shipping Business Tramp & Liner Trade Chartering & Brokering Freight Rates

  2. Tramp Shipping • -- shipping service where carriers contract to haul cargo in shipload lots between ports designated by charterer. • Tramp ships provide convenient, timely & economic transportation for many goods needed in a complex industrial society. • In established trades (i.e., grain from US, Canada, Argentina & Australia to N. Europe, Med, Africa, Japan & S. Asia • On new routes to alleviate temporary critical shortages

  3. Tramp Shipping • Moves 4.5 billion tons of basic agricultural, forestry, mining products & manufactured raw materials (steel, cement, etc) world-wide • Depends on a global network of brokers, agents & representatives to market services, and procure & contract cargoes • Post WWII: • Surplus Liberties & Victories dominated the general service (bulk & break-bulk) fleets • 70’s-80’s: larger “SD-14’s” (UK) & “Fortune Class (Japan) predominate

  4. Tramp Shipping • Smaller general purpose Tramps face fierce competition from: • Larger bulkers: 30-50,000 DWT “Handi-Max” & very large (100-159,000 DWT) special purpose, ore carriers • Container ships • Tankers outfitted for grain transport (pneumatic “vacuators” for quick unloading) • STILL (1996): 50% of all dry-bulk ships & 20% of all dry-bulk cargo carried by 10-30,000 DWT vessels to service: • Cargoes that cannot be placed in containers • Transportation of small (10-15,000 T) lots • Shallow depth ports and/or • Ports with low to moderate facilities requiring self-unloading vessels

  5. Liner Shipping • -- shipping service that operates on an established route and has published sailing dates and published tariffs • Private carriers transport only the goods of a single shipper (more typical of tramp trade) • Common Carriers transport for any and all goods offered between the specified ports it serves (typical of Liner Service) [Basically, a vessel carrying the property of 2 more shippers is a common carrier]

  6. Liner Shipping • Conference: An association of common carriers operating on the same ocean route and using a common tariff • Closed Conference: limits membership to the specific number of carriers that will be sufficient to to provide transportation for the proffered cargo • Open Conference: admits membership to any common carrier prepared to serve the trade routed covered by the conference [There are about 300 Conferences world-wide, most unite 10 or less Liner Companies, a few as many as 50]

  7. Liner Shipping • Examples of Conferences: • United States Atlantic and Gulf Ports/Eastern Mediterranean and North African Freight Conference • TRADE: From U.S. Atlantic, Gulf and Great Lakes ports, and inland and coastal points and ports in Greece, Egypt, Turkey, Algeria, Cyprus, Lebanon, Malta, Morocco, Syria, Tunisia and Yugoslavia • MEMBERS: Farrell Lines, New York, NY; Lykes Bros. Steamship Co., Tampa, FL; Waterman Steamship Corp., New York, NY • Israel Trade Conference • TRADE: Between U.S. Atlantic, Gulf, Great Lakes, Pacific (including Alaska and Hawaii) to and from Israel. • MEMBERS: Zim Israeli Navigation Co. Ltd., Haifa, Israel; Farrell Lines, New York, NY; Lykes Bros. Steamship Co., Tampa, FL

  8. Liner Shipping • Liner companies may have a variety of structures, but all encompass the following functions:

  9. Liner Shipping • Traffic Department • Inbound Freight Division • Delivery Orders • Inland Routing • Customs Brokers • Warehousing • Tracing and Claims • General Freight Agent • Sales Staff • Outbound Freight Division • Booking Clerk • Manifesting Section • Chartering Department Charters ships in & out of fleet

  10. Liner Shipping • Vessel Operations Department • Marine Superintendent • Port Captains • Supervision of Deck Personnel • Deck maintenance – Inspections & dry-docking • Seaworthiness, Safety & Voyage Instructions • Superintendent Engineer • Port Engineers • Supervision of Engine Personnel • Machinery maintenance – Inspections & dry-docking • Seaworthiness, Safety & Voyage Instructions • Commissary Superintendent • Supervision of Steward Personnel • Ship’s Stores Acquisition • Terminal Manager • Facilities (equipment & stevedoring) • Administrative (receiving & delivery, security)

  11. Ship’s Compliment

  12. Vessel Management Companies • Companies offering full management services or a combination of specialized expertise including: • Terminal Requirements • Feasibility Studies • Vessel Selection • Vessel Activation • Route Proposals • Weather Information • Local Regulations • Hotel Operations • Crewing • Regulatory Compliance • Condition Surveys • Purchasing • Chartering • Brokering and Insurance • Shipyard Selection • Layers of corporate structure proliferate • Vessels individual corporations with single owner, & multiple operators • Single operator of ships with different owners • Owner/operators wholly owned subsidiaries of conglomerates

  13. Chartering • CHARTER-The hiring of a vessel for either: • a specified period of time or • a specific voyage or set of voyages. A chartered vessel is technically a private carrier which predominates in tramp trade, but liner companies often charter vessels or lease vessels to charter depending on cargo demand • CHARTERER-The entity hiring the vessel from the shipowner. • CHARTER-PARTY-The contract between the owner and the charterer, stipulating in detail each party’s responsibilities in the transaction. Charta Partita is Latin for a “letter divided.”

  14. Chartering • There are three basic types of Charter Parties • Voyage Charter • Contract of carriage in which the charterer pays for the use of a ship’s cargo capacity for one, or sometimes more than one, voyage. • the ship owner pays all the operating costs of the ship (including bunkers, canal and port charges, pilotage, towage and ship’s agency) … • while payment for cargo handling charges are subject of agreement between the parties. • Time Charter • The hire of a ship for a specified period of time. • The owner provides the ship with crew, stores and provisions, ready in all aspects to load cargo and proceed on a voyage. • The charterer pays for bunkering and all voyage related expenses including canal tolls and port charges.

  15. Chartering • There are three basic types of Charter Parties • Voyage Charter • Time Charter • Bare-Boat Charter • The leasing of an empty ship for a specified period of time for a specific fee in this arrangement, • the ship owner virtually relinquishes all rights and responsibilities in respect of the vessel and the charterer becomes the de facto owner for this period. • The charterer is generally responsible for all operating expenses including crewing and insurance. • Also called a Demise Charter

  16. Chartering

  17. Weight & Measure • There is tonnage and there is tonnage • Deadweight Tonnage (DWT) – The displacement of a fully loaded vessel in Long Tons (2240 lbs) or Metric Tons (1000 Kg) including structure, fuel, water, stores, cargo, passengers & crew. • Light Weight Tonnage– Displacement of “empty” vessel (no fuel, stores, cargo, etc.) • Deadweight Items – The difference between DWT and LWT including Cargo Deadweight • Gross Tons – The entire interior volume of the vessel (including deck houses and excluding certain spaces exempted by statute) in 100’s of cu. ft. (1 g.t. = 100 cu.ft.) • Net Tons –Volume remaining after “non-earning” spaces have been deducted from the Gross Tonnage.

  18. Weight & Measure • There is tonnage and there is tonnage • Gross & Net Tonnage – are legal terms used to determine port & canal transit fees and classify the “size” of vessels for certain legal activities and regulations. They are intended to be a measure of the “earning capacity” of the vessel. • As an analogy consider “Gross Income” which the IRS defines as the total of what you make but exempting certain items (.e.g, contributions to an IRA) and “Taxable (Net) Income” which is Gross Income minus deductions (either standard or itemized). • Calculation of Gross and Net Tonnage can be as complicated as a 1040 Tax Form and there are “loopholes” for getting certain spaces exempted or deducted that actually may be used to carry cargo. • Originally the “tun” was a cask for carrying 250 gal. of wine. It weighed 2240 lbs and occupied 57 cu. ft. of space.

  19. Freight Rates … • … the prices charged for the services of ocean carriers. Determined by ship operators to reflect: • The cost of providing the carriage including • Vessel operation • Cargo handling, port fees & tariffs • Exchange rates among international currencies • The value of this service to the shipper • The ability of the merchandise to support the expense of being shipped • Economic conditions in general • … subservient to • The Law of “Supply & Demand” including • Competition among carriers on the same route • Competition among ports

  20. Freight Rates … • Charge carriage by weight ($/100 lbs) or volume ($/cu.ft.)? • It depends … • If 1 LT (2240 lbs) of cargo occupies less than 40 cu.ft., charge by weight. (deadweight cargo) • If 1 LT (2240 lbs) of cargo occupies more than 40 cu.ft., charge by volume. (cubic cargo) • The weight (in LT) of 40 cu.ft. is the stowage factor • Carriers charge “by weight or measure” whichever generates the most revenue • But what about the type of cargo? (nails vs. oranges vs. computer parts?)

  21. Freight Rates … • Class Rates – assigned to groups of unrelated cargos that are found to require approximately the same revenue for their transport • Class D (dangerous cargo) is the highest rate followed by Class 1 through 8, with Class 8 the cheapest • There are deadweight cargo and cubic cargo rates in each class • Fuel surcharge computed to reflect fuel price fluctuations without redefining class rate scales • Commodity Rates – negotiated compromise falling between class rates • Applicable to specifically described cargoes (e.g., Paper: wrapping, not corrugated, other than cellulose film) • Commodity rates take precedent when both class & commodity rates are offered

  22. Freight Rates … • Through Rates –are charged for shipments originating with one ocean carrier but transferred to connecting carriers at intermediate ports • Usually the originating carrier issues the Bill of Lading, collects all charges, and divides the revenue with the other carrier(s) as per the through rate agreement • Sometimes the Through Rate is lower than the combination of rates of each of the participating carriers • Similar to a flight from Chicago to NY via Atlanta being cheaper than the sum of the legs or, possibly, a direct flight. • However, sometimes through rates are the sum of the connecting carriers’ charges plus a transfer fee.

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