(4)--MaritimeEconomics航运经济与政策.pdf
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1、 4.1 THE SHIPPING MARKET MODELThe search for signpostsNow it is time to examine the economic mechanisms which control the shipping cyclesdiscussed in the previous chapter.Shipowners have two jobs.One is to operate ships,aworthy task but not one that brings riches.The other is to be in the right plac
2、e at the righttime,to rake in the money at the peak of a cycle.Each twist of the cycle confronts ship-ping investors with a new opportunity or threat.In the space of a few months a shipownerscashflow can swell from a trickle to a flood,and the market value of his fleet can changeby millions of dolla
3、rs.This is how the market manages investment in a difficult and uncertain world,and it presents shipping company management with quite a challenge.The aim is to take advantage of the cycles to buy low and sell high.This is fair enough,as far as it goes,but this aspect of shipping is a game of skill
4、and playing the cyclesSupply,Demandand Freight RatesThe price of freightToday is greatBecause the ships,youll understand,Are high priced too,Costing when newFar more than they used toIf youd know whyTheir price is high,Consider this,berth costs are greatBecause the trade,On which freights paidGrows
5、faster than ships can be madeOnly one thing left to know,What it is that makes trade grow.The world needs its grain and ore;Sometimes less,but mostly more.When judging if the price is highWhat matters most is.when you buy(Martin Stopford 2007)4 depends on being able to recognize or,better still,pred
6、ict the peaks and troughs on thefreight chart.Just being right is not enough.An investor may correctly predict a marketpeak,but if the charterers take the same view there will be no long-term contracts.Similarly,in market troughs owners may be ready to buy cheap ships,but who is willingto sell for a
7、 loss?As Michael Hampton pointed out,consensus is generally not a goodsignpost.1The best opportunities go to those who can judge when the other players in themarket are wrong,and that means digging below the surface to understand the conse-quences of current developments(see Chapter 17 for a full di
8、scussion of forecasting).From an economic viewpoint,each shipping cycle is unique.If we are to improve our understanding of what is going on in the market,we must now develop a theoreti-cal explanation of how the freight market cycles are generated.To do this we will use the supply and demand model,
9、a technique often used by economists to analysecommodity markets.The term modelis used here in just the same way as when we talkabout a model ship it is a smaller version of the real thing,leaving out those detailsthat are not relevant to the present subject.The aim of the exercise,which is oftenref
10、erred to as fundamentals analysis,is to explain the mechanisms which determinefreight rates in a consistent way.4.2 KEY INFLUENCES ON SUPPLY AND DEMANDThe maritime economy is enormously complex,so the first task is to simplify the modelby singling out those factors that are most important.This is no
11、t to suggest that detailshould be ignored,but rather to accept that too much detail can hinder a clear analysis.In the initial stages at least we must generalize.From the many influences on the ship-ping market we can select ten as being particularly important,five affecting the demandfor sea transp
12、ort and five affecting the supply.These are summarized in Table 4.1.As far as the demand forsea transport is concerned(the demand function),the five variables are theworld economy,seabornecommodity trades,averagehaul,random shocks andtransport costs.To explainthe supply of shippingservices(the suppl
13、y func-tion),we focus on the world fleet,fleet productivity,shipbuilding deliveries,scrappingand freight revenues.The way in which these variables fit together into a simple modelof the shipping market is shown in Figure 4.1.This model has three components,demand(module A),supply(module B),and the f
14、reight market(module C)which links thedemand and supply by regulating the cashflow flowing from one sector to another.How does the model work?The mechanics are very simple.In the demand module(A)the world economy,through business cycles and regional growth trends,determines136SUPPLY,DEMAND AND FREIG
15、HT RATESCHAPTER4Table 4.1 Ten variables in the shipping market model Demand Supply1.The world economy1.World fleet 2.Seaborne commodity trades2.Fleet productivity 3.Average haul3.Shipbuilding production4.Random shocks4.Scrapping and losses 5.Transport costs5.Freight revenue 137KEY INFLUENCES ON SUPP
16、LY AND DEMAND4.2CHAPTER4Figure 4.1The shipping market supply and demand modelSource:Martin Stopford,2008 the broad volume of goods traded by sea.Developments in particular commodity tradesmay modify the growth trends(e.g.development in the steel industry may influence theiron ore trade),as may chang
17、es in the average haul over which the cargo is transported.The final demand for shipping services measured in ton miles.(i.e.the tonnage of cargomultiplied by the average haul).The use of ton miles as a measure of demand is techni-cally more correct than simply using the deadweight of cargo ships re
18、quired,since itavoids making a judgement about the efficiency with which ships are used.Thatbelongs more properly to the supply side of the model.Turning to the supply module(B),in the short term,the world merchant fleet provides afixed stock of transport capacity.When demand is low only part of thi
19、s fleet may be trad-ing and some ships will be laid up,or used for storage.The fleet can be increased by new-building and reduced by scrapping.The amount of transport this fleet provides alsodepends on the logistical efficiency with which ships are operated in particular,speed andwaiting time(see be
20、low).For example,a fleet of tankers steaming at 11 knots and return-ing from each cargo voyage in ballast carries less cargo in a year than the same size fleetof bulk carriers steaming at 14 knots and carrying a backhaul for all or part of its journey.This efficiency variable is generally referred t
21、o as fleet productivity and is expressed incargo ton miles per dwt per annum.Finally,the policies of banks and regulators have animpact on how the supply side of the market develops.Dynamic links in the modelPeople play a central part in this shipping market model.At the heart of the demand module(A
22、)are the cargo shippers.Their decisions over the sourcing of raw materials and the location of processing plant such as oil refineries determine how trade develops and,ofcourse,they negotiate freight rates,time charters and FFAs.Many shippers are large corporations trading raw materials and manufact
23、ures,but in recent years they have beenjoined by commodity traders and operators who have cargo contracts for which ships areneeded.The people who play a central part in supply module(B)are the shipping investors.The term shipping investor is used because although many decision-makers will beprivate
24、 shipowners or shipping companies there are other important players for example,German Kommanditgeseichllschaft(KG)companies which own containerships;oil traderswhich own tankers;and major oil companies with their own fleets.These shipping investorssit on the other side of the table from the cargo s
25、hippers in the freight negotiation and theyalso have the crucial task of ordering the new ships and scrapping old ones.Imbalances between the supply and demand modules feed through into the third partof the model,the freight market(C),where freight rates are constantly adjusting inresponse to change
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