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Shanghai Shipping Exchange to Launch Dry Bulk and Oil Indices

Pubdate:2012-11-27 10:06 Source:lijing Click:

The Shanghai Shipping Exchange will launch the country's first dry bulk and oil import indices next week to track vessels carrying goods and energy to the world's largest commodities consumer.


The new dry bulk index would start on Wednesday based on strict price collection from charterers, brokers and shipowners and focus only on China, exchange president Zhang Ye said yesterday.


Zhang said it was not aimed at challenging the Baltic Dry Index, which has long been the benchmark for the global dry bulk and shipping markets.


"China owns the world's largest shipping capacity and is one of the world's biggest dry bulk consumers … so we hope to provide an index that focuses on China's market, which is very important for us," he said. "We didn't have our own index in the past, while BDI can reflect the overall global trade market. So, I don't think the Baltic Exchange needs to worry as the market won't give up on the BDI.


"We adopt a different pricing system. The BDI is more of global index and China is just part of its index."


London's Baltic Exchange, the hub of the global shipping market since 1744, publishes daily freight rates and indices.


The overall dry freight index, known as the BDI, gauges the cost of shipping commodities including iron ore, coal and grain.


The Baltic Exchange has described Shanghai's benchmarks as "poorly modelled on the Baltic indices". Chief executive Jeremy Penn said the Baltic already reported the vast majority of routes planned by Shanghai.


"It's not about the BDI. It's about people wanting an accurate benchmark for the freight routes which affect China and we believe that we provide already an accurate and well managed system of reference rates," Penn said. "I am not sure [SSE's] review and audit processes are in place. But most importantly we will always get a more reliable result and a more defensible result because we only take inputs from competitive shipbrokers."


The Baltic's indices and rates are compiled by a global panel of shipbrokers. The exchange says what it publishes is neutral and reliable because the panellists do not trade the market on their own account.


Zhang said the Shanghai exchange had different compiling committees for both the dry bulk and tanker indices. "We have our own index compiling committee and are adopting a very strict index compiling process," he said.


Its Chinese bulk dry index will be listed in dollar terms on either a per tonne basis or a daily basis. It will also track more than 10 freight routes to China.


The oil index will specialise in two freight routes for very large crude carriers and the exchange wants to expand to more than five routes next year.


Global shipping is facing one of the worst downturns ever as it struggles with a glut of ships ordered when times were good before the global economic turmoil.


Many small and medium-sized Chinese shipbuilders are suffering from heavy losses, with some battling bankruptcy.