Hedge funds hook shipping stocks grappling for recovery
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[February 15, 2018]
By Maiya Keidan and Jonathan Saul
LONDON (Reuters) - Shipping stocks may
still be in the doldrums in the view of many investors, but hedge funds
have bet at least $675 million on signs of renewed buoyancy in the
industry.
Hedge funds made initial forays into shipping stocks in the third
quarter of 2017, but significantly stepped up their bets in the final
three months of the year, U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission
filings compiled by Symmetric show.
"Shipping has been in a terrible trough for a number of years," Chris
Walvoord, global head of hedge fund research at investment consultant
Aon Hewitt, said.
"Hedge funds are starting to see opportunity ... and are calling the
bottom on these companies and there are at least a couple out there
getting into this space."
The move by hedge funds comes as signs of a fragile recovery in segments
of the global industry are appearing, after a near-decade long slump
caused in part by a glut of ships ordered.
"You're looking, over the next two years, for these stocks (in shipping)
to rise 50 to 100 percent," said William Homan-Russell, head of shipping
at $1.5 billion hedge fund and shipping investor Tufton Oceanic.
"When adjusting for our estimated shipyard costs, share prices are at
the lowest prices they've been since 1999."
HIGH AND DRY
Dry bulk shipping - one of the hardest hit parts of the industry - is
expected to see better prospects as fleet growth slows and an expected
pick up in demand for commodities such as coal, iron ore and grains
bolster employment for bulker vessels.
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By contrast, oil tankers are likely to see tougher times for now with
weak freight rates hitting bottom lines of operators.
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Hedge fund ownership of Nordic American Tanker, which ships oil, for example,
rose to 27 percent at year-end, from 2.4 percent at end-September, according to
the data from Symmetric, which tracks investment funds. Data for earlier periods
was not immediately available.
And ownership by hedge funds of Dryships Inc, which is active in dry bulk,
tanker and offshore shipping markets, meanwhile, rose to 80 percent, from 10.3
percent.
Hedge funds had invested $308 million in Kirby Corp, $26 million in Nordic
American Tanker and $9 million in Dryships.
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Dry bulk firm Golden Ocean and oil transporter Teekay Tankers were also popular
as well as Ship Finance International, which has a diversified fleet, the data
showed.
Funds had also invested $35 million to their holdings of Golden Ocean and $77
million in Ship Finance International.
Blue Mountain Capital Management and Greywolf Capital Management were among the
hedge funds to invest $39 million in Teekay Tankers.
A spokesman for Blue Mountain declined to comment, while Greywolf could not
immediately be reached.
Some hedge funds have started moving into liquefied natural gas (LNG) tanker
stocks, investing $4 million in Dynagas LNG Partners, and $62 million in Golar
LNG Partners after pulling back from the sector in the preceding three months.
Although other investors pulled back from LNG stocks, a pick up in transport
demand has helped the outlook for vessel owners in the LNG sector.
(editing by Alexander Smith)
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