The Great Eastern Shipping Company Limited (BOM:500620)
India flag India · Delayed Price · Currency is INR
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At close: Apr 24, 2026
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Q2 24/25

Nov 11, 2024

G. Shivakumar
CFO, The Great Eastern Shipping Company Limited

Thank you, Yashasri. Good afternoon, everyone, and welcome to the results call for Q2 and H1 FY25. We'll do a quick run-through of the presentation. I'm joined by Mr. Rahul Sheth, and we'll be happy to take Q&A after that. Usual disclaimers: we are not forecasting earnings. We have a large exposure to the spot market, so we're also not giving any guidance on our earnings. We had a net profit of 576 crores on a consolidated basis for Q2, higher than the Q2 of last year but slightly lower than Q1 of this year. Our consolidated NAV is at 1,463 per share at the midpoint of valuations. And we've had the 11th consecutive quarterly dividend of INR 7.20 per share for Q2 FY25. With this, now we've paid out about INR 80 in dividend over the last two and a half years.

If you consider that our stock price was about INR 340, we've paid out almost a quarter of that in dividends in a period of two and a half years. You've seen the results. I won't go too much through the results. We'll go through the markets, really, rather than what the numbers are looking like for the results. Of course, you can always ask questions in the Q&A. We continue to be significantly net cash. We are about $400 million net cash as of 30 September, and after that, we've become even more net cash. The net asset value is around the same levels as it was in June. So we are at about 1,184 per share standalone. As I mentioned earlier, about 1,463 per share on a consolidated basis. Not going to go through these numbers. Profitability continues to be very strong.

This is what has happened to TCE-wise and why we see the difference in performance. While we had crude tankers dropping off versus Q2 last year and versus Q1 of this year, we had product tankers slightly better than Q2 of last year but significantly below Q1 of this year. A lot of it was made up by LPG, where all our four vessels were repriced during the last year or so and have got repriced at significantly higher rates than their previous contracts. So that compensated significantly for the drop in earnings from last year for the crude tankers, and Dry bulk also was significantly better than in the year-ago period. Changes in standalone NAV: we had about a INR 200 increase, a little less than INR 200 increase, and INR 200 came from the cash profits that we made during the 12-month period.

Of course, we paid out a significant dividend in this period as well. Over the last five years, we've seen our NAV move up very steadily and with a CAGR of 23% over the last five and a half years, from March 2019 to September 2024. On a consolidated basis, also, it's a similar story. The increase in the NAV in the year is due to the cash profit and not due to the fleet value. And the drop, if any, is due to the dividend and a minor change in fleet value. Coming to what happened in the markets, which led to the results you saw, we saw Suezmax earnings around the same levels as last year. We saw product tanker earnings significantly lower than the year-ago period. This is for the six-month period that I'm talking about. And what were the fundamentals like?

Of course, in Q2 of the financial year, you typically have a seasonal softness, the summer season in the Western Hemisphere. Crude trade itself declined by about 3%. Refining margins were very weak through the quarter. They have now started recovering a little bit in the last couple of weeks. In Singapore, refining margins are back to their 10-year averages. So hopefully, that should have some impact on rates going forward. Significant factor, again, was Chinese crude imports falling 8% year on year. For the first nine months of 2024, we are seeing a drop of 0.9 million barrels a day in crude oil imports into China. And that's a significant factor. While, of course, the crude tanker fleet hasn't grown, it's more or less flat compared to the year-ago levels. Product tanker earnings were also weak, as I mentioned, and seaborne product trade did decline.

Again, the same factors, refining margins. While the product tanker fleet saw a small growth of 2% year on year. What has also happened, and interestingly, we've seen this happening in the last couple of quarters, is that while the conflict in the Red Sea contributed to ton-mile growth for the larger product tankers, which typically the LR2s carry diesel from the Middle East or from the West Coast of India to Europe, and they had to divert all the way around the Cape, around Africa, we saw now VLCCs and Suezmax cannibalizing some of those cargoes, which resulted in weakness in the product tanker rates.

What we are also seeing is that as crude tanker rates move up, and these have moved up a little bit, not very sharply, you should hopefully see VLCCs going back to the crude trade and therefore freeing up those cargoes for the product tankers. Asset prices have remained firm. Order books have increased, and we now have almost 10% order book for crude tankers and 21% for product tankers as the order book. We'll see the delivery profile of those towards the end of this presentation. On Tribulk, we saw the rates for Capesize doing significantly better than in the previous year. So you are 60% better in the six-month period than in the previous year. I think the Q1-Q2 was even more spectacular in the difference. While the sub-Capes were not doing that well, they also did a little bit better than the previous year.

So the main factor driving Tribulk earnings and trade was strong bauxite imports into China, which was growing at about 15%, which grew at 15% year on year in Q2. Iron ore imports also were steady. While not seeing spectacular growth, they grew by 2% during the quarter. Coal did not contribute much, and grain trade also was flat. While Tribulk hasn't had much of an impact from the Red Sea disruption, that whatever small disruption, which was estimated about 2%, continued as vessels traveled around the Cape of Good Hope. The fleet grew by 3% year on year. The order book continues to be fairly subdued at about 10%. Asset prices for the smaller vessels declined by about 10%-15% during the quarter. But Capes remained steady because their earnings have been supporting asset prices. LPG, all our ships, as I mentioned, are fixed on time charter.

The spot market has come off significantly, so you can see that difference. In the first six months of last financial year, the average spot rate was almost 90,000, and now it's dropped to below $45,000 a day, so that's more than a 50% drop. Asset prices continue to stay at all-time high levels, and the order book is also very high at about 25%. Here, the Panama Canal disruption, which took rates up towards the end of last year and early 2025, has now completely normalized, and so that is no longer a factor. Coming to fleet supply, we already spoke about the order book here, so I won't go into that, but the significant factor is this, where most of the order book is rear-ended, so there are not too many ships.

While the order book, for instance, for product tankers at 21% looks quite heavy, most of those are coming in 2026 and beyond. The growth in calendar 2025 is fairly subdued. It's about 6% for product tankers and less than 2% for crude tankers. For Tribulk, again, it's about 2%-3%, while for 2026 and later, it's about 6%. LPG also, in the first year, which is in calendar 2025, it's less than 5% delivering during the year. Most of it is delivering 2026 and 2027. Scrapping continues to be very low. All the sectors are making reasonable earnings, and therefore, scrapping continues to be extremely low. Removals from scrapping continue to be extremely low. We showed this earlier. So just to give some sense of perspective on the order books versus the old fleet, the old fleet continues to be pretty high, especially in crude tankers.

And if you just balance that versus the fleet which is to be delivered, then you'll see that the order book is not too much of a concern. Looking at asset price movements, asset prices continue to be strong, but they've come off marginally in the case of crude and product tankers. These are marginal changes in the prices, not significant. In Tribulk, they came off a little bit in the last quarter, in the slightly older and in the smaller Tribulk ship, that is the sub-Capes. Coming to Greatship, the Oilfield Services Subsidiary, jack-up utilization globally continues to be okay, though you had a small shock happening in the middle of the year. You can see that downward turn it took in the middle of 2024 after those rigs were off-hired by Saudi Aramco. But it stabilized from there.

We, of course, in the last quarter, in the last two quarters, had those unfortunate situations where two of the rigs we had bid into tenders in India. Those tenders were canceled. So we have the rigs coming off contract. So one rig has come off her earlier three-year contract, but she has now obtained a business. It's a short-term business with a minimum of four and a half months going up to approximately a year. This is in India itself. So that's one rig. The second rig will probably come off sometime in the next three months or so, and we will be looking for work for her. There are a couple of businesses that are out. One is a short-term business, and one is a three-year business. These are both in India. We will be bidding for those businesses.

In the meantime, we are also looking outside, but there are not too many prospects as of date that we can talk about that are anywhere close to getting awarded. We also have five vessels coming up for repricing in this six-month period. Our CSR Foundation continues to do great work. We have affected the lives of many, many, many people through these NGOs that we partner with. For more details, please visit our website. Thank you. That brings me to the end of the presentation. Now we are happy to take any questions.

Operator

Thank you very much. Ladies and gentlemen, we will now begin the question and answer session. To ask a question, please click on the raise hand icon tab available on your toolbar or on the Q&A tab available on your screen. Kindly turn on your mic when the operator announces your name.

You may also post your text questions. Ladies and gentlemen, we will wait for a moment while the question queue assembles. We'll take our first question from Nirav Laha from Badrinath Holdings. Please go ahead.

Nirvan Laha
Analyst, Badrinath Holdings

Hi, good evening. Am I audible?

G. Shivakumar
CFO, The Great Eastern Shipping Company Limited

Yes, you are.

Operator

Go ahead.

Nirvan Laha
Analyst, Badrinath Holdings

Okay. Thank you so much. Actually, my questions are all regarding Greatship. So the first question is regarding the two rigs which could not be bidden with ONGC. The first rig that you said there had already obtained work, if you could give us an indication of the day rates there? And for the second one, the three-year contract that you're evaluating, if you can let us know whether that is with ONGC or with somebody else?

G. Shivakumar
CFO, The Great Eastern Shipping Company Limited

So the day rate on the second one, we won't get into too much detail, but it's around the rate that we last got a three-year contract from ONGC. We last awarded rate for a three-year contract with ONGC. That's the day rate at which we are working in the short-term contract as well. Now, your question on the other three-year contract was, sorry, I didn't quite get that.

Nirvan Laha
Analyst, Badrinath Holdings

Yeah. So the question was, was it again ONGC who was taking out the tender, or is it some other client?

G. Shivakumar
CFO, The Great Eastern Shipping Company Limited

That is correct.

Nirvan Laha
Analyst, Badrinath Holdings

Okay. So actually, just wanted to understand what you think is happening with respect to ONGC because with regards to the global market for jack-ups, I think the market continues to remain tight, and there's absolutely no new builds happening. That is my understanding. So what do you think is happening with ONGC in the Indian market, and how do you see utilization of your rig assets, especially going ahead? And would you be exploring international waters as well if you feel that ONGC is, for some reason, not working out? So just want to understand your views on the overall jack-up market and what's happening with respect to ONGC in India.

G. Shivakumar
CFO, The Great Eastern Shipping Company Limited

Yeah. Yeah. We don't know. We are not privy to their thoughts as to what's happening with these tenders and why they got canceled, etc. So we won't get into that because that would be speculation. They do require rigs for doing their work. They have quite a few rigs coming off contract. Apart from ours, they will have quite a few rigs coming off contract within the next 12 months. So presumably, if they want to retain that drilling capacity, they will need to come out with tenders shortly. So that's one. With regard to the international market, yes, in principle, we would like to go international, but it takes time to get pre-qualified in any of these regions. You mentioned that the market is tight. It's not that tight.

There are still quite a few rigs that were suspended from Saudi Aramco contracts, which are there in the Middle East, while some of them have got alternate contracts. There are a few which are still looking for work. So there is some capacity out there. Some rigs are available out there. And always, somebody who's always in the region, a rig which is in the region already, is, of course, in the front-runner position to land a contract in that region because of the costs of moving and setting up in a new region.

Nirvan Laha
Analyst, Badrinath Holdings

Sure. So final follow-up on that. Those rigs which were in the Saudi area and which are available, they have the necessary fit-outs to start work with ONGC, or you think that that's a long process? So just trying to understand the supply that can come in.

G. Shivakumar
CFO, The Great Eastern Shipping Company Limited

Yeah. Typically, they wouldn't have the fit-outs required, but the spec of the rig itself might be not compatible with what ONGC requires. So typically, every contract requires different equipment, and these are the little nuances of each contract. But that can be procured. So that is not the constraint, really. It's more on the design of the rig itself. ONGC has some specific requirements when working on the West Coast on jack-ups, which is the footprint of the rig. And if the rigs are not able to meet those, then they will not be able to bid into ONGC, typically.

Nirvan Laha
Analyst, Badrinath Holdings

Sure. Sure. So thank you so much. I'll join back the queue. Thanks.

G. Shivakumar
CFO, The Great Eastern Shipping Company Limited

Thank you.

Operator

Thank you. We'll take a next question from Shantanu Pawar, an individual investor. Please go ahead.

Shantanu Pawar
Analyst, Individual Investor

Hi. Am I audible?

Yes, you are.

Yes, Mr. Pawar.

Hi. Thank you for the opportunity. So my question is regarding this recent news article that had come out, which was stating a rule requiring international container line operators operating on Indian sea routes to allocate at least 5% of their volumes for domestic operators. So is GE Shipping entering into the container shipping business? And if yes, how feasible is it to acquire second-hand container ships at current prices and in terms of profitability? And lastly, do you think there is any preferential treatment that PSUs could get while getting allocated those 5% volumes?

G. Shivakumar
CFO, The Great Eastern Shipping Company Limited

Sorry. Okay. One is, I'm not sure how this 5% works. I've seen that article as well. We're not quite sure how that 5% will work. But coming to your question on what we can do, it's not difficult to acquire a ship. Ships are always transacted. It's not difficult to acquire. Ship prices are pretty elevated now because the markets are quite strong. Container ship markets are quite strong, and so therefore, we'll wait for the right opportunity for an entry into the container ship business, but on the 5% thing, we don't know how it will work and how it can affect someone who's operating container ships.

Shantanu Pawar
Analyst, Individual Investor

I see. And what about the preferential treatment? Do you think the government could perhaps allocate more towards the PSUs?

G. Shivakumar
CFO, The Great Eastern Shipping Company Limited

Again, we just don't understand that business enough to comment on how that could work. So I won't get into it. Yeah.

Shantanu Pawar
Analyst, Individual Investor

All right. Thank you, sir.

G. Shivakumar
CFO, The Great Eastern Shipping Company Limited

Thank you.

Operator

Thank you. We'll take a next question from Mohammad Farooq from Pearl Capital. Go ahead.

Mohammad Farooq
Analyst, Pearl Capital

Good evening, and thank you for the opportunity. Our company has consistently delivered a quarterly average profit exceeding INR 600 crores for the past 10 quarters. And with over 70 years of experience and solid management and a cash reserve exceeding INR 6,000 crores, the company operates in a sector that has experienced a turnover in the last four years. However, despite all these strong fundamentals, the company's valuation remained notably low, with a P/E just of 6. Now, given this, I would like to understand whether the management views the current valuation as a concern or it is not a priority at this stage. Could you please outline the steps being taken?

G. Shivakumar
CFO, The Great Eastern Shipping Company Limited

Yeah. So we don't have a target valuation. We are not experts in stock market valuation. Hello.

Mohammad Farooq
Analyst, Pearl Capital

Yeah.

G. Shivakumar
CFO, The Great Eastern Shipping Company Limited

Yeah. So we don't put targets on the valuation. We are not experts in stock market valuation. We have some views on what ships should be priced at and at what levels one can buy ships. So we focus on that. So as far as taking steps on the valuation is concerned, because we don't have necessarily a view on that, we are not going to say that this is to push, saying that this is the price at which it should be. However, we will, and this is what we endeavor to do in our communication with any investors, is to put our record, as you mentioned it so well, put our record of delivering results and let the investors judge for themselves.

Mohammad Farooq
Analyst, Pearl Capital

Okay. Thank you. Thank you.

G. Shivakumar
CFO, The Great Eastern Shipping Company Limited

Thank you.

Operator

Thank you. We'll take our next question from Surendra Yadav, an individual investor. Go ahead.

Surendra Yadav
Analyst, Individual Investor

Yeah. I'm audible.

G. Shivakumar
CFO, The Great Eastern Shipping Company Limited

Yes, you are.

Operator

A little lower, sir. Can you speak a bit louder, please?

Surendra Yadav
Analyst, Individual Investor

Yeah. I have some question on the financials. So I could see a quarter-on-quarter drop in other income, and this is on the back of increased cash and bank balance. So if you could provide a breakdown of this and the reason for decline in that. I'm speaking of consolidated financials.

G. Shivakumar
CFO, The Great Eastern Shipping Company Limited

Yes. Yeah.

Surendra Yadav
Analyst, Individual Investor

So yes. You're talking about a drop in other income from Q1 versus Q2 of last year?

G. Shivakumar
CFO, The Great Eastern Shipping Company Limited

From Q1. So 127 crore in Q1 and 97.

So this is a contribution which comes from our overseas subsidiary, which does investment in various instruments, basically equity shares of listed shipping companies overseas. This is our chartering subsidiary and investment subsidiary, which is based in UAE. There, the prices came down, and therefore, their contribution to the other income came down.

Surendra Yadav
Analyst, Individual Investor

Understood. So I mean, this is kind of a chunky income. It is recognized whenever the investments are kind of liquidated. Would that be understood?

G. Shivakumar
CFO, The Great Eastern Shipping Company Limited

This is recognized on a fair value to P&L basis. So mark-to-market is also recognized.

Surendra Yadav
Analyst, Individual Investor

Understood. Understood. And just a couple of questions on the P&L as well. I could see that quarter-on-quarter increased in finance cost despite, again, a decrease in debt. So has there been any repricing in the debt that we have undertaken?

G. Shivakumar
CFO, The Great Eastern Shipping Company Limited

Yes. Yeah. This is consolidated you're talking about, I presume.

Surendra Yadav
Analyst, Individual Investor

Yeah. Yeah. On the standalone basis, it seems quite flat. Yeah.

G. Shivakumar
CFO, The Great Eastern Shipping Company Limited

Yeah. So in the offshore business, that's Greatship, we refinanced a loan, which is about $100 million in March of this year. The earlier loan had been partially swapped into fixed rates when rates were low, and therefore, that interest cost was lower. Now, the entire loan is exposed to floating rates, which are obviously higher than the rates at which we had swapped earlier. And that's why the interest cost is higher versus the last year. So for instance, just to give you an example, it may have been swapped at 1.5% LIBOR or the equivalent, the benchmark. And that part has gone now, and the current spot benchmark rate is 5%. So therefore, the interest cost is higher.

Surendra Yadav
Analyst, Individual Investor

Okay. And I assume the logic would be that we are expecting a decrease in benchmark rates, so probably that would help us going forward.

G. Shivakumar
CFO, The Great Eastern Shipping Company Limited

Yes.

Surendra Yadav
Analyst, Individual Investor

Yes. Okay. And just one last question on the other expenses line item. Again, this saw a jump of INR 20-odd crores. So was there any dry docking or something like that which came up during the quarter?

G. Shivakumar
CFO, The Great Eastern Shipping Company Limited

No. Dry docking doesn't come into other expenses. What happens in other expenses is when you in-charter a vessel, that goes into other expenses. So when we take in ships on charter, that goes into other expenses. So we took in a ship on charter during the quarter, and that resulted in an increase in the other expenses line.

Surendra Yadav
Analyst, Individual Investor

Understood. And just one last question, and I'll join back the queue after that. I could see some investment in subsidiary and loan-to-subsidiary in the standalone cash flows, some INR 90-odd crores. So could you please provide the details on this, the nature of the investment and to which subsidiary this was given?

G. Shivakumar
CFO, The Great Eastern Shipping Company Limited

Yes. We set up this subsidiary in the GIFT City. The government has come out with a scheme for ship finance and leasing in the Gandhinagar GIFT City, under which we set up a subsidiary which has started operations in the last four, five months. So some of this capital has gone towards capitalizing that subsidiary. There was some equity capital. And over and above that, we also put in some debt. Now, what is the business of this subsidiary? I just mentioned to you that we in-chartered a ship. This subsidiary is in-chartering ships. So it's taken in one product tanker on a four-and-a-half-year charter and one crude tanker on a three-year charter. So that's the business of this subsidiary. And this cash which has gone into the subsidiary from Great Eastern Shipping Mumbai is to fund the working capital.

One is equity, and then there's a loan to fund the working capital.

Surendra Yadav
Analyst, Individual Investor

Okay, so if you could just say the benefit of doing it via subsidiary and not through the main entity?

G. Shivakumar
CFO, The Great Eastern Shipping Company Limited

It is a beneficial tax and regulatory regime which has been set up in the GIFT City in Gandhinagar. So that's the benefit of doing it through the subsidiary. So we were actually doing this activity through our chartering subsidiaries in Sharjah and Singapore earlier. And now that these benefits are being given in the GIFT City in Gandhinagar, we decided now to, instead of doing it from the overseas subsidiaries, to do this activity from Gandhinagar.

Surendra Yadav
Analyst, Individual Investor

Understood. Understood. Yeah. I'll join back the queue for a couple of other questions.

G. Shivakumar
CFO, The Great Eastern Shipping Company Limited

Okay. Thank you.

Operator

We'll take a next question from Shivan Sarvaiya from Yumiviction Investment Advisors LLP. Please go ahead.

Shivam Sarvaiya
Analyst, Yumiviction Investmen

I'm audible.

G. Shivakumar
CFO, The Great Eastern Shipping Company Limited

Hello?

Operator

Not very clear.

G. Shivakumar
CFO, The Great Eastern Shipping Company Limited

Hello. Yes, Shivan. We can hear you now.

Shivam Sarvaiya
Analyst, Yumiviction Investmen

Okay. Okay. Good evening, sir. So I had a couple of questions. One was on slide number 12, where you all have shown the revenue days that are done in Q2 versus Q2 FY24. So there has been a reduction in the offshore logistics segment. So just wanted to know the reason for that. And in the same continuation to that, on slide number 17, you all have shown the MPSSVs offshore vessels having a coverage of only 14% for this quarter. So if you could just clarify on that. Then coming to, okay. So should I say all the questions together, or should I?

G. Shivakumar
CFO, The Great Eastern Shipping Company Limited

No. Let me just finish with this. So the revenue days, there are two factors there. We had two dry docks. We had several dry docks, sorry, during the quarter, which is a reduction in the revenue days. There are two MPSSVs. One of them underwent a dry dock for a significant part of the quarter. The other MPSSV, and typically, these MPSSVs have worked on short-term contracts because that's where we get maximum value. They are extremely marketable in the international market, and we get best value from short-term contracts there. So therefore, those vessels typically will have very limited coverage at any point in time. However, also this time, both of these vessels are, one of these vessels is operating on a very short-term contract, and the other one is awaiting business. She's waiting for a business.

Shivam Sarvaiya
Analyst, Yumiviction Investmen

Okay. So do we expect this to be so? If you could kind of say, what has been the average coverage then over the last few quarters, and is this lower than that? I don't have the numbers in front of me, but if you could.

G. Shivakumar
CFO, The Great Eastern Shipping Company Limited

Yeah. This is a little lower than that. Of all our ship types in the offshore business, this always has the lowest coverage.

Shivam Sarvaiya
Analyst, Yumiviction Investmen

Okay. And this is lower than the normal. This is lower than it used to be before, again, because one of them is sitting without business, so it has 0% coverage. Can I be expecting anything? As in, have we done some bidding or?

G. Shivakumar
CFO, The Great Eastern Shipping Company Limited

Yeah. We are bidding into contracts all the time. So it's just a question of time. The thing with the offshore business is the business only comes when there is an offshore asset in operation and you require the support from the MPSSV. So it's like a project-based business for these high-end vessels, and that's why you have these gaps in between.

Shivam Sarvaiya
Analyst, Yumiviction Investmen

Okay. And there aren't any dry docks in this particular quarter and maybe in the next quarter, right? Or are we expecting some more dry docks?

G. Shivakumar
CFO, The Great Eastern Shipping Company Limited

No. We actually have some dry docks coming up now also in the offshore business. This is going to be a fairly busy period.

Shivam Sarvaiya
Analyst, Yumiviction Investmen

Okay, so basically, we can expect a better revenue day moving ahead, right?

G. Shivakumar
CFO, The Great Eastern Shipping Company Limited

In the vessels, yes. In the vessels, yeah, hopefully, yes.

Shivam Sarvaiya
Analyst, Yumiviction Investmen

Okay. So then the one rig that is going to be coming for repricing in this current half, are we expecting any idling, or it's going to be a straightaway ship to the next one?

G. Shivakumar
CFO, The Great Eastern Shipping Company Limited

We don't know because we still have to bid in that tender, and we don't know when it'll be awarded also. So it's anybody's guess. Yeah. It's anybody's guess.

Shivam Sarvaiya
Analyst, Yumiviction Investmen

So the difference between the time in which it is awarded and the time when the current rig goes off charter, do you all get an extension? Are we expecting an extension?

G. Shivakumar
CFO, The Great Eastern Shipping Company Limited

I didn't get that. So typically, yeah. You have to just keep in mind that even if we bid and we win in ONGC, the two contracts are separate. So it's not like ONGC is going to take the previous contract, extend it, and roll it into the second. Secondly, between contracts, when the rigs finish their work, they generally, when they're taken off contract, we generally have to spend a certain amount of time repairing, upgrading those rigs. It's similar to a dry docking. So you have to have a gap between the two contracts, especially when they're long-term contracts.

Shantanu Pawar
Analyst, Individual Investor

Okay. Got it. Okay. Okay, sir. And I had another question. We've seen the asset prices that you all have shown it in the presentation that they have come off a bit in certain categories of vessels, and for certain categories, they have kind of plateaued. So if you could give some understanding in terms of how far are we, or are we in that 15% dollar-based IRR return that we keep targeting for in terms of asset acquisitions? How far or how close are we from that?

G. Shivakumar
CFO, The Great Eastern Shipping Company Limited

If you look at it, so you have to remember one thing. When you're looking at what kind of return you can get, it's a function of what you pay for the ship and what you expect to earn. And your earning expectations will keep changing from time to time, right? So it's not a static number at which one buys ships. However, having said that, the tanker prices have only fallen a few percentage points. So it's a very marginal drop. So there's quite a long way to go. But on dry bulk, we've seen a more steeper fall of 10%-15% depending on which asset class it is. For example, on the cape sizes, which are the largest asset class, it's even less than 10% fall. But on the sub-capes, it could be starting to get a bit interesting on the pricing we can see.

Shivam Sarvaiya
Analyst, Yumiviction Investmen

Are we looking at assets currently as we speak?

We are always evaluating, but at the moment, there is nothing that we can really comment on.

G. Shivakumar
CFO, The Great Eastern Shipping Company Limited

Okay. Okay. And one more question. We sold Jag Rani, the Supramax. Now, the vintage of that ship was 13 years around. It was built in 2011. But we already have an older ship called Jag Radha. So why was that not sold, and why was a younger vessel sold? Any particular reason for that?

So one is that we felt like the 2009, just the yard from which that ship is built is a better quality yard. So we thought it would be better off to hold on to the 2009 versus the 2011.

Shivam Sarvaiya
Analyst, Yumiviction Investmen

Okay. All right. Thank you, sir. I'll come back with you.

G. Shivakumar
CFO, The Great Eastern Shipping Company Limited

Gap in age. So then we would prefer to go for the ship. Two years is not a very big difference in age. So we prefer to hold on to the ship with a better quality construction.

Shivam Sarvaiya
Analyst, Yumiviction Investmen

All right. All right. And just one more question, if I may. This was regarding the other expenses. So if I kind of just do a consolidated minus standalone, I see a rise in the other expenses in the rig. Basically, that would majorly be the offshore business in this quarter. So what was the reason for that? Was there any kind of one-off refurbishment expenditure that were taken in this quarter?

G. Shivakumar
CFO, The Great Eastern Shipping Company Limited

No. No. So it's not in the offshore business. It's in the shipping business itself. I was mentioning to the earlier person that we have in-chartered two vessels. So that charter hire that we are paying out comes under other expenses. And that's the increase in other expenses that you are seeing.

Shivam Sarvaiya
Analyst, Yumiviction Investmen

Okay. Okay. Thank you, sir. My query will be answered. I'll get back to you.

G. Shivakumar
CFO, The Great Eastern Shipping Company Limited

Thank you, Shivan.

Operator

Thank you. We'll take some text questions. We have a text question from Shantanu Pawar, an individual investor. Recent article stating rule requiring international.

That question has been already asked. We can move to the next one.

Okay. We'll take the next one from Priyam Srivastava from B&K Capital. What is average long-term return on NAV at an industry level?

G. Shivakumar
CFO, The Great Eastern Shipping Company Limited

We don't know what the return is at an industry level. These are not. It's not like the sector is only with publicly listed companies. A large percentage of this business is privately owned, and we just don't have access to that information.

Operator

Thank you. We'll take the next text question from Himanshu Upadhyay from Bugle Rock Capital. We have seen spot rates for LPG carriers have fallen. Are the period charter rates also falling? And do we have any contracts which are getting over in this FY for LPG carriers?

G. Shivakumar
CFO, The Great Eastern Shipping Company Limited

So firstly, we don't have any LPG carriers coming off in this financial year. And yes, the spot rates have come off, and the period charter rates have corrected, but not to a similar extent. We'll have to see over the course of the year what happens to the period charter rates.

Operator

Thank you. Next question is from Ajay Gauri, an individual investor. If further investments in assets don't make sense at the moment because of market cycles, has the company thought of buyback given the value it can unlock for shareholders?

G. Shivakumar
CFO, The Great Eastern Shipping Company Limited

We do constantly evaluate whether a buyback would make sense or whether it would make more sense to wait on the cash for the asset prices. Our preference is always to invest more in renewing the fleet and having more ships. So we do evaluate it, but at the moment, we have no such plans.

Operator

Thank you. Ladies and gentlemen, in order to ensure that the management is able to answer queries from all participants, kindly restrict your questions to three at a time. You may join back the queue for follow-up questions. We'll take the next question from Jinesh Shah from RSPN Ventures. Please go ahead.

Jinesh Shah
Analyst, RSPN Ventures

Yeah. Hello. So my first question was with respect to the fleet number. So I can see that we had sold out two fleets in the current quarter, and we are expected to sell more fleets in H2 FY 2025. So I wanted to ask whether are we replacing this with younger fleets, or what is the management planning about it?

G. Shivakumar
CFO, The Great Eastern Shipping Company Limited

Yes. So for most of the ships that we have sold, we have replaced them with younger ships, either through purchase or in charter. I think only on the Supramax vessel, we have not bought a ship against that sale. But that doesn't mean we won't buy one in the future.

Jinesh Shah
Analyst, RSPN Ventures

Okay. So by the end of the year, what is the number of fleet that we can expect?

G. Shivakumar
CFO, The Great Eastern Shipping Company Limited

We can't put a number to that, but we keep evaluating because, as you can imagine, it takes a bit of time to figure out and negotiate a transaction. So again, it'll depend on the price that we are getting, whether we buy more or sell more. But we expect to be around these numbers in any case, not a significant variation downward. If we get great opportunities to buy, we may go up a lot.

Jinesh Shah
Analyst, RSPN Ventures

Okay. Got it. So my next question would be with respect to offshore business. So I don't want a formal guidance, but since we can see that in H2 FY 2022, we have four vessels and one rig that are up for repricing, so can we expect a much better performance than H1 in the next half of the year in offshore business segment?

G. Shivakumar
CFO, The Great Eastern Shipping Company Limited

Yeah. As it stands, it is somewhat unlikely. Just let me tell you why. In the first quarter, so the first quarter was a very good quarter for the offshore business. All the rigs were working, and all the vessels were working also. In the second half of the year, you have one rig which is currently between two contracts, and therefore we'll have 60 days or so, around 60 days off hire, which means no revenue is being earned in that period. The next rig will come off in the next two to three months. That rig will also have significant off hire. Even if she gets a contract, she will have off hire, as Rahul described earlier. Between contracts, you typically have an off hire period, and you also have to spend money on the rig to upgrade for the next contract.

All of those make the profitability a little subdued during that period because it makes a big difference. 60 days of a rig not earning is a significant amount of impact. But what happens is, as soon as you get the contract, then you go back into, you get the revenues and everything else.

Jinesh Shah
Analyst, RSPN Ventures

Okay. Okay. Got it. So we might see a little bit of subdued environment in this offshore business segment in the next half of the year, right?

G. Shivakumar
CFO, The Great Eastern Shipping Company Limited

That is correct.

Jinesh Shah
Analyst, RSPN Ventures

Okay. And just one last question from my side. Since I was newly evaluating this company, I was just understanding the technical jargon of the order book, whether my understanding with respect to that is correct or not. Can you just explain that, whether it is the ship that is to be delivered in next two to three years, or that is the percentage of it, or how is it?

G. Shivakumar
CFO, The Great Eastern Shipping Company Limited

The order book refers to all the ships that are placed on order. Depending on how full the yards are, it depends on when the ships get delivered. Typically, we have seen that yards may take up orders up to maybe three years in advance, or owners may not want to also build four, five, six years in advance, right, even if slots are technically available. Generally, one can assume that this order book is to be delivered within three to four years. Thanks for asking the question because we'd like to clarify. In some companies, the order book is what is their revenue backlog. When we talk of order book, it is of the global fleet. If the global fleet of a particular type of ship is at 100, how many ships have been ordered which will join the fleet in the next few years?

So when we say the bulk carrier order book is at 10%, that means if your bulk carrier fleet is a billion tons carrying capacity, you have about 100 million tons of carrying capacity that has been ordered for delivery over the next three to four years.

Jinesh Shah
Analyst, RSPN Ventures

Okay. Okay. Understood. Thanks a lot. That's it from my side.

G. Shivakumar
CFO, The Great Eastern Shipping Company Limited

Yeah. Thank you.

Operator

We'll take our next question from Surendra Yadav, an individual investor. Please go ahead.

Surendra Yadav
Analyst, Individual Investor

Yeah. I'm audible?

G. Shivakumar
CFO, The Great Eastern Shipping Company Limited

Yes.

Operator

Yes. Please go ahead.

G. Shivakumar
CFO, The Great Eastern Shipping Company Limited

Please go ahead.

Surendra Yadav
Analyst, Individual Investor

Yeah. So my next question was regarding the presentation, slide number 14, the changes in standalone NAV.

This one, sir.

G. Shivakumar
CFO, The Great Eastern Shipping Company Limited

Yeah. One moment. Let me go to that. No, no. This is a different. Yeah. This is an uploaded version.

Surendra Yadav
Analyst, Individual Investor

Yes. So I just wanted to understand whenever the transaction for a sale of asset is done, how exactly does it affect these values? Is it recognized as a profit or a decrease in fleet value? That could be clear.

G. Shivakumar
CFO, The Great Eastern Shipping Company Limited

Good question. It goes into the profit. So that profit goes there. So you moved it from the MTM, which is in the fleet value, to the real life, which is the cash profit. So all the cash profit that we have recognized in the last 12 months, between September 2023 and September 2024, has gone into cash profit.

Surendra Yadav
Analyst, Individual Investor

Okay. And it has gone out of fleet value.

G. Shivakumar
CFO, The Great Eastern Shipping Company Limited

Yeah. Sorry.

Surendra Yadav
Analyst, Individual Investor

Understood. Understood. And the MTM changes in the fleet value, which has not been sold, that is captured in the fleet value changes.

G. Shivakumar
CFO, The Great Eastern Shipping Company Limited

And also, the removal of the so let's just take one example. Let's say you had INR 10 per share of profit sitting in one vessel, one ship. You sold that ship at that price. That INR 10 gets transferred from fleet value. Fleet value goes down by INR 10, which is the gain, and it goes to cash profit.

Surendra Yadav
Analyst, Individual Investor

Okay. So the fleet value that we are seeing here, it is a mix of the transaction of ships that have been done and the changes in the value of the ships.

G. Shivakumar
CFO, The Great Eastern Shipping Company Limited

That's correct. That's correct. Yeah.

Surendra Yadav
Analyst, Individual Investor

Understood. But in general.

G. Shivakumar
CFO, The Great Eastern Shipping Company Limited

But in general.

Surendra Yadav
Analyst, Individual Investor

Yeah. Please go ahead.

G. Shivakumar
CFO, The Great Eastern Shipping Company Limited

Versus a year ago, asset prices are up. That's a broad message. But this has happened because it has got transferred from one to the other. So you have to take a negative entry on the ship which has been sold. So it's moved from mark-to-market gain to realized gain. So your mark-to-market gain comes down. That's what it means.

Surendra Yadav
Analyst, Individual Investor

Understood. So just one request. If a similar breakdown on a quarter-on-quarter basis can also be provided, I think that would provide a clearer picture of what is happening during the quarter.

G. Shivakumar
CFO, The Great Eastern Shipping Company Limited

Fair enough. We'll keep that in mind. Yeah.

Surendra Yadav
Analyst, Individual Investor

And my second question was just generally, I think the preference, at least in the crude and product segment, has been to operate the fleet on spot as much as possible. But what I've been seeing is that same strategy is not being followed on the gas carrier segment. So is it inherently due to a different market of gas carrier, or just that the values were so high that we thought it would be a good rate to fix in longer-term charters?

G. Shivakumar
CFO, The Great Eastern Shipping Company Limited

No, it was just because we thought it was good to take the opportunity and fix up the fleet. But if we believe that the charter rates are not sufficiently good, then we have no problem running them on the spot market. The one MGC that we have is different, the smaller gas carrier. That one inherently needs to be fixed out because the spot market is very limited. But the three VLGCs, the larger ones, they can be easily run on the spot market.

Surendra Yadav
Analyst, Individual Investor

Understood. And just one last question from my end. I'm assuming that.

Operator

Mr. Yadav, I'm sorry to interrupt sir.

Surendra Yadav
Analyst, Individual Investor

All right.

Operator

My request is to join back the queue, please, and we have other participants. Yeah. Thank you. We'll take our next question from Amit Khetan from Laburnum Capital. Please go ahead.

Amit Khetan
Analyst, Laburnum Capital

Hi. Thank you for taking my question. Sorry, I joined a little late, so maybe you've already addressed this question. If I look at the offshore earnings for this quarter, they look a little subdued compared to the last couple of quarters. Is there any one-off element here?

G. Shivakumar
CFO, The Great Eastern Shipping Company Limited

Not a one-off. The two big vessels, the MPSSVs, both had low utilization. One of them actually had a commercial utilization issue, which is she didn't have a contract. She was available but didn't have a contract. The other one had a combination of a commercial utilization issue and a dry dock. So therefore, the revenue was lower. That was the big difference, really, in the quarter. And these two are the high-earning vessels. They are very high-spec vessels.

Amit Khetan
Analyst, Laburnum Capital

Got it. Got it. Second question was, so in the past, you've talked about possibly evaluating the container segment. Now, given the new administration in the U.S. and the commentary around how that's going to negatively impact the container shipping segment, plus when you juxtapose that with the massive order book on the container segment in the next few years, it looks like the asset prices there could get very interesting.

So have we accelerated our thinking or process in this step?

G. Shivakumar
CFO, The Great Eastern Shipping Company Limited

So the point that you make is quite relevant. The fundamentals do line up to say that maybe the container market could come down. But you should just remember one thing that when COVID hit, every single report and every single analyst thought the entire container market has gone for the next few years. And then you had probably the largest boom ever seen in the container space in like 60 years. Then again, the container market started coming off because of the order book, and then you had the Red Sea attack, and again, the container market took off. So while what you're saying is logical, one can't assume that that's what's going to happen. Secondly, we did see this round of tariffs that Trump did in his first term.

And there is a way of water always finding its own level. So you found that while a lot of goods didn't directly land up at U.S., they went to Mexico, they went to Canada, they went to other areas, got transshipped, repackaged, and moved into the U.S. because eventually, U.S. needs those goods. If they increase the tariffs to a rate where U.S. just starts consuming a lot less, then yes, that's negative for demand. But if it gets rerouted, repackaged, and sent back to U.S., you may actually need more ships to do that. So it's very difficult to say exactly the way it would pan out. But the point that you're making is correct, that if the market comes off, then we could get good opportunities to buy. In any case, we are ready to move whenever the opportunity comes.

You don't have to do too much preparation for that.

Amit Khetan
Analyst, Laburnum Capital

Got it. So we are prepared to take advantage in the container segment because it's a new segment for us, or at least we've not been in this segment for probably maybe 20-25 years or so.

G. Shivakumar
CFO, The Great Eastern Shipping Company Limited

That's right. That's right. We've not been there, but.

We've not been in the sector, but yes. But we have capabilities of running different segments of shipping, so that won't stop us if we find the opportunity.

Amit Khetan
Analyst, Laburnum Capital

And is there a scale requirement here in the sense that it's not enough to just buy one or two containers, then you need to buy a bunch of container ships?

G. Shivakumar
CFO, The Great Eastern Shipping Company Limited

No. You can have a smaller fleet as well. That's fine.

Okay.

The scale requirement is for the liner operators, which is not.

Which is a completely different business, so we should not discuss that.

Amit Khetan
Analyst, Laburnum Capital

Okay. Okay. All right. Great. Thanks a lot.

G. Shivakumar
CFO, The Great Eastern Shipping Company Limited

Yeah. No problem.

Operator

Thank you. We'll take our next question from Ajay Gowrie, an individual investor. Please go ahead. Mr. Ajay Gowrie.

Ajay Gowrie
Analyst, Individual Investor

Yeah. I had a question regarding the buyback. Hello. Yeah.

Oh, yes.

A question regarding, sorry?

G. Shivakumar
CFO, The Great Eastern Shipping Company Limited

It's been asked and.

Ajay Gowrie
Analyst, Individual Investor

Regarding buyback, I think it has been answered by the manager.

G. Shivakumar
CFO, The Great Eastern Shipping Company Limited

Yes. It has been. Yeah.

Operator

Okay. Thank you. We'll take the next question from Anuj Sharma from M3 Investments. Please go ahead.

Anuj Sharma
Analyst, M3 Investments

Yeah. Thank you. Just on the Greatship, you said the short-term contract is contingent between four and a half months to one year. So is that contingency based on operators' choice, or is it our choice?

G. Shivakumar
CFO, The Great Eastern Shipping Company Limited

No, it is their choice. It is their choice because typically, when you drill a well, it depends on what is achieved during the drilling program.

Anuj Sharma
Analyst, M3 Investments

All right. All right. Post the scrapping of first tender, has the operator had any long-term contracts in the rigs, or it's been this way for all the contracts then on?

G. Shivakumar
CFO, The Great Eastern Shipping Company Limited

No, they've not come out with a new tender. They have just recently, like she mentioned at the beginning of this call, that they've recently come out with a tender, a long-term tender.

Anuj Sharma
Analyst, M3 Investments

Okay. Okay. And we are participating in that?

G. Shivakumar
CFO, The Great Eastern Shipping Company Limited

Yes, we will.

Ajay Gowrie
Analyst, Individual Investor

All right. And one question on the reduction in number of ships. So we have replaced some of them with new buys and in charter. But assume that the asset prices continue to rise, do we or have we ever thought of hedging that through a new build contract? And what would be the typical arbitrage between a new build and a short-term, relatively new-age fleet or a ship?

G. Shivakumar
CFO, The Great Eastern Shipping Company Limited

So one thing you have to remember that there could be an arbitrage between the new build and the secondhand. But the reason that exists is because if you order a new building ship today, you're not going to get delivery until end 2027, 2028. And you're going to be paying a relatively high price for that. Now, you don't know the market you're going to have three years forward, which is why the arbitrage exists. So it's not a free lunch.

Anuj Sharma
Analyst, M3 Investments

Yeah. No, I completely agree.

G. Shivakumar
CFO, The Great Eastern Shipping Company Limited

You can't play on that arbitrage. It's not a good strategy to play on that.

Anuj Sharma
Analyst, M3 Investments

All right. No, I completely agree on that logic. Just the small point is, out of the 41 ships, in each of the categories, if we had one or two as a hedge, would that still not be a logical strategy? Because we are really, if we are in chartering and the asset prices continue to rise, we might actually, at the end of third year, when the in charters go, we might have a scenario that the asset prices continue to rise. Just a scenario, a hypothetical scenario, and we don't have ships at that point of time. Do we?

G. Shivakumar
CFO, The Great Eastern Shipping Company Limited

Yes, so what you're saying is, yeah.

Anuj Sharma
Analyst, M3 Investments

Yeah. No, I'm saying that we have always done long-term modeling 20, 25 years in the past. Is that a scenario which we think about? Thanks.

G. Shivakumar
CFO, The Great Eastern Shipping Company Limited

No. What you're saying is very relevant. Now, we have to also put probabilities to these events happening. For a cycle to be that long, do we need to hedge ourselves against that? So we are switching our assets, right? So our ships that are older, we are replacing them and making sure that a certain amount of capacity does exist. That, in effect, is a hedge to ensure that if the market does last longer than we expect, we at least have sufficient exposure to take advantage. On your second point, that new building, is that a hedge? If you did want to take a hedge, it's better to buy ships today, pay the slightly higher price from the arbitrage price of a new building, and take advantage of the higher spot market.

Thirdly, if we do the in chartering, right, and maybe an in chartering lasts three, five years, you always have the option that if the market remains strong at that point in time, you can take in a second in chartering at that time. So we have multiple ways to play if the market does surprise us on the upside. We do keep this in mind about the amount of cash ships that we have because you never want to be on the you don't want to take a one-sided bet at any point in time, right?

Anuj Sharma
Analyst, M3 Investments

All right. All right. That's a fair point. Thank you so much. Thank you.

G. Shivakumar
CFO, The Great Eastern Shipping Company Limited

Sure. Thank you.

Operator

Thank you. We'll take our next question from Priyam Srivastava from DK Capital. Please go ahead.

Priyam Srivastava
Analyst, DK Capital

Hi. So good evening. Can you hear me?

G. Shivakumar
CFO, The Great Eastern Shipping Company Limited

Yes. Good evening.

Priyam Srivastava
Analyst, DK Capital

Okay, so what is the difference between GE and other shipping companies in terms of how we operate? Aren't most companies trying to be value buyers?

G. Shivakumar
CFO, The Great Eastern Shipping Company Limited

No, every company has different strategies. So there are companies which have a strategy of high leverage and high time charter coverage. There are companies which have zero leverage and full spot. The value buying strategy, at least in the listed space, is not really the preferred one, and we have seen this because there are not too many shipping companies listed in India, but we have seen companies overseas. A lot of companies try to grow on a year-on-year basis, and so I think we are different in that way. What is also different between us and international listed shipping companies, again, because there are not many listed in India, is that we operate in different sectors, which is crude tankers, product tankers, LPG, and dry bulk, and also offshore.

And therefore, we can play these cycles and do our value buying at different points in the cycle of these different sectors. And I think that advantage shows up in the results that we have done over long periods of time.

Priyam Srivastava
Analyst, DK Capital

Okay. Sure. So is it not preferred, or what's preventing others from attempting doing the same similar thing?

G. Shivakumar
CFO, The Great Eastern Shipping Company Limited

So it's like in the equity markets, what stops everybody from being a value investor? Everybody just has a different investing style that works for them.

No, and everyone has a different definition of what is value, right? When you're buying stocks in the stock market, every single day, shares are being transacted. So clearly, there are opposing views for the transaction to take place. It's the same in shipping or any other business, I assume.

Priyam Srivastava
Analyst, DK Capital

Right. Okay. Fair enough. So my second question was, how do you assess if the price of an asset is right? Do you base it on current yield or do projections and predictions?

G. Shivakumar
CFO, The Great Eastern Shipping Company Limited

We don't do it on current yield. You have to always keep in mind the current state of the market because not all markets are the same. You can always look at history. History just gives you an indication. It does not necessarily mean that's exactly what's going to pan out in the future.

Priyam Srivastava
Analyst, DK Capital

Okay. Okay. Thank you so much.

G. Shivakumar
CFO, The Great Eastern Shipping Company Limited

Thank you.

Operator

Thank you. We'll take the next question from Surendra Yadav, an individual investor. Please go ahead.

Surendra Yadav
Analyst, Individual Investor

Yeah. Just a couple of questions.

G. Shivakumar
CFO, The Great Eastern Shipping Company Limited

Yes. Yes. Please go ahead.

Surendra Yadav
Analyst, Individual Investor

Yeah. On the dividend payout, if you could give clarity until we are in a position to make investment, can shareholders expect similar level of dividend payouts?

G. Shivakumar
CFO, The Great Eastern Shipping Company Limited

You mean payout ratio or absolute amount of dividend?

Surendra Yadav
Analyst, Individual Investor

Yeah. Yeah. Yeah.

G. Shivakumar
CFO, The Great Eastern Shipping Company Limited

So we don't have a hard and fast ratio. Eventually, it is decided by the board of how much dividend we should pay. And we have to also keep in mind the amount of money we keep aside because it's a function of how much you earn, how much you need to keep aside for fleet renewal and expansion. So there are a multitude of factors that go into it. There is not one single rule.

Surendra Yadav
Analyst, Individual Investor

No, but given that the existing cash balances are kind of enough to serve those requirements, given that we keep three years' odd of risk capital. So I mean, because I saw a couple of other listed players outside India heavily increasing their dividend payouts. So is that something that's a policy out there, or will you see with each quarter that comes by?

G. Shivakumar
CFO, The Great Eastern Shipping Company Limited

So I won't get into individual names. Typically, these companies which have dividend payouts, very high dividend payouts, and we know a couple of companies which are doing 70%-100% dividend payouts, they have. I'll remind you that the last time we did an equity issuance was 30 years ago. We don't issue equity, and we don't take it as an option at all. And however, that is not true for a lot of the other companies that operate internationally in the market. And therefore, I would not compare. What also happens is paying dividend and raising capital is not an efficient way of operating in India. You know, as an investor, that dividends suffer significant taxation here. And therefore, it's not really a great way to operate if you intend to just take the money back at some point.

Surendra Yadav
Analyst, Individual Investor

Understood. Understood.

And just one last question. Any plans on listing of Greatship (India) Limited in future, given that it is a substantial entity and there's quite some demand in market for new paper as such? So any plans regarding that? That would definitely unlock some values for both the company and the shareholders.

G. Shivakumar
CFO, The Great Eastern Shipping Company Limited

No. At the moment, we have no such plans.

Surendra Yadav
Analyst, Individual Investor

Okay. Okay. Thank you.

Operator

Thank you. We'll take a text question from Shivan Sarvaiya from Hrim Udgam Investment Advisors LLP. Could you provide the current fleet positioning between TC and spot?

G. Shivakumar
CFO, The Great Eastern Shipping Company Limited

So the crude tanker fleet is 100% on spot. The product tanker fleet is about 30%. Yeah, about 20-25% on charter. The gas carrier is fully fixed out, and dry bulk is on the spot market.

Operator

Thank you. As there are no further questions, I now hand over the call to Mr. G. Shivakumar for closing questions.

G. Shivakumar
CFO, The Great Eastern Shipping Company Limited

Oh, I can see a couple of questions in the text. Yeah. There is a question from Amit Khetan. I don't know. No, it's not been answered.

Operator

I'm sorry.

G. Shivakumar
CFO, The Great Eastern Shipping Company Limited

Yeah. The question was, how are we thinking about capital allocation? Yeah. I'll just read it out in the offshore segment. Has there been a change in thought process? No. There is no change as of now. So we'll see how the market goes. As of now, there is no change in thoughts on that. There is a question from Dhruv Jain of Ambit, which is on asset prices. One moment. Sorry. It's gone. Yeah. Asset prices have softened from the peak. Also, you have sold a couple of no. So okay. The question is whether we are looking to reduce our absolute exposure to crude and product market? No. Each of the ships that we have sold has been replaced one way or another. And Rahul mentioned either we replace with a purchase or with an in charter. So within the group, we still have that exposure.

Yeah. There's one more question.

Yeah. There's one more question. The last question is on guidance. Okay. There is no guidance on margins, and so we're not going to discuss that. The final question is on the insured value of the fleet. The fleet is insured for around the current market value.

The market value of the fleet.

Yeah. I think that's all. Hello? Yashasri?

Operator

Yes, sir. Yes, sir. Any closing comments, sir?

G. Shivakumar
CFO, The Great Eastern Shipping Company Limited

No. I think we are. Thank you for your questions. I don't think we have any further comments that we have to make. I thank everyone. Anjali, you want to have a couple of words?

Yes. Thank you, everybody, for joining, and we will be putting up the transcripts of this call shortly. The audio will be available by end of today, and the scripted one will be there in a couple of days, so you may please feel free to reach out to us, or our whole team is here to answer any queries that you may have. Thank you again for joining today.

Operator

Thank you, members of the management team. Ladies and gentlemen, on behalf of GE Shipping, this concludes the call for today. Thank you all for joining today. You may now exit the meeting.

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