Good day, and welcome to the Euronav Q2 2022 Earnings Conference Call. All participants will be in listen-only mode. Should you need assistance, please signal conference specialists by pressing the star key followed by zero. After today's presentation, there will be an opportunity to ask questions. To ask a question, you may press star on your touchtone phone. To withdraw your question, please press star then two. Please note this event is being recorded. I would like to turn the conference over to Brian Gallagher, Head of Investor Relations at Euronav. Please go ahead.
Thank you. Good morning and afternoon to everyone, and thanks for joining our Euronav Q2 2022 earnings call. Before I start, I would like to say a few words. The information discussed on this call is based on the information as of today, Thursday, August 4th, 2022, and may contain forward-looking statements that involve risks and uncertainties. Forward-looking statements reflect current views with respect to future events and financial performance, and may include statements concerning plans, objectives, goals, strategies, future events, performance, underlying assumptions and other statements which are not historical facts.
All forward-looking statements attributable to the company or to persons at, acting on its behalf are expressly qualified in their entirety by reference to the risks, uncertainties, and other factors discussed on the company's website with the SEC, and which are available free of charge on SEC's website at www.sec.gov, and our own company website at Euronav on www.euronav.com. You should not place undue reliance on forward-looking statements. Each forward-looking statement speaks only as of the date of the particular statement, and the company undertakes no obligation to publicly update or revise any forward-looking statements. Actual results may differ materially from these forward-looking statements. Please take a moment to read our safe harbor statement on page two of the slide presentation. It's now my pleasure to pass on to our Chief Executive, Hugo De Stoop, to start with the content slide on slide three. Hugo, over to you.
Thank you Brian and good morning or afternoon to wherever you are, and welcome to our call. I will run through the Q2 highlights before passing on to Lieve Logghe, our CFO, to give more details on the financials with specific focus on the FSO. Brian Gallagher, the Head of IR, will then highlight some key and current trends in the wider tanker market before I return to summarize our strategy and outlook. Turning to slide five and the Q2 highlights. Once again, we've had a very busy quarter across our businesses. Fleet rejuvenation was again front and center with nine vessels transacted. We sold our 3three oldest Suezmax. We also sold four older VLCCs that were non-eco and bought two2 almost new ones. These actions have substantially reduced the age of our fleet and more importantly, the average consumption and emission profile.
We are fully ready to what we believe will be a sustainable freight rate market recovery. Also, remember, we still have six vessels to be delivered to us over the next 18 months, so the Euronav platform will continue to grow and get younger into this freight recovery. We also bought out our joint venture partner in the FSO segment. This move gives us more visibility on income in an asset that we believe we know very well because we have operated those two units since 2010. Strategically, just after the quarter, we formally announced the combination agreement with Frontline, and I will touch upon the next steps later regarding this combination. That is not all, as we printed an important milestone that perhaps has been overlooked with all our corporate activity.
We are indeed, we organized our first sustainability presentation in early May. This has clearly set out our path to net zero, and we look forward to providing updates on this and other sustainability initiatives going forward. These moves were all made with the tanker market showing sequential rate improvement and even stronger signals in a normally weaker Q3. However, freight rates are still not at the levels where we can be satisfied, as slide five illustrates, thus indicating a lot more progress is required to return us to sustained profitability. That brings me to slide six and further focus on some of the short-term catalysts. Ton-miles are rising across the tanker market spectrum as the dislocation from Russia continues to impact.
Asset prices continue to rise, with secondhand tonnage again rising over the past three months, and newbuild prices are at multi-year highs. This has led to virtually no new ordering of ships. Also, we have seen increased volume of exports and therefore cargoes in recent months. This is in turn has led to Q2 performing better than Q1, which given the seasonality history of our sector is unusual. Turning now to Euronav specifically on slide seven and how we have positioned ourselves to this improving up-cycle. I wanted to point to the scale of our fleet rejuvenation during Q2. This has driven material reduction in our fleet age, where we have taken advantage of the higher secondhand prices to recycle into younger tonnage.
Yet the platform is still ready for growth with our core fleet ready to expand with six new vessels, adding around 11% to our capacity over the next 18 months when those vessels will be delivered to us. With that, I will now pass over to Lieve to provide more detail on the financials. Lieve, over to you.
Thank you, Hugo. All tanker shipping companies require a strong balance sheet to manage the highly cyclical and seasonal elements of our business sector.
Euronav is no different, and retaining a two-year liquidity runway remains at our core. The fleet rejuvenation that Hugo spoke about earlier has all been done with book profits being recorded on sales, and the intention, as always, is to recycle this capital into younger, more efficient ships. Perhaps the key transaction for the finance team during Q2 was the buying out of our joint venture partner on the FSOs, which we cover in slide 10. On the financials for the FSOs, there are technically two contracts, one for each vessel, which switch to the new 10-year contracts running from Q3 2020 to Q3 2032. EBITDA will be around $40 million on a yearly basis going forward. The FSO operation has been a very strong performer in terms of operations with zero unscheduled downtime.
Slide 10 shows what we wanted to remind investors of, that these are not plain vanilla storage platforms, but possess various treatments to improve the grade quality of the crude on board. Owing 100% of the FSOs provides us with a strong, visible, and long-term income stream. I will now pass on to Brian Gallagher to run through current thoughts on the tanker markets.
Thank you, Lieve. On slide 12, I want to point to two key points on the current tanker market. Firstly, crude tanker markets continue, and we believe will, going forward, remain highly seasonal. This is a fact we've overlooked over the last two years, given the very exceptional trading and storage patterns that we've had to endure within the sector. The left-hand chart shows the seasonality on a daily basis in terms of freight rates according to the Baltic Dirty Tanker Index going back to 1999. It's very clear from this pattern that we have a market bottoming out in very extreme fashion, usually in August and September. What is also clear is we then get an extreme rebound of seasonality that kicks in towards the end of September and then continues through much of Q4, often with another uplift during and around Thanksgiving.
The right-hand graph on this chart shows, on this slide rather, this shows the same seasonality in light blue of the current run rate for seasonality in 2022 in dark blue. The dislocation from the conflict that we've seen between Russia and Ukraine war is very clear from late February and drove wider tanker market volatility. What is interesting is that since late May, the index has risen by 30% in a much more measured trajectory. This reflects another triumph between the tanker segments and a general reduction in oversupply of tankers, yet an increase in terms of supply of crude. The general background in terms of timing is encouraging, and they've got some real data points to support it. We now move on to slide 13. We can look at other data points which provide further support.
Slide 13 looks at two key components of the tanker markets. Firstly, oil supply and ton-miles. Over the past couple of years, growth in both of these segments has been pretty much absent. U.S. exports are expected to continue their recovery following a reduction in June and July, with U.S. exports according to the EIA could add another further 1.5 million barrels per day over the next 12 months. Ton-miles are also set to recover during this calendar year and again into 2023, primarily as new trading routes driven by the dislocation from the Russia-Ukraine conflict that we highlighted in our Q1 call continue to kick in. This process is not finished yet and still got some legs to go. Put simply, crude is likely to travel further in most tanker segments as new trading routes are established.
We now turn to other data points on slide 14. We can see sequential improvement in both vessel supply and the time charter market. Regular listeners to this call will have known our focus on the Bloomberg index that measures oversupply of VLCCs in the Middle East. While a little volatile, this trend has come down markedly, as you can see on the left-hand slide of this slide, in recent months. On the right-hand side, we look at the longer term picture. This shows longer term, which we define as more than 12 months, time charters that have been agreed in the VLCC space. We've seen a steady improvement and rise in the frequency and number of those contracts agreed since Q2 of last year. Not only has there been an increase in activity and contracts, we're also seeing associated with that an increase in rates.
We've seen recent evidence that a two-year time charter with a VLCC at $38,000 a day has been agreed. This is very encouraging. Albeit it's being driven by new tonnage, this data point gives us a very, very strong signal that charterers and our customer base are looking to secure capacity and are increasingly prepared to offer better terms, both in duration and in rate, to secure that capacity. A lot of encouraging data points for us to focus on both short term and longer term. I will now pass on to our chief executive, Hugo De Stoop, to give some concluding remarks to this conference call. Hugo, over to you.
Thank you, Brian. Both Lieve and Brian gave indications of how you would have us continue to position ourselves for what we believe will be a sustained recovery in tanker markets. I would like to add very important milestones that we announced after the quarter end with the combination agreement with Frontline.
Slide 16 illustrates what the next steps will be. Frontline is currently relocating its corporate headquarters back to within the European Union into Cyprus specifically. Once that process is complete, they will launch an exchange offer on a set ratio of 1.45x Frontline share for every one Euronav share. When the exchange offer is closed, we can then proceed with the next stage of the combination. If the exchange offer yields between 50%-75% acceptance, that effectively gives Frontline control over Euronav, and the governance of the combined entity will change, and Frontline and Euronav will act as one group. This will allow the new company to deliver the vast majority of the synergies and other benefits that we spoke about on the combination agreement announcement of July 11.
If we were able to get the exchange offer at a level higher than 75% acceptance, then we can proceed with a full merger. We firmly believe that the combination and the attributes of the combined entity that are listed on this slide, and which can come into force as long as we have more than 50%, will be very interesting, especially in the development of the tanker cycles as we see for the coming years and as we see already for the coming winter. Turning now to our traffic light slide and current market outlook on slide 17. It is clear from the continued movement to green that we anticipate further progress in the tanker market recovery.
For Q2, we have another upgrade, this time regarding the ton-miles, driven largely from what Brian covered earlier in the dislocation from Russia, driving structural change and longer ton-miles across all tanker segments. Elsewhere, demand and supply continue to remain encouraging, albeit the demand is still not back to levels that we saw in 2019. It is, however, encouraging that the order book has continued to have virtually no order flow in the past 12 months. The organic growth we have with new vessels arriving in the next 18 months, alongside the construction of the largest ever tanker platform via the Frontline combination, means that Euronav will continue to grow its exposure to this improving market background. Thank you for your time and attention. With that, I will pass it back to the operator for questions.
We will now begin the question and answer session. To ask a question, you may press star, then one on your telephone keypad. If you're using a speaker phone, please pick up your handset before pressing the keys. To withdraw your question, please press star, then two. Please limit yourself to one question and one follow-up. At this time, we will pause momentarily to assemble our roster. Our first question will come from Gregory Lewis with BTIG. You may now go ahead.
Yes, thank you and good afternoon, everybody. You know, Hugo, I was hoping you could provide a little bit more color around, you know, I guess everything's in levels of magnitude, but at least over the last couple weeks, we've seen, you know, a modest but yet a pickup in VLCC rates. Could you talk a little bit about what you're seeing in the market that has kind of, you know, reversed the benchmark headline rate from negative to positive? Yeah, just I guess start there.
Yeah. Hi, Greg. Thank you for the question. I must say we are a little bit in new territories here. First of all, because I don't know what you call the benchmark VLCC rate, but obviously today there are almost four benchmark VLCC rates. You have the non-eco, not scrubber ship, you have the non-eco scrubbered ship. You have the eco, the super eco, with or without scrubber. So obviously this has an implication. What is also new is that normally it's the VLCC segment that is doing the heavy lifting for all the other segments. What we have noticed this time around is that because of the dislocation coming from Russia, and Russia is typically not a VLCC market, the pushing is coming from the smaller size.
The Suezmax and the Aframax started with the Aframax pushing the Suezmax. Suezmax are now pushing the VLCC simply because when you look at the rates of Suezmax and you compare that to VLCC, and certainly when they are eco VLCC or eco scrubber VLCC, it's a lot cheaper to use a VLCC. And that's what we have seen in recent weeks, and that's the main reason why we believe the VLCC market has improved after the Suezmax had already improved some weeks ago and probably already five or six weeks ago prior to the improvement of VLCC. What we are also seeing, and that's very encouraging going forward, is the number of VLCC cargoes available, be it in the Middle East or be it in the Atlantic, which is growing.
We are still at a level, as Brian said, on overall demand which is slightly below the pre-COVID levels. We anticipate that we will go past the pre-COVID level when China reopens in full. It's a little bit difficult to say when that is gonna happen precisely, but we believe that when they do, that will give a massive boost again for the VLCC. At that time, we may return to some form of normality where the VLCC market is indeed doing the heavy lifting and probably taking the rest of the market with it at much higher levels than what we're seeing today. I hope I've answered your question.
Yeah, no, that was great. Then just following up on that, I mean, clearly we're seeing a pickup in spot fixture activity. You know, I think one of the things that a lot of people in industry, in the tanker industry are thinking about is, you know, shifting ton-miles, and you kind of alluded to Russia. You know, it looks like those buyers of that Russian crude, you know, it's been India and China, you know, clearly the VLCC route from the Middle East to India, you know, it's harder. I think it'd probably be harder to find a shorter ton-mile route for VLCCs than that.
Is there any way to kinda, you know, I don't know if it's percentages or how you wanna think about it, that we're seeing VLCC ton miles out of the Middle East expand as some of those Russian crudes are, I guess, largely finding homes in Asia? Has there been any change in ton miles out of the Middle East, or at this point, it's still kind of tracking along the same way?
No, we have seen a few ships and those were Aframax, Suezmax and VLCC carrying crude oil from Russia to the Far East, be it India or be it China. We believe that the trend will continue. We are seeing and I think it's a question of how people organize themselves, because the most efficient way to transport crude oil over long miles is obviously on a VLCC. Unfortunately for the Russian, VLCC cannot go into the port. They're too big of vessels, so ideally they would do transshipment.
We've seen a few of those, largely off the coast of Africa, simply because it would be probably impossible or very dangerous, from getting your ship seized by European authorities to do a transshipment in anywhere near a European coast. We have also seen cargo being discharged in Libya and in Egypt for relatively short periods of time, and then being lifted again on bigger ships. I think that what we're seeing at the moment is part of the industry who can do that reorganizing itself and trying to find the most efficient way to carrying that oil to the Far East. We have no doubt that that will be the case.
Obviously, if you look at a map, you understand that it's longer ton-miles, obviously because the vast majority of that oil was going to Europe, which was a very short distance, and that's also the reason why it was done, sorry, on much smaller ships. I think we are seeing the beginning of a story that will have long tails, because I don't see any of the sanctions being lifted, even if the war in Ukraine would end. I don't see those sanctions being lifted immediately. We will need to monitor what's happening next few months and see exactly how that trend develops. It's very logical and obvious that ton-miles is gonna be one of the positive impact of that.
Perfect. Super helpful. Thank you very much.
Thank you.
Our next question will come from Jonathan Chappell with Evercore ISI. You may now go ahead.
Thank you. Good afternoon. Super short term one.
Good afternoon.
Just trying to understand, there's been a lot of talk about counter seasonality improvements in rates over the last couple weeks. We all see it. Your quarter to date fixtures for the third quarter, almost halfway through, is substantially below your achieved PC rate for the second quarter, which kinda goes in the face of everything we just talked about, what's happened recently. Can you kind of explain what's behind that perceived sequential decline and maybe where the current rate environment is today and how we should think about trying to get to a blended average for 3 Q?
Yeah. I'm not going to predict the.
I was gonna.
Yeah. No, go ahead, Brian.
We were expecting something on this. Yeah, it's a very good point you make, Jonathan, as always, but I think there's a number of different moving parts. As you know, there's a lot of moving parts in our industry anyway. Super short term, what you saw, you have to remember tanker markets are working four to six weeks ahead of where the calendar is. That's the normal duration of our voyages. You obviously had a big spike in bunker prices and other costs in and around that, and that is basically why you're seeing, if you like, the run rate that we've booked so far doesn't quite look as if it's on a sequential improvement.
The reason, as we try to say, and which we haven't done in the past, if you look at our commentary carefully, after we give our quarterly update numbers for Q3, we have gone out of our way to sort of say that the last two weeks trading is materially ahead of that run rate. Part of that's the cost dropping out and also, as you guys alluded to on the first answer, a better trading going anyway. It's a factor of a number of additional costs and a slowing in the market very short term, which is being captured by that quarter to date number in Q3.
It's definitely easing itself out in the numbers that we're seeing in the short term, and we anticipate that carrying on, and therefore that will have a much bigger impact, and we'll ease out the numbers over the quarter, if that makes sense.
Yeah. I would add to that we are also slightly more optimistic that the number will improve dramatically because of what Brian said, but also because when we analyze the voyages that we have done so far, I wouldn't say all of them, but I think majority of them were what we call backhauls. We position voyages that pay a lower rate, but then the ships will be positioned in the market. That should be much better for them to take the next cargo. I wouldn't be surprised if we would have a material improvement also coming from that angle.
You would say that you're already substantially higher than that number or there's just a lot of confidence?
Yeah, in the last two weeks, as Brian said, substantially it's more than double that.
Okay.
We believe that it's sustainable. I mean, the way we look at the market is, when you have enough ships that have booked at a certain rate and then the market takes a pause, but doesn't drop, then it's a very good sign that it will either stay there or further improve in the next couple of weeks. Obviously, let's all remember that we are in Q3, and Q3 is generally speaking, the weakest market, even in a good market. We wouldn't be surprised if we were at breakeven or slightly below breakeven level. We are very encouraged by that fact as well.
Okay. For my follow-up, Hugo de Stoop, maybe you can just help me understand because it is a pretty rare situation. On the merger next steps on slide 16, the light blue shaded on the left side. If you do end up in this 50% plus one share to 75% range, you say you're acting as one group. How does an investor think about that? I mean, does Euronav still have a separate listing and Frontline has a separate listing, but you're acting as one? Is Euronav delisted? I'm just trying to understand the
Yeah.
The processes in a public market perspective on how getting.
No, absolutely.
To 75% works.
No, those are great questions because it's true that it is a little bit peculiar. I think the main difference between Euronav, which is incorporated in Belgium, and other companies which are traditionally incorporated in other jurisdictions and maybe more Anglo-Saxon, is that in order to effectuate a full merger, you would need only 50%. In Belgium, you need 75% to sort of squeeze out the remaining 25% and then to force the merger through. Obviously, we are all aware that we have a major shareholder who's at the moment opposing the merger, and they have something like 21% or 22%.
If not all the shares are presented at the time of the exchange, at the time of the tender, then one may suspect that we won't reach 75%. That's why we illustrate, okay, we need 50% and one share. That's the minimum to act as one group. Now we'll come back to that in a minute. Unless we have or until we reach 75%, then we can ask do the full merger. What do we mean by acting as one group? Well, yes, Euronav would remain listed, but obviously the more shares are being swapped into this tender offer, the poorer the liquidity will be in Euronav and its listings.
I think when we talk to shareholders, for the ones that are the institutionals or even part of retail, they would prefer to be in on the Frontline side because obviously we exchange share for share, so there would be more shares, there would be even more volume than there is today. Certainly much, much more liquidity than what we see in Euronav. Acting in one group would simply mean that when you are thinking about the operation of a shipping company, there will be only one management responsible for the group. One board responsible for the group. Obviously you have some managers remaining at the Euronav level. This is shifting. You are managing your fleet as one fleet.
You're managing your OpEx as one OpEx. You benefit from your synergies. You do your purchase, your procurement, taking into account the volume discount that you could have even if you were fully merged. From that perspective, we don't believe that there is any difference from synergy perspective. Maybe the only difference would be on financing. Given that our financing is usually done by subgroup of fleets or, you know, we couple 10 or 15 ships together, it doesn't really matter whether we are fully consolidated or not. That's what we mean by acting as a group. Then obviously we've said what would happen the moment 50% or one share of Euronav are in the hands of Frontline, then there is a change of governance that we have explained in the press release, which is change of the board and obviously change at the management level.
Sorry for the quick follow-up to the follow-up, but I just wanna understand this. Once you get to 50% plus one, then you can enact the governance change, and you can start acting as one group. But is the tender still open so that you can have others continue to tender their shares in the weeks and months following?
No.
Try to get to that 75%?
No. That's a very important question. We will probably have another call specifically on that when we're getting closer to the tender process. We can decide to reopen it, but it's not automatic and certainly not an open-ended tender, because that would decrease the incentivization of people to tender in the first tender. We want as many people to tender as possible, simply because we wanna get to the 50% ownership as early as possible and potentially to 75% as early as possible as well.
Okay.
It's not an open-end tender. It's reopened only when we decide to reopen it, if we decide to reopen it.
Okay. That's very helpful. Thank you, Hugo De Stoop. Thanks, Brian.
Thank you.
Our next question will come from Christian Wetherbee with Citigroup. You may now go ahead.
Hey, thanks. Good morning, guys. This is Eli with you on for Chris. Hugo, I know you just touched on it here, but to the extent that you can give us any help, how should we be thinking about the synergies or economies of scale in more dollar terms as we approach the merger here? Anything you can give us or to help us quantify what this could look like?
You would like a number or you would like precisely what we're gonna do in the various section of P&L?
Yeah, maybe just what you can do on the various sections of P&L. I understand you probably can't assign numbers at this time, but I mean, if you could, that'd be helpful. Maybe just start with more broadly on the P&L.
Yeah. Obviously, you're talking about the revenue first, and the revenues is to operate the fleet, and it's a combined fleet of VLCC and Suezmax to a certain extent, the LR2 are a little bit separate. Frontline would join the pool, and the 20 ships that are in the hands of other people in the pool would remain in the pool. We would have a pool that would be 85, potentially a little bit higher than 85 VLCCs. The desk of the Suezmax will continue to be next to the desk of VLCC and will benefit from the information that they gather in the market, which is very important.
We are also mapping now, the different clients, and believe it or not, Frontline and Euronav are highly compatible in the sense that there's not a lot of overlap in terms of clients. Certainly on the Chinese accounts, we're very complementary to each other, so that's a good thing. We believe that because of the market presence, we'll be able to deliver a much better service, and we'll be the first choice of our customers, when we have this platform, enacted. On top of that, we would like to continue to grow the pool. I think once you have a platform that has this collection of ships and, again, I'm talking here not only VLCC but also Suezmax, I think it will attract other owners to join.
The bigger, the better, for a number of reasons, but those are relatively obvious. If you move on the cost side, well, it seems to be very obvious that you can do a lot of saving overhead because you don't need two full management team, two boards, et cetera. But it's also a question of offices location. We have offices in similar jurisdiction. We can obviously put them together. Other than that, and as we explained in the first press release, the initial one where we indicated the intention of doing this, we've said that again, we're very complementary because one system is very lean and mean, the other one is more vertically integrated, i.e. the Euronav one. We don't expect to have a lot of redundancies.
It's more on the systems, the offices and the platforms that we would do the savings. We also expect to have a lot of savings on the technical side, namely the OpEx. I think it goes without saying, and we've demonstrated that in the past when we first merged with Maersk and then merged with Gener8. The volume discounts that we can achieve once we have a bigger presence is quite significant, and we're talking about 2%, 3%, 4%, but on relatively big numbers. Dry docks is another area where we see a lot of potential for saving a lot of money when we use the dry dock.
You can imagine with a fleet of 150 vessels, there's a number of dry docks that you need to achieve on a yearly basis. Then finally, on the financing side, we also believe that we can save a few points and probably a few dozen points. That's certainly what we've seen with other groups when they were achieving the size that we are achieving. Again, we continue to do this analysis. In the press release, we've indicated that as a minimum, we will expect to save or to gain, I mean, depending on if you talk about revenue or cost, around EUR 60 million per year. I think that we are all relatively optimistic that this figure can be improved substantially over the next couple of years. That's very much as of the first year, first 18 months after the confirmation of the merger.
Thank you. That's really helpful. One follow-up just on the market. I know we've talked a lot about it, but we have these demand pushes and supply pushes. As you're talking about a countercyclical market and then going forward, I guess I'm just trying to understand, like, where does the scale lean? So on the demand side, we obviously have Russia and others. On supply side, we have, you know, elevated ton-miles and new build prices that are high, so that impacts the capacity. As we move into the next couple of quarters, where should we think about that scale shifting? Does it move over to the demand side in terms of the pressure or the supply side in terms of the pressure? How do we think about the future here?
Well, as you know, we don't control a lot of things in this market. Indeed you have the supply side, and the supply side is where the fundamentals are very, very positive. Why they're very positive? Because the fleet, the average fleet age profile is getting old. We expect, and we are a little bit impatient like all of us on this call, I suppose, we expect to see a number of ships being scrapped. I mean, at some point it's not like you can keep them forever. Year on year, they're getting older. On the new build side, we haven't seen any order in almost a year. We are taking the bulk of the order book in the first six months of this year.
What is left for this year, but also for the years to come, is very, very thin. Obviously compared to that, then you have to look at the demand picture. The demand picture, as we said, is indeed turned lively because of Russian oil dislocation, but also continued recovery from the trough that we've seen due to COVID and particularly the Chinese consumption that we expect to recover with much more strength going forward once they stop doing those opening and re-lockdowns around COVID. We don't know when that's gonna be, but we don't believe that that's sustainable for many years. We are in a seasonally weak part of the year.
We're seeing a lot of signals showing us that the market is getting from strength to strength, and there is consecutive improving numbers quarter on quarter. That gives us a lot of optimism for the winter. The winter anyway sees always a lot more demand than the summer. We expect, and we've been saying that for a long period of time, we expect the next winter to be strong. If you were to add a few elements like, you know, scrapping a few ships, or some sort of disruption, then obviously we would be on for a multiyear cycle that would be very interesting to be exposed to.
Well said. Thank you all.
Thank you.
Our next question will come from Omar Nokta with Jefferies. You may now go ahead.
Hi, thank you. Hey, guys, just wanted to touch just a bit further on the market and just kind of impact on the Russia-Ukraine sort of situation in Europe, and if you could handicap it, Hugo or maybe Brian. You know, if you think about it, you know, what do you think what amount of Russian crude barrels do you think are still making their way into the European market today? Presumably those will need to be diverted and replaced here in the next couple of quarters. Do you have a gauge of how much is still flowing into Europe?
Well, maybe if I can jump in on that. I mean, it's very hard, as you know, Omar, to get data, although I've noticed that Bloomberg are actually trying to monitor this on a weekly basis, and their flows would suggest that the flows are actually higher than they were in February. I'll guess, best guess would be that we may be three-quarters of a million to one million barrels down in terms of that flow into Europe. As I believe it's not been widely reported, but the EU have slightly diluted some of the firmness of the sanctions as well, until December fifth, which means, again, they're looking to keep that oil flowing.
I would say that probably net has only been maybe one million barrels of Russian oil into Europe that's been diverted out. Then they've obviously pushed the rest of that difference into the Indian and Far East markets. Again, it's a very inexact science, and part of it's difficult, and I'm glad Hugo talked about this earlier, is that it's because there's ship-to-ship transfers. This isn't just a question of following one ship and going, "Well, that's going from A - B, and we can monitor that." Ships are going from A - B, and then the ship is going and then another ship is taking that oil from B- to C and D and E. That's what makes it very difficult.
Yet, the impact has not been as profound, I think, as we would anticipate. I would refer you earlier into the second part of your questions, what we talked about earlier. I noticed Teekay Tankers have done some interesting work on this this morning on their presentation later on today, which I think dovetails with ours in that, we would expect the net effect to be something around about 2-2.5 million barrels, and that being replaced by oil from the Middle East and from the Atlantic, and that's what we've started to see already. This is the one thing we've been trying to make as a consistent message, both in this quarterly call and the last one, is that this isn't some event that happens over a few weeks.
There's further months and quarters of this whole process to continue to happen and develop. We would anticipate we'd see more and more Far East, sorry, Middle East barrels coming into Europe well into next year. We'd expect to see further Atlantic barrels continuing to trend into Europe to replace those lost Russian barrels into next year as well. That's the underlying message here, that there's a longevity to this structural change that Hugo talked about earlier. I can't give you any more than any. We, while we're very close to the action, you know, we're monitoring this, a lot of the same data points as you in terms of the numbers.
Yeah, let's not forget that, well, you have a part of that oil which is carried by pipeline, and from what we know, that continues to flow very normally. Obviously, there are not a lot of sanctions. There are a lot of self-sanctions. I mean, banks are very reluctant that you would carry liability insurance, P&I clubs, same. Today it's not illegal. Obviously people who are doing it are not advertising doing that. That makes the data very, very difficult to gather and to follow.
Yeah. Thank Hugo for that, and Brian, also appreciate the comment. That's good context. I guess maybe just a follow-up, you know, just at least in regards to the increased oil flow that we're expecting here in the Atlantic Basin, obviously led by the U.S. Gulf and, you know, then have Brazil, Canada, and Guyana, as you mentioned. You know, that 1.6 million barrels that you quantify, you know, through the end of next year, yeah, how do you get concerned about maybe the permanence of maybe the Suezmaxes and Aframaxes carrying more of those barrels? Or maybe Hugo, you kinda touched on this earlier, I think to Greg's question. Or do you see the VLCCs starting to come back and taking a lot more market share?
It's a very difficult question to answer, but at the same time, I'm not too worried about it because when you look at the Suezmax flows in general and VLCC flows, there is a lot of markets where two Suezmax or two cargos of Suezmax can go into one VLCC. You do have this push-pull impact. The Suezmax market is doing very well, and to a certain extent is showing or seeing many more cargos. Naturally, that would have knock-on effect on the VLCC market. Those two markets are really well interconnected. When we speak to chartering desks of our clients, it's usually the same people, and they do monitor the pricing of one versus the other.
As I said, in the last two or three weeks, what we've seen is a lot of cargos that were shown towards Suezmax desk, and then they were disappearing, and they were popping up in the pool. They knew that those two cargos were being combined in order to be carried by VLCC. I cannot imagine a world where Suezmax, and to a certain extent, Aframax are doing very well and the VLCCs are doing poorly. I mean, that would be highly surprising.
Understood. Thanks, Hugo. I appreciate that. I'll turn it over.
Thank you.
Our next question will come from Frode Mørkedal with Clarksons Securities. You may now go ahead.
Thank you. Hi, guys.
Frode.
This is another market question. You clearly believe in a great market recovery. I'm curious if you can give more color on how bullish you are, right? Maybe if you can compare the outlook to historical episodes. Are we heading into a 2015 scenario or 2008?
Well, that's, you know, we are seasoned enough not to make the mistake of predicting the market. If you want a gut feeling, kind of comment, I think that, we are closer to 2004, 2003 for that matter, than any other market that we've seen. That is based on the order book, the price of the new buildings, and the almost incapacity to build, to overbuild the fleet for the next three years because there is no more room in the yard.
A little push from the demand side will give this market a go at certain levels, and then it should gradually improve because part of fleet will be too old to be operated, and there will be nothing to replace it. That smells very much like 2003, ahead of the sort of four to five -year cycle that we saw 2004 -2008. Four, five, six, seven, and eight, five years. That very much looks at least from a fundamentals perspective, it looks like that.
That's great. 2004, 2003 was good years. As a follow-up, I mean, I would guess a generalist would be cautious and worried about the recession. How would you respond to that? Maybe would it maybe touch upon the inventory cycle and the impact on tankers?
Yeah, it's a very difficult one because God knows that we know very little about macroeconomy, and our market is sort of polluted or impacted by so many different kind of events. Many of them are positive for our market, and very often we feel sorry to say that, and that's very much the case here with the Russian dislocation, Russian oil dislocation. I think that a recession is not good and obviously, normally you have the demand that is obviously being reduced on the oil side. At the same time, we have an energy crisis, and the energy crisis is not entirely due to what's happening in Russia. I mean, it's much broader. We're talking about an energy transition.
What happens in an energy transition is that people tend to misplace their investment, mistime their investment. You are too early, you are too late. All of those dislocations usually shipping partly benefits from it. Nevertheless, it's very difficult how it's gonna play out. Given where we are, given the age profile of fleet, given where the order book is, I think that many scenarios are manageable, but obviously manageable through more or less scrapping.
Great. Thank you.
Thank you.
Our next question will come from Chris Tsung with Webber Research. You may now go ahead.
Hi, good afternoon everyone. I wanted to just understand if Euronav is under any restrictions from now until the tender offer in Q4, you know, with regard to the combination with Frontline. Like, you know, are you able to continue buying or selling ships or taking on new debt, et cetera?
Yes, we are. Everything that is business as usual we can do. Fortunately, in shipping, business as usual is quite broad. As a matter of fact, the conditions have not materially changed since we announced the intention to do, and that was confirmed in early July. At that time, we were also restricted, obviously. Once you set the ratio, you have set the economics, and therefore you're not supposed to do major things. You've seen that we have transacted on seven ships that we bought out our 50% joint venture partner, and that we're under the same restrictions that would apply today to us. Indeed we can do a lot of things.
What we are always doing, obviously, is talking to our partner. There is a NDA between the two companies. From that perspective, we can also do a lot of things, not warning them in a sense, but definitely telling them that this falls within the clause of the contracts that we signed.
Right. Okay. Thanks for that, Hugo. Just to follow up, looking in that press release from July, can you provide some color on what the absence of material adverse changes means?
Oh, MAC clause is something that is totally standard in many contracts, and this one will not be different. In fact, we had a discussion with the lawyers whether we needed to spell it out, and it was so standard that there was no need, and the regulator was also happy with it. It's really, I mean, I don't know if God forbid, but if a major conflict, I mean, everybody's watching in China and Taiwan at the moment. If a major conflict would erupt, I mean, that's typically a material adverse change. I think that the Lehman Brothers failure in 2008 was qualified as a material adverse change.
I mean, these kind of sort of mega events that would affect pretty much everything. Still then, it doesn't mean that the deal is canceled. It means that the parties have the right to withdraw from it if they believe that the economics has changed for one company, not for the other. In our case, we are exactly in the same business. I, you know, it's very difficult to imagine an event that would have positive consequence for one of us and negative consequence for the other, and that would therefore be used by one or the other party as a way to get out of the transaction. I think both parties are very excited about it, and I don't think that there could be many events that would change that.
Great. Yes, that was super helpful. As always, Hugo, thanks. That's it for me.
Thank you.
Our next question will come from Anders Redigh Karlsen with Kepler Cheuvreux. You may now go ahead.
Yes, good afternoon. Most of my questions have been asked, but I'm thinking a little bit about the supply situation. You know, if you were to place an order today, when would you get delivery? And also in terms of the existing order book, you know, are there any delivery delays following the lockdowns in China and some labor conflicts in Korea? Can you elaborate a little bit around that?
Yeah, those are very good questions, and quite frankly, it's very encouraging. If we were to place a VLCC order today, we might get one or two in 2025, then otherwise we're already in 2026. The Suezmax side, it's a little bit better. I mean, better, it depends on which side you sit on. You might get a few units in Korea in late 2024, and then the rest will be in 2025. Say in 2025, we're not talking about a lot of berth left. As far as pricing are concerned, we're talking $80s, depending on, you know, the specification. God knows that specification today can make the price move substantially, you know, more than a few millions.
Because is your ship gonna be dual fuel? Is your ship gonna be ready to be a dual fuel for some types? It's gonna be ammonia. It's gonna be LNG. It's gonna be methanol. You have it. And the same on the VLCC, and there you start probably at $120. But at the moment the yards are not quoting official prices. I don't think that there are many yards out there who are pushing for further order in the tanker. They know that the segment has not recovered yet in full, and therefore they're still chasing the clients that are relatively rich from operating their current fleet, and that's mostly in the container side in the LNG side, and then the car carriers and so on.
That's where most of the orders are being done today and continue to be done today. In terms of disruption and delays, yes, a little bit, certainly in Korea. Social disruption, probably driven by inflation. People are trying to get better salaries, understandably. You've seen Daewoo going on strike, complete strike. I believe it was for 10 days, and it's probably not the end of it because it's not resolved. We've seen signs of this happening in other yards, but maybe to a lower scale. I think that in China that we are hearing that there are some delays in the other segments. Remember, there's not a lot of tankers, certainly VLCC, that are being built in China, unless they are for Chinese accounts.
Therefore, the data that we get in terms of delivery and all delays are relatively gray zone, so it's difficult to see the impact. We understand from other segments that yes, there are delays. Also the delays can come from the fact that people place order at on the relatively cheap side of the inflation cheap side of the steel price. We understand that there's a lot of, I mean, yards that are trying to renegotiate prices because of that. Certainly in China if they don't manage to renegotiate, they may even go bankrupt. Watch out for the space in general. On the tank side, it's true that the picture is a little bit different, but nevertheless positive for the fundamentals.
Okay, thank you for that.
Our next question will come from Chris Robertson with Deutsche Bank. You may now go ahead.
Hey, thanks for fitting me in here. Hugo, you spoke about the fleet rejuvenation in the press release, and you just hit on the future fuel technologies in the last question here. I just wanted to follow up on that and ask how do you think Euronav's fleet renewal efforts will evolve, especially in the back half of this decade as we get closer to 2030? And then do you think that the current landscape of yards that exist will be sufficient to kinda renew the fleet once these future fuel technologies are available and a little bit more mandatory?
It's a great question, and God knows I don't have a crystal ball, but it's true that we have this joint development program that we sign, and we are the only ones on the tanker side who sign it with the largest yard, namely, Hyundai. Hopefully we know a little bit more about it than the others. What's gonna happen is the first ammonia ship for VLCC, that is in fact for what we call the 7S80 bore engine, and that's the largest engine that is being used in the shipping industry is only gonna be ready late 2026, probably early 2027. The first ammonia engine for smaller ships will be developed in the first place and will be available as of 2024.
They will gradually go up to our size and our segment for the 7S80 bore. That's late 2026, early 2027. If you look at our ESG presentation that we did in May, we had a timeline, and I think it was also repeated here. You can see the milestones that we would like to reach in order to reach the bigger milestones, 2030, 2040, 2050. 2050 net zero obviously. 2030, minus 40% compared to 2008. We also said that we would like to operate at least one ship that has the potential of a net zero emission. That could be two technologies.
It could be ammonia, because it doesn't emit CO2, but it could also be LNG or methanol, as long as that product is green, and therefore, whatever CO2 that they emit is being captured. Even though that's probably preferable, but we need to see what gets developed for the shipping industry, and we know it's gonna be a multi-fuel industry, but definitely per segment it's gonna be important to see what gets developed. The second part of your question was will there be enough capacity? I think we are seasoned people. I mean, we've been in this industry for 20 years, and we have heard that concern many times before.
I think that if there is great demand for this new technology, the space will be created, and if people are willing to pay for it, then it will be developed and it will be available. We've seen that time and time again, so I do not have a major doubt that this is the case. Nevertheless, I think that you may well see a dislocation between the clients' demand for that and the suppliers, i.e. the ship owners, where the people who are the early adopters of the technology, knowing that that technology is mostly developed, so I'm not talking about R&D of course, but mostly developed by a shipyard and engine manufacturer. The early adopters should benefit from a high demand because the trend that's gonna be driven by Scope 3.
When you have to reveal what your supply chain is, in fact, emitting, we believe that our clients will be in high demand compared to the number of vessels that will be able to meet those requirements. I'm not even talking about when there will be a carbon tax, and we all believe that there will be a carbon tax before 2030. Obviously starting in Europe, and that's already defined, but probably much broader than Europe. That will also drive demand for ships that are from an ecological, environmental point of view, lower emitters or zero emitters as the case may be.
Thanks, Hugo. That was really comprehensive. I appreciate the color on that. I'll turn it over.
Thank you.
Again, if you have a question, please press star then one. Our next question will come from Quirijn Mulder with ING. You may now go ahead.
Yeah. Good afternoon. Thank you that you pick up my question. I have in fact two questions. First about, let me say the situation with regard to the scrapping, because we have discussed that earlier, that last year was somewhat disappointing, that scrapping was picking up very, very slowly. What is the current situation? What is the expectation of that? Is that picking up? Is that accelerating?
Because that can be the big boost. What's the situation with regard to Iran? I heard that the negotiation will restart after some delays, I think. Is that something which you are closely following what's happening there? That were my two questions for now.
Yeah. Thank you very much, Quirijn. Maybe Brian, you can take the first one because you have the latest number.
Yeah.
On the number of Suezmax and VLCC that have been scrapped this year.
Absolutely, yeah. I mean, you're right. It has been a bit slower than we anticipated, where we count five VLCC scrapped year to date an eight 8 Suezmax. It has been a bit lumpy. Last year wasn't maybe disappointing where original expectations were, but it ended up being reasonably good. Certainly the highest year we've had since, I think, 2017. Yeah, it's not the way we were thinking. Again, we think there's a pretty logical explanation for that, in that we've had this illicit fleet build up that's been largely doing some of the Iranian trades, to some extent Venezuelan trade as well. That's been very VLCC focused. At the same time, we're still seeing very high asset prices, as Hugo said earlier.
That's a very encouraging background. We still remain of the view that we'll see owners start to move to the recycling yard at some point. It's just a question of when rather than if. On the Iranian side, we're in the same camp as you. We read the same newspapers. We've obviously alluded to and given an indication of how impactful this would be on the tanker market, would be more impactful on the tanker market than it would be on the crude oil market. I'm afraid we're just gonna have to wait and see if there's any opportunity for negotiations to develop.
I don't think Hugo's gonna need to scrap for that, but we continue to remain in a wait and see, as you are on the Iranian situation.
With regard maybe to the.
No, no, that's not to us. Go ahead.
Sorry.
Go ahead.
No, no. With regard to the Suezmax, for example, benefiting from the Russian situation, isn't there a risk that you also see there somewhat illicit trading in 2023 when there's a serious boycott?
You may see that, I mean, there's no doubt about it, but it's much more difficult to organize compared to the Iran-China trade. If you look at the map, you understand directly what we mean by that. Because your illicit Suezmax will probably take the oil out of Russia. If you want to have something that is the best economics, I mean, the economies of scale, larger cargo transport over a long distance, then you need to discharge them into VLCCs.
Those VLCCs or those Suezmax and VLCCs can only do that outside territorial waters or economic waters of the EU, and that is off the coast of Africa and not in any place, obviously, because you need to find, you know, the right area which is calm enough to do that. It's very different from what we've seen in Iran develop for many years now. Having said that, it's obviously people will try to benefit from it. Let's not forget again that it is very important for the energy in general, that this oil flows somewhere.
As far as we are concerned, we are looking at it on miles and we say, okay, this oil was going over a very short distance between Russia and Europe, and now it has to go and find clients on the other side of the world. Obviously these clients which were getting their oil much closer to their territories, they will let that oil go, and that oil will come to Europe. From a shipping perspective, it's an advantage. From a trading perspective, you may rearrange and certain type of fleet with certain nationalities, with certain flags may need to do certain trade. Overall, it's relatively positive, and it's a very different situation than what you see in Iran.
Thank you.
This concludes our question and answer session. The conference is now concluded. Thank you for attending today's presentation. You may now disconnect.