Good day, and welcome to the Euronav third quarter 2022 earnings conference call. All participants will be in listen-only mode. Should you need assistance, please signal a conference specialist 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 then one on your touch tone phone. To withdraw your question, please press star then two. Please note this event is being recorded. I'd now like to turn the conference over to Brian Gallagher. Please go ahead.
Thank you. Good morning and afternoon to everyone, and thanks for joining our Q3 2022 earnings call. Before I start, I would like to say a few words. The information discussed on this call is based on information as of today, Thursday, the November 3rd, 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 statements of historical facts.
All forward-looking statements attributable to the company or to persons acting on its behalf are expressly qualified in their entirety by reference to the risks, uncertainties and other factors discussed in the company's filings with SEC, which are available free of charge on the SEC website at www.sec.gov and on our own company's website at 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 note to read our safe harbor statement on page two of the slide presentation. With that, I'll now pass over to Chief Executive Hugo De Stoop to start with the content slide on slide three. Hugo.
Thank you, Brian, and good morning or afternoon to wherever you are and welcome to our call. I will run through the Q3 highlights before passing back on to Brian Gallagher, our head of IR, who will then highlight some key and current trends in the winter market before I return to summarize our strategy, where we are in the current cycle and our outlook. Turning to slide five and the Q3 highlights. In capital markets today, everyone is looking for a pivot. Well, in tanker markets, especially in the larger VLCC segment, we finally got ours in freight rate, and this was the catalyst to drive us back to profitability. Since July, the substitution trade of VLCC ships supplying the lost seaborne barrels from Russia to the EU has really gained traction. The Suezmax sector has experienced more impactful dislocations since April and has continued to see rates rise.
Now VLCCs have largely caught up over the third quarter. As experienced watchers of shipping will know, the impact in our numbers is lagged as we are operating six to eight weeks ahead of the current calendar. Hence, you can see from slide 5, the quarter to date numbers for Q4 reflect better the trends we have seen since the summer. We at Euronav have also been busy. We've sold three older vessels this quarter and recycled the capital into two new Eco Suezmax contracts, which will be delivered ahead of the winter in two years from today. We now have eight vessels under construction that will be delivered across what we believe is the starting quarter of a multi-year upcycle. It's a very pleasing operational quarter for us as we believe the cycle has turned and should last for the foreseeable future.
Looking now at the financial on slide seven. It was a relatively quiet quarter on the financials during Q3 with no exceptional items. Our leverage and our liquidity remains very robust and in line with previous guidance. We continue to work hard on adding additional sustainable financing, which we expect to complete very soon. The two FSOs that we operate now fully are totally consolidated for an entire quarter, and this for the first time since we acquired 50% of our partner on June 7, 2022. Slide seven also focuses on how much progress we have made year to date in fleet renewal, with interest remaining high in secondhand tonnage. With that, I will now pass it back over to Brian Gallagher to give some thoughts on the current market cycle.
Thank you, Hugo. A key driver of the oil marketplace over the last six months is about to hit its last but very impactful phase in our view. This is the dislocation from the Russian crude flows. The European Union has already diverted about one million barrels per day of seaborne imports from Russia and replaced those largely from Atlantic and the Middle East locations. We expect another one million barrels per day of EU-bound exports from Russia to follow a similar pattern over the next quarter, ahead of the December 5th deadline set by the EU to ban oil, all oil shipped from Russia to Europe.
This will mean that the same volume of oil will travel approximately three-four times the distance it previously did, and we will continue to see the benefit of substitution trades from Atlantic to Middle East, oil being traded on a seaborne route to the EU. This latter substitution trade will in particular benefit the larger vessel sizes such as VLCCs. This trend has been very pronounced since July onwards. The chart on slide nine illustrates both the distances involved and also the detail of the dislocation of these crude barrels. This brings us to the additional crude demand that we anticipate to see from further fuel switching on slide 10.
Slide ten is a slide we've used before, but which continues to have a very strong message for the current crude transportation market. While volatility in energy prices has waned a little recently, we continue to see the relative price of oil being cheap in comparison to other core energy sources. All of the fuel prices illustrated on slide ten are represented on a per oil barrel equivalent and therefore are completely like for like. Oil is therefore relatively cheap in terms of a source of fuel at the moment and power, and consequently, we believe that we will see not only fuel switching during this winter, but continue to see this trend well into next year. The impact of all of this on slide eleven shows the impact on shipping itself. The dislocation and increased demand for oil is clearly illustrated on slide eleven.
This shows the amount of oil on the water being transported in the dark blue line. The one-year time charter rates of VLCC is given in the light blue line. Oil in seaborne transit is back to levels we have not seen since the very short spike we saw in March 2020, just ahead of the COVID pandemic kicking in. With ton miles continuing to be a key feature of the dislocation, we anticipate that we will continue to see growth in oil in transit on seaborne routes on similar patterns. In summary of our market views, we continue to remain very positive on the current trends and expect to see a sustained and strong winter period.
I'll now pass back to our Chief Executive, Hugo De Stoop, to give some more medium-term thoughts about where we are in the cycle on our current outlook from the traffic light perspective. Hugo, over to you.
Thank you, Brian. I'd like to sum up before we go to Q&A with two very general thoughts. Firstly, slide 13 gives an indication of the parallels, but also the differences we see between this current cycle setup and previous sustained multi-quarter upcycles in the tanker market. First, the valuation of the tanker sector in capital market terms is cheaper than what we have seen in previous upcycles in 2004, 2014, and 2019. Second, the average age of the global fleet is much higher than what we have seen in previous cycle. Finally, we are in a very different era in terms of the order book expressed in absolute numbers or as a percentage of the fleet in the larger tanker space. Those different aspects give a very supportive and constructive medium-term outlook.
Moving on to the final slide, which is slide 14, that allows me to focus on the traffic lights we give at the end of every quarter earnings call. Once again, we felt the market background deserves another upgrade, and this time we are upgrading ton miles. The last phase of the Russian dislocation means that we expect to see further increases in ton-miles, which bodes well for the tanker market this winter and for the coming medium term. You will have noticed on slide 14 that our traffic lights are majority green. We still believe there is an upside as all of the recent upcycle has been delivered without any benefit coming through from Chinese consumption or Chinese oil demand growth. We still believe there is further to go and further potential for upgrades to our traffic lights. Thank you for your time and attention.
With that, I will pass it back to the operator for questions.
Thank you. We will now begin the question and answer session. To ask a question, you may press star then one on your touchtone phone. If you're using a speakerphone, please pick up your handset before pressing the keys. To withdraw your question, please press star then two. In the interest of time, please limit yourself to one question and one follow-up. At this time, we'll pause momentarily to assemble our roster. Our first question comes from Jonathan Chappell from Evercore ISI. Please go ahead.
Thank you. Good afternoon. First question, Hugo, on liquidity. Just curious, number one, is that pro forma for all the vessel sales that have been done, plus the down payments on the new builds? Second of all, this additional finance under discussion, can you give us any sense to the magnitude of that and the terms, given that you laid out it was possibly going down the path of green financing?
Yeah, absolutely. Very good question. Indeed, 355 seems to be a little bit on the low side for Euronav. That is before we get cash from the vessels that we have that we are selling at the moment. All those vessels are debt free. In Q4, we expect to get approximately $159 million, so that will be added to the liquidity. Then the new facility, which is $377 million, that we have a term sheet for and currently in the documentation, we expect that 330-ish of that will also be added to the liquidity, and that's because it's replacing a facility that has already expired. That explains why 355 seems a little bit on the low side.
Overall, we go back to $800 million of liquidity, and that is before operating cash flow comes in, and we expect those to be significant and generous in Q4.
Okay. Yeah, great. That's exactly why I asked it. Thanks for that. The second question also has to do with capital. Just keep it to your own specific. You know, clearly most of the other publicly traded entities have kind of returned to the dividend model. I know the V's have lagged, and we're really not gonna see the true impact of the V recovery until the fourth quarter. I'm just wondering how you're considering capital allocation and kind of a twist on a question I've asked in prior calls. Are you somewhat restricted on what you can do with capital, especially vis-à-vis dividend, until there's some finality to the potential Frontline merger?
Yeah, absolutely. I mean, when you do a merger and you calculate the economics, namely the ratio, you are normally freezing the dividends. Otherwise, the economics are changing. What we have in the agreement is obviously we can continue to pay a minimum dividend, the $0.03 that we pay every quarter. That's in the books. We are now moving to a market that should allow us to return more capital to the shareholders. We will do so, but only after we have the tender offer closed. That's obviously the same for Frontline. They've paid a dividend in Q2. That was also agreed and calculated in the ratio.
We should hold on paying dividends until the tender offer is closed, and that we expect, as you've seen, to be done in Q1. There might be a little lag of a quarter and even not a full quarter. I mean, probably one or two months, if you look at your calendar and when we pay dividends related to every quarter.
Okay. All right. Well, great title on slide 13, and thanks for your time, Hugo.
Thank you very much.
The next question comes from Amit Mehrotra from Deutsche Bank. Please go ahead.
Hey, gentlemen. Good morning. This is Chris Robertson on for Amit. How are you?
Fine. You?
Good. Good. I wanted to ask about the expansion of the TI Pool. Do you expect that will allow greater rate outperformance? Or how will that change things operationally?
Operationally, I'm not sure that will change much. What we're trying to achieve there in the pool is to have a central point of contact for our clients to go. I mean, at the moment, the market is very fragmented. If you are a broker representing a client, what you do is, you look at the different database that exists out there, and some are more comprehensive than other. You try to spot the vessels that can perform the cargo you are in charge of finding transportation for. When you have a place which represents 65, and tomorrow, hopefully, 85, potentially 90, and maybe one day even 100 ships, it makes the life of many people easier.
As far as the participants of the pool are concerned, what we are looking at is trying to optimize the voyage among the different vessels, and also trying to find the appropriate vessel for the appropriate trade that we're doing. Because nowadays you have non-eco ship, eco ships, you have non-eco ship with scrubber, without scrubber, eco ship with scrubber, without scrubber. Every single voyage will have its particular properties. It's important to have a big pool of different vessels that can take those different voyages. It's mutual benefit, I would say, for the operator as much as for the clients, in the way that I've explained.
If we play the game of triangulation, then normally indeed, and that's one of the goals, your net results should improve, but not at the detriment of your client, which is then a big benefit, again, for both parties. You pay the same, and we get the benefit of size.
Got it. Yeah, thanks for that. Follow-up question. On slide nine, you talk about the Russian dislocation. I just wanted to ask on the Baltic loading ports, how many of those can accommodate VLCCs, and are there going to be ship-to-ship transfers associated with the dislocation of Russian crude?
Very few can accommodate these. The ones that can, usually you cannot load a VLCC to the top. Yes, there is normally, when the oil is moving far away or further away than it used to be. I mean, Europe was a closed destination. As we have explained in the introductory remark, we're talking about three, four, potentially five times the distance that we used to perform. On that kind of distance, it makes sense to lightering into a VLCC. So far, we have seen a few operations doing that. We expect that this will pick up dramatically in the winter. Why do we expect that to pick up dramatically?
It's because in the winter, and here I'm not only talking about the Baltics, I'm much more talking about the northern part, I mean the northern ports of Russia. You need ice class vessels. When you look at what exists in the world, and here I'm talking a few Suezmax and then many Aframax that are ice class, that means they can break the ice, they can load the oil, and then they can go to their destination. If you use those ships to do the long voyage, you know, over around Africa and going to India, China, and whoever is interested in taking that oil, then they won't be available to go for that distance, which is icy.
We expect those ships to lightering into VLCC in non-ice waters, and then to go back directly to the port where they are needed. That's why we're very optimistic about VLCCs in general.
Got it. Yeah, that makes sense. In other words, they'll be traveling longer distances, and it will take longer to load them because of the lightering.
Correct.
All right. Yeah. Thanks, guys. Appreciate the time.
Thank you.
The next question comes from Omar Nokta from Jefferies. Please go ahead.
Good afternoon, Hugo and Brian. I just wanted to ask about the latest new buildings that you have for the two Suezmaxes you ordered recently. You got a nice delivery slot for the third quarter of 2024. Those seem to be a bit earlier than what we thought maybe was available. Were those option slots that you had? Or maybe can you just give some context as to how you got those slots? Then also, you know, what does the picture look like from here if you were to place a fresh order today?
Well, very good question. In fact, we hesitate in making those remarks in the press release because it's very important people understand what the current picture is about shipyards in general and that one in particular. We're very much attached to the quality that Korea can deliver, and we monitor very much the Korean yard. The three big ones, which are Hyundai, Samsung, and Daewoo, they are completely full until 2025. When I speak about 2025, Q2 for maybe one or two ships, but it's mostly Q3, Q4. They continue to receive orders from other segments. In particular, LNG is quite keen to continue to order.
Obviously, well, for obvious reasons, the container side is slowing down on their pace of order. To come back to the tanker space, that's what the picture is. We also check what's going on in China, and it's very similar, and I'm not even talking about Japan, because there it's much worse. We're talking end 2026. Daehan, which is not part of the top three, but it used to belong to Daewoo, so the quality is very good. We have had the opportunity to develop a very good relationship with them. You remember that earlier this year, we took two Suezmax that was resale of contracts that we did last year. In fact, that was.
That's very much what built our relationship with them because we could act very, very swiftly. I think between the time they were in trouble with their existing clients, and the time we took that contract in our own hands, there was maybe two weeks or something like that. We were relatively generous on payment terms, which was appreciated by the yard. What happened on this occasion is that there were two options, if I'm not mistaken, for product tankers, that the shipowner, for one or another reason, couldn't lift, and they became available. The first party they came to offer those slots was Euronav because of what I just explained, and we grabbed them because indeed we thought that the very interesting part was the timely delivery.
We haven't announced the price, but I can tell you that was also a very attractive price compared to what we could see being offered by other yards for what we believe the same quality. All in all, we believe it's a very good deal. Whether we're gonna see more of those is a little bit difficult to say. I know that people are trying to study options on the container side and see whether or not they could be transformed to tankers. I think that most of those studies are showing that it's difficult because it's always. I mean, it's difficult because it's another type of ship.
Product to crew, that's relatively easy, but container to tanker or dry bulk to tanker, it's, well, it requires a lot of changes, so it's not easy. We don't expect to see many of those opportunities arising for us or for other people. Therefore, we believe that the first opportunity that we will see is 2025, be it for Suezmax or for VLCC.
Thanks, Hugo. Very helpful. Just wanted to follow up then, you know, like the structural notation of these two Suezmaxes. You mentioned they're being designed to be LNG-capable down the line, after delivery. I mean, you're also evaluating making them ammonia and methanol ready. Is it conceivable that you'd be able to pick, say, you know, first off, you go back to the yard after delivery and you say, "Okay, let's put on the LNG components," and then maybe a few years later, you bolt on ammonia or methanol as that becomes more, you know, prevalent.
Is it conceivable that you'd be able to have like a tri-fuel type of vessel with these Suezmaxes where it could do bunker fuel, it could do LNG, and then maybe down the line you could bolt on, say, a methanol or ammonia? Is that realistic or is that just too far-fetched?
From a technical point of view, everything can be done, especially on a tanker, because we have a lot of space on our deck. If you look at the ship, the deck is relatively empty. I mean, there's obviously the three different lines to unload the cargo that we have. Different from dry bulk because they have hatches that need to open, so the space is more restricted. Completely different for container vessels because every single space is used for loading the containers. From a technical perspective, yes, you could imagine doing that. Then from a cost perspective, that is completely suboptimal. Simply because we're talking about different type of fuel. I mean, methanol will continue to be liquid at ambient temperature.
LNG is definitely not liquid at ambient temperature. Same for ammonia. On top of that, some of those products are more corrosive than others, which means that the piping that you need to put in place is more or less sophisticated. By that I mean, will be specific type of metals to do the piping. The way you will seal the engine is also very important because ammonia, for instance, is more toxic than any other type of fuel that we are considering at the moment.
You really need to make sure that everything is completely watertight because you cannot afford to have any leak, no matter how small that is. From a CapEx perspective, I don't think that you're gonna see different type of fuel or tri-fuel as you name it. Dual fuel, that's the obvious conventional that we use today, plus one of the new fuel. Transforming the ships, i.e., in the first place, you receive a conventional, then potentially you transform it into a let's say methanol, because that's the closest to what we're using today. Then at a later stage, let's say 10 years down the road, methanol is no longer the flavor of the day and you move to LNG or ammonia.
That is also possible, but it will cost money, and so you gotta make sure that at that point in time and when you take the decision, it makes sense to transform those vessels, a second time in their lifetime, as far as the fuel they consume is concerned.
Got it. Thanks, Hugo.
You're welcome.
The next question comes from Chris Wetherbee from Citigroup. Please go ahead.
Yeah. Hey, thanks. Good afternoon, guys. Maybe apologize for what could be an obvious question first. Just wanna clarify on the opportunity for the long haul from Russia from an ice perspective. Is that a potential seasonal situation, or do you see that being persistent beyond, say, first quarter, as we think about 2023?
Part of it should be permanent, part of it should be seasonal. The season is forcing it to happen, if you see what I mean. You have no choice. You need to use to the max those icebreakers. I mean, to the extent that the weather, the temperature are gonna be that low. They will be forced if they want to export what they are producing today to do the lightering. On the long term, it continues to make sense from an economies of scale perspective, and that's why VLCCs are usually used for long distance, Suezmax for shorter distance, and Aframax for much shorter distance. That's the name of the game to a certain extent. Definitely in the winter with a lot of legs for the long term.
Okay. That's helpful. I appreciate the clarification there. Then maybe thinking about sensitivity of demand, so going to your you know your red light green light chart that you put in here, and obviously the only one that sort of maybe not quite as constructive is demand for oil. Wanted to get your perspective, if you think that the sort of economic dynamic is maybe as impactful to the overall market as it has been historically, just given all of the other potential constraints to both capacity and also there's the ton-mile sort of multiplier here. Just wanna get a sense. You know, we are concerned about the macro clearly, but we're wondering if we think it's going to be quite as impactful as this historically is.
Well, that's a great question, and to a certain extent, I'd love some of your colleagues to give me the answer. So it's almost like a gut feeling, but we are very simple people, and we're trying to look at very simple facts. The biggest fact, and we also mentioned that in our introductory remarks, sorry, is the demand that is coming from China, and that is not yet back to pre-COVID level, and that's the minimum that we should see coming back, when we speak about China. You've seen it from GDP point of view, obviously, that country has slowed down.
It's certainly not negative GDP, but the complete slowdown compared to the growth numbers we used to see. That already in itself, I can't tell you when it's gonna happen, should give a big boost to oil demand. You also know that they will start sort of restricting the usage of fossil fuel only by 2030. Until then, they have declared that they wanna max out the usage of fossil fuels. I don't think that there is any concern coming from that region for this decade. Then for the remaining part of the world, I mean, clearly you're talking about recession. We were talking about it in the last quarterly call.
Yes, that usually has an impact on the energy that is being used by the world in general. But there where we are, I would say maybe more positive than other sectors, is the relative pricing of a kilowatt hour. Because you can translate that in oil barrels or in kilowatt hour or whatever unit you may choose, but it's true that the price of oil relative to the others, and especially relative to gas, is very cheap. Which means that anyone who has an opportunity to switch from gas to oil will do it.
The same could be said about coal, but I think that people are more and more reluctant to switch to coal because of the emissions and because of other type of pollution, not only CO2, but many types of pollution. I think at the moment, oil is probably more protected than many other sources of energy, even if we enter into a recession.
Okay. Okay.
As you can see, I'm using very simple analysis.
Well, that's usually the right way to do it, so I appreciate the time, Hugo. Thanks so much.
Thank you.
The next question comes from Frode Mørkedal from Clarksons Securities. Please go ahead.
Thank you. Hi, guys. Just a question on the final leg, as you called it, the Russian oil embargo. Perhaps you can discuss the oil price cap, the potential of a shadow fleet, and I guess the third alternative is that exports go down. Curious to know how you see this shaping up.
Again, one would need to have a crystal ball. Why don't we start with the last one, which is cut in production. A lot of people were talking that potentially they would reach, you know, the maximum capacity of export to countries like India and China who are already taking Russian oil. At Euronav, I think we believe that if the oil is cheap, and certainly cheaper than what you can fetch in other places in the market, it will find a home. We have many precedents that demonstrate this, and an oil cap, and I will come back to that, is another way of forcing a discount, which is already happening because obviously the freight is more expensive.
When Russia sells oil to China and India, no doubt that they sell it at a bigger discount than when they used to sell it to Europe. From that perspective, I think that it's more physical operational restriction that will dictate whether or not Russia will have to shut in some of their oil field. By that, I come back to the comment that we made earlier on ice class vessels capable of being enough in numbers to go to Russian ports and then do the lightering, and this is obviously a heavier operation than when you can just pick up the oil in a port and transport it to its destination without interruption. That's what we believe at Euronav will happen.
As far as the price caps, sanctions, we don't think that will stop the production of Russian oil. I'm not even sure that the world really wants less oil being put on the market, given where pricing is and given the influence or the impact it has on general inflation, which is really problematic, as you know, in Europe and to a certain extent in the U.S..
Yes. Just as a follow-up, do you have any idea how much Russian oil is being insured by Western companies? There's also this ban on insurance coming up. How do you think that will affect the trading market and the tankers?
First part of the question, no idea whatsoever. Very difficult to know. Obviously, the restrictions or the sanctions are also coming up on the insurance world. I don't think that it will change a great deal what we're seeing today, because if I look at the P&I we are involved in, they already did what many companies and banks have done, which is sort of self-sanction or imposing already a great deal of restriction on what business they can or cannot do with Russians. That's already the situation.
For the few cases that we have tried to analyze and we have heard of, this is simply being replaced by less international insurance companies, namely, insurance companies being located in Dubai, in China, in Hong Kong, especially when the destination of the oil is or are those countries.
Yeah. I see. Thank you very much.
You're welcome.
The next question comes from Chris Tsung from Webber Research. Please go ahead.
Hey, good afternoon, Hugo and Brian. How are you?
Fine. You?
Good. Thanks. I just wanted to pick back up on the Russian dislocation and, you know, there's some talks about a growing dark and shadow fleet and, you know, we've seen the pickup in S&P market for older tankers. Just curious on your views on how much tonnage could actually exit the market following sanctions in early December.
Well, another one I definitely should have brought my crystal ball here. First of all, you're absolutely correct. I mean, the pickup in the second-hand in the S&P market and second-hand vessels is definitely there. When you look at the price, one cannot ignore and not imagine that some of that tonnage is not gonna be dedicated to the trade with Russia. I think that I'm not sure I would call it a shadow trade, simply because, well, up until fifth of December, it's allowed. I mean, you obviously need to have an agreement with your finances and whatnot, but shipping is mostly private, that shouldn't be a problem. After that, it's the destination which is a problem, right?
The ownership of the vessel. If your vessel is owned by the right entity, outside Europe, outside the U.S., outside the U.K., then you can continue to trade. I'm not sure I would call it a shadow trade like what we have seen happening with the oil coming out of Iran. Yeah, it's very peculiar. I don't know how much vessels would be able to do that. I think that there will be a two-tier market.
It's gonna be very difficult to have ships, even if you are based, you know, outside Europe, to have ships that do one cargo out of Russia and then the next one out of a place that is not under restrictions. I think that the fleet will be more dedicated, but difficult to tell you today how much tonnage, how much VLCC, how much Suezmax are gonna be dedicated to that one.
Okay. That's fair. Thanks. Thanks for the color. That's it for me.
Thank you. Again, if you have a question, please press star then one. Our next question comes from Thijs Berkelder from ABN AMRO. Please go ahead.
Yeah. Good afternoon, Brian and Hugo. Question on windfall taxes. You have not made much profit in the past few years, but you are about to make big profits. Is there any country looking at potentially taxing your kind of operations?
Not that we know of. You should know that when you are based in Europe, which is the case of Euronav and will be the case of Frontline very soon, we are under a European regulation that is called the tonnage tax. Then the different countries being a member of the European Union have their own way of applying that directive, as we call it. We are based in Belgium, and we have already done our analysis in Cyprus. It's a very good system that everybody likes, and I would be surprised if they wanted to change it. I mean, everything is possible, but at the moment nobody's questioning that system.
The reason why nobody's questioning that system is simply because if it wasn't in place in the European Union, I think that very, very few ships, very few shipping companies would be based in Europe. As you know, it's very different to own a ship than it is to own a factory. I mean, the factory, you cannot just move it out of country overnight. That's more the case with the ship. I mean, the ship you decide on the flag, you decide on the registry, and you can also decide where the company is incorporated. I understand the question because that's very much talked about in the energy sector and we are very different animals.
The reason why the energy sector is making a lot of profit is because of the characteristic of the energy market and very much what's going on because of the Russian Ukraine crisis. As far as shipping is concerned, yes, we are going to enter an upcycle as we call it, but our business is full of upcycles and downcycles, therefore very cyclical. The benefit of the tonnage tax for the states that apply it means that they get their tax even when we are loss-making. That's, you know, it's just a different way of taxing an industry and one that has worked for more than a decade now, and from what we hear, is there to stay. I mean, very few people question it.
Okay. Thank you for that. A follow-up question is the Frontline transaction has been slightly delayed into Q1. Can you maybe indicate what could further delay the transaction from happening? Also looking at the further increased stake by the family Saverys.
Yeah. Maybe two questions. The first one is on timing. Initially we were very ambitious, and we said that we should be able to close the transaction in Q4. Obviously we had plans to use the full Q4 to do that. What happened is that we could be in a position to launch the tender offer in Q4, but that would mean that we go over the Christmas period and the holiday period, which is suboptimal.
Today we prefer to announce to the market that the idea is to launch the tender offer as early as possible in Q1, but then have the full period where the tender offer is open, free of holidays, free of bank holidays and people maybe not paying the same attention as they would in other periods. That's very much the main reason. We're not talking about a big delay. We're talking about a strategic delay, if I may use that term. Other things that could delay the deal, there are things that we control and there are things that we don't control. The things that we don't control is all the regulatory part.
Most of the filings in the U.S. or in Belgium, the regulator has a certain time to analyze the files before we or Frontline makes them public. That's on the first review. The second review usually has no time limit. If there is delay there, then there is very little we can do. Most of the time we don't expect to see one. We are optimistic that we can meet the new timeline that we have set to the market.
Then on your last question, which is our largest shareholder at the moment, which is CMB, which has indeed bought more shares, and that's a token that I suppose they believe in the business, which is always great to hear, especially at those prices. It means that today they have a position of 21%. If we wanna do a full merger with Frontline, i.e., create one big company, we need 75% of the vote. Once someone has 21 or more votes, it becomes very difficult because not everyone is voting. That's the reason why we have structured this transaction as a two-step process. The first step is a combination. It's not a merger. We will be able to achieve, we believe, up to 90% of the synergies of a fully merged company.
We will look at every single department, I would say, be it on the revenue side, be it on the cost side, the overhead, and really act as one group. Indeed, in order to achieve a full merger, we will need to see what happened with CMB stake and already how many shares we can collect in the tender offer. That's something that we will do as a second stage of the rocket, I would say, and certainly after the tender offer. I don't think that it matters a great deal to the investors, simply because for those who understand shipping, they will understand that once you control a company with more than 50% of the vote, you can do already a lot, if not everything that you would have done.
The merger may be the only thing that you cannot do is a delisting, basically.
Okay. That's clear. Thank you.
There are no more questions in the queue. This concludes our question and answer session. I'd like to turn the conference back over to Hugo De Stoop for any closing remarks.
Not much to add. I think we've covered pretty much everything that we wanted to cover. I thank everyone for participating to this call. See you next quarter. Thank you.
Conference is now concluded. Thank you for attending today's presentation. You may now disconnect.