Morning, everyone. Welcome to Ardmore Shipping's 2023 Investor Day, during which we will also be covering the company's results for the fourth quarter and full year 2022. I'm Bryan Degnan with The IGB Group. Just a few administrative points before we get underway today. The event is being recorded and broadly distributed via live webcast, which along with today's slides is accessible at www.ardmoreshipping.com. An audio replay of the event will be available on the website from later today. The standard earnings press release was issued pre-market this morning and is also available on the website. Here. Later in the event, following prepared remarks, there will be a Q&A session, at which point we will take questions from the people with us in the room today.
For those joining remotely, please feel free to submit any questions that you might have at any time to Ardmore at IGBIR.com. Ardmore@IGBIR.com. Throughout the event and for the benefit of those joining remotely, we would ask that all speakers and questioners utilize the provided microphones. slide three for the disclaimer here. Please allow me to remind you that our discussion today contains forward-looking statements. Actual results may differ materially from those projected in the forward-looking statements. Additional information concerning factors that could cause the actual results to differ materially from those in the forward-looking statements is contained in the fourth quarter and full year 2022 earnings release.
Now moving to slide four, I would just like to briefly introduce you to the members of the Ardmore leadership team whom we have the pleasure of hearing from today. We have with us, Curtis McWilliams, Ardmore's Chairman, Anthony Gurnee, Founder and Chief Executive Officer, Bart Kelleher, Chief Financial Officer, and Gernot Ruppelt, Chief Commercial Officer. With that, I would ask, Curtis McWilliams, Ardmore's Chairman, to come up for some brief opening remarks.
I promise they'll be brief. On behalf of the board of Ardmore Shipping, I'd like to welcome you to this, our annual Investor Day presentation. It's now been 10 years since Ardmore became a publicly listed company on the New York Exchange. Over this time, Ardmore has always been committed to the highest standards of both governance and transparency. Today's presentation is just one element of this commitment, and I hope you will find it both interesting and informative. As you saw in our earnings release this morning, as Chair, I'm enormously pleased with our 2022 performance. Not only our strong earnings performance, but as well our continued commitment to our capital allocation policy, resulting in a very, very strong balance sheet and our reintroduction of our dividend as we return capital to our shareholders.
As you'll hear from the team today, we continue to believe that the prospects for our sector, and more especially for Ardmore, remain very bright as 2023 unfolds. In closing, I wanna thank you, our shareholders, for your continued support of our company. Our focus as a board is to ensure that Ardmore remains solely focused on the creation of sustainable long-term value for its shareholders. I truly hope that we will continue to earn your trust as a steward of your investment. With that, I'm happy to turn over the presentation to Tony Gurnee, our CEO.
That was really good. I think we can just stop right there. Thanks, Curtis, and welcome everyone. First, I'd like to outline the format of today's call. Bart and I are gonna start off by presenting the results of the fourth quarter and full year. We're then gonna pivot to the Investor Day part of the presentation. I'll begin with an overview of Ardmore strategy, and then Gernot will give his high insights on the commercial side of the business before going into some details on the market outlook. Then we'll conclude the presentation and open up the call for questions from the floor as well as remotely. Again, for remote questions, please send them to ardmore@igbir.com. Turning to slide six.
For highlights, we're pleased to report our most profitable year thus far with adjusted earnings of $144 million or $3.74 a share. Fourth quarter performance continues to reflect the strength in the product and chemical tanker markets with adjusted earnings of $54 million or $1.30 per share, equating to an annualized book return on equity of 46%. Highlighted in the chart on the upper right of this slide, our full year results were driven by a strong second half, which has bled into the first quarter. On a TCE basis, our MRs earned 43,175 per day for the fourth quarter, and so far, we're running at 39,500 for the first quarter of 2023 with 55% booked.
Chemical tankers on a capital adjusted basis earned $33,000 a day for the fourth quarter and are running just slightly lower at $31,300 for the first quarter with 70% booked. These rates emphasize the ongoing robustness of the market. In fact, if the first quarter to date were to continue for the full year, although they're highly a little bit off the highs of last year, the resulting earnings would be about $4.60 a share.
As a result of the strong performance, and consistent with the capital allocation policy, we're pleased to declare a quarterly cash dividend of $0.45 a share, representing one-third of adjusted earnings. Further benefit of this performance, Ardmore continues to de-lever and strengthen its balance sheet, resulting in lower break-even rates, higher quality earnings, and much greater substance behind our net asset value. Overall, we feel that between our operating performance and the solid financial profile, Ardmore is exceptionally well-positioned to continue benefiting from this market. One final important note on this slide, especially for those that are not fully familiar with our industry, is the operating leverage we have to charter rates, where every $10,000 a day increase in rates results in an incremental $2.40 in earnings per share.
Turning to slide seven, the market outlook remains very compelling. Benefiting in particular from the current oil market volatility, which of course has a lot to do with the Russia-Ukraine conflict. In fact, the conflict continues to drive a further pronounced and likely to be persistent reordering of global refined product trade, resulting in increased ton-mile demand, and supporting very high rates. Our first quarter to date performance is marginally off the peak of last year, due in part to the impact of extreme weather, and early refinery maintenance in the US Gulf. We believe this is now behind us with the Atlantic Basin recovering rapidly to the levels of east of Suez over the past week. Arguably, the market's back to around $40,000-$50,000 a day on a global basis.
We're also seeing China reopening and set to strengthen global economic activity, thus adding a further layer to product tanker demand, for example, for jet fuel. Meanwhile, chemical tanker demand is also forecast to expand in 2023, supported by global growth. Added to all these near-term factors are the robust underlying supply-demand fundamentals, which Gernot will discuss in more detail later on. Turning to slide eight, we'll speak more about capital allocation later, but I wanted to highlight the dividend for the fourth quarter of $0.45 a share. The calculation is shown on the table to the right side of the slide, equating to a current yield of 11%. The dividend will be paid on March 15th to all shareholders of record as of February 28th. With that, I'd like to hand the call over to Bart.
Tony. Moving to slide 9. Ardmore continues to build upon its financial strength. Net leverage at the end of December stood at 25%, which is down from 55% at the start of last year. We have a very strong liquidity position with $50 million of cash on hand and $170 million of undrawn revolving facilities at year-end. As Tony mentioned earlier, we've reduced our cash break even to approximately $14,500 per day, driven by our reduced debt levels as well as our access to revolving facilities. As always, Ardmore remains focused on optimizing performance as we benefit from the positive market volatility in these elevated markets. We're also closely managing costs in this continued inflationary environment. slide 10. For financial highlights.
As noted, we're very pleased with our performance. We report record full year results of $3.74 per share. We're correspondingly reporting strong EBITDAR for the quarter and the year, and we continue to frame EBITDAR as an important comparable valuation metric against our IFRS reporting peers. Please note that there is a full reconciliation of this presented in the appendix on slide 45. Although our very favorable floating to fixed interest rate swaps will roll off this summer, we're in a position to mitigate the impact of the higher interest rates due to the significantly lower debt levels. Please also note slide 49 in the appendix has our Q1 guidance numbers as well. Moving to slide 11. Continue to reinvest in the fleet to optimize performance. This year, we'll have eight scheduled dry dockings.
By the way, this reduces to four next year. In tandem with these dry dockings, we're installing second-generation scrubber technology on an initial six of our vessels, with the installations occurring within the time constraints of a normal dry docking. These modular units are fitted with the latest technology, which filters, neutralizes, and reduces water discharge, and also has carbon capture capabilities. As you can see highlighted in yellow on the picture, it looks like a gray 20-foot container standing on end and attached to the back of the vessel stack. By design, it's relatively quick and easy to install. Based on current bunker spreads, this project has an IRR of approximately 60%. Also noteworthy, we had on-hire availability of almost 100% for the fourth quarter from the continued close coordination of our team at sea and on shore.
Moving to slide 12. Here, we're highlighting our significant operating leverage. For every $10,000 a day increase in charter rates, as depicted on the left, our earnings per share would increase by approximately $2.40 per share on an annual basis. Shown on the right, even without vessel value increases and based on accrued cash generation, our net asset value would increase by approximately $1.60 per share annually post-dividend. In the right chart, we can see the current $35,000 per day run rate NAV would increase by approximately $3.42 this year. To conclude my remarks, I'd like to emphasize and put the current charter levels into further perspective.
Based on our Q1 charter levels of approximately run rate thus far, approximately 35,000 per day, we generate free cash flow of approximately $200 million per year, or approximately 30% of our current market cap of $680 million. This is why we're really excited about the outlook and find our positioning compelling. With that, I'm happy to hand it back over to Tony and look forward to answering any questions at the end.
Okay, that concludes the earnings portion of the presentation. We'll now move on to a more in-depth view of the company, and the markets we operate in. I've just got five slides to cover here, and then I'll hand it over to Gernot. Turning next to slide 14. First, when it comes to strategy, we've been very consistent over the years with a focus on product and chemical tankers and the overlap of the trades these ships operate in, along with a gradual increase in scale and organizational capability, and a mix of patience and quick action, with regard to major transactions. Our strategy has evolved with changing markets, above all with the energy transition, which we'll speak about later.
At the moment, we feel that we have a very good fleet, you might even say of a Goldilocks fleet, large enough to give us the scale needed to operate globally, modern enough and fuel efficient, yet relatively low cost, and thus supporting excellent returns on capital, and flexible enough to allow us to be nimble and targeted in how we operate. Turning to slide 15. You might be surprised to hear a tanker company talk about philosophy, but all good businesses have one, and ours can be summed up as combining performance and progress. While we're very happy with our absolute performance, what we focus on is our performance relative to our peer group across key metrics and what we think is possible on cost control and cost reduction.
The whole organization is focused on this, which is evident in the returns we've generated, you could even, you know, say that this is our alpha. In fact, a very important driver of performance is our focus on progress, which has resulted in a very diverse and capable team, allows us to connect effectively with our seafarers and motivates our energy transition team to continue finding opportunities and overall gives meaning to what we do. Turning now to slide 16. When I think about how the company has evolved over the past 13 years, there are clear phases, some where we got a lot done, others where from the outside, we were just treading water and coping with weak markets.
In fact, we were working hard to develop our capabilities internally, our financial capacity and preserving and even building earnings upside. I think we've arrived at a point where all this effort is now really coming through, and it feels as if we're just getting started as a company. Turning to slide 17. This slide discusses how we balance the energy transition with what you could call energy reality. The push for decarbonization and addressing anticipated regulation on the one hand, while on the other hand, the ongoing need for fossil fuels along with the ships needed to provide the transport. We speak a lot and often enough about our Energy Transition Plan in detail, we won't do that here, but happy to do that in Q&A.
Above all, we see the energy transition as an opportunity to drive performance, and if you'll allow us to be immodest, to be one of the companies that leads the way, shares knowledge, and sets the example as to what's possible. Our main effort so far has been investing in incremental fuel efficiency projects. One of our most recent, such as shown here, variable speed drives with an estimated IRR of 88%. Recently tallied up what we've done in this area, and so far, we've initiated 12 projects, nine of which have been very successful with an average IRR of about 60% and that's not including the e1 Marine JV, which is a longer-term project, not generating immediate cash flow for Ardmore, but nevertheless could be very accretive to value in the longer term.
Same time, we still carry mostly clean petroleum products, 70%-75% by volume. Over time, we'll migrate more toward non-CPP cargos, which will be largely driven by demand growth and acquisition opportunities that arise for assets. But that's where we see the long-term growth in the business. This final slide is on capital allocation, which plays a very important role for us. If we had to distill it down to one phrase, it's what anchors our ambition to reality. Our priorities are shown here, and they too have been consistent. The difference now is that given our financial strength, we can now pursue them simultaneously if we choose.
The point is that this is a highly cyclical business where financial strength can pay off hugely if it permits well-timed investment and growth, but we also must balance reinvestment and growth with returning capital to shareholders over time. Okay. I'm gonna hand over the presentation now to Gernot, and he's gonna take us through how he runs the commercial business as well as his views on the market outlook. Over to you, Gernot.
Thank you, Tony. Good afternoon, everyone. It always feels very special for me to be standing here in New York and present to you. I left New York about 10 years ago, exactly, of course, for good reason, to join Tony on his mission to build a really great tanker company. It always feels great to be back. Also for me, thank you for coming and joining us today. Key messages are really shown here on slide 20. No matter where we are in the cycle, we will always face volatility in our markets. Everything we do as a team and the way our platform has been set up acknowledges this volatility. A key feature in our business. It's an opportunity. We embrace this opportunity, and we thrive in it. TCE optimization, we live and breathe it.
No matter what the market has to offer, how can we do better? The answer is multifaceted, of course. It's in how we trade our ships, how we explore new markets. The answer is in how we operate our voyages. Also importantly, it's about how we build organizational capabilities, how we learn and evolve as a team. We see improvement as a continuous process about how we retain knowledge and consistently apply it. Initiatives that improve TCE performance can compound over time, good for immediate financial results, and also from a competitive standpoint, it gets harder to replicate. Much of what we do then is rooted in our culture, which we built and refined from day one. To think and to act as one, be extremely deliberate what we do at all times, and how we look at every decision as an opportunity for relative trade.
slide 21. Here you have an overview of our commercial universe, or at least a selection of it, and how we are set up within it. You will see here many recognizable names, blue chip companies, major refineries, and commodity traders. This slide may seem a bit obvious, boring really, because you will have seen similar slides from most of the other tanker companies. An important point to make here is that we transact with an increasing amount of customers with a non-petroleum focus. Now, engagement with them goes well beyond the day-to-day. You have to forgive me for not being more specific here. Could be agricultural companies, chemical traders, or companies that increasingly focus on trading of non-petroleum commodities, biofeedstocks, or companies to engage in biofuel blending. You can actually see that the conversation in the market is shifting quite a bit.
Ultimately, this slide is about creating lots of trading options for Ardmore across the globe, and importantly also across different cargo segments. slide 22 is really important for us. It is about the team that we feel quite blessed to have at Ardmore. The culture that we built, which is really at the heart of everything. When you compare us with your average tanker company, we have an unusually diverse team, diverse along almost every dimension and at every level. Different cultural backgrounds, gender, but also different professional backgrounds. All is strictly merit-based. This diversity enables us to have better access to our regional markets and to make better trading decisions. Better access, more options, better decisions. It's good business, really. As much as possible, we give our staff a chance to step up and take more responsibility through internal rotations, internal progression, and career development.
We are also constantly trialing new data and technology solutions. Focus is on bottom line impact, making sure that our commercial team have the best decision-making tools at hand at all times. It is not about buzz. We are quite selective in terms of what technology we are eventually onboarding. slide 23, summarizing key pillars of our commercial strategy. I could speak for an hour now to unpack all this. Some of it will have to remain a bit of a black box because it is commercially sensitive. To highlight a few, voyage combinations. Finding creative and more profitable voyage combinations is key within petroleum markets and beyond. It's about creating access to the right trading options. It is also about having the organization capability to execute them, especially when we trade in the overlap between petroleum products and chemical cargoes. Voyage execution.
How well integrated are we across the whole chain that makes up one voyage? There are myriads of factors affecting voyage performance. For us, it's a bit like in Formula One, where every lap is analyzed and every voyage is debriefed extensively. Perfect lap, perfect pit stop. It's what makes the perfect race and the perfect season. Just like in Formula One, we do our own lap analysis too. After every voyage, no matter how close we get to the perfect voyage, we always look for ways to do it better than having a constant live feedback loop across our teams. Commercial philosophy I touched on briefly. It is about being nimble and embracing the volatility in our markets, but at the same time, being very methodical, very diligent, targeting exactly the right voyage at the right time.
Trading book here on the right, I will provide an example on the next slide of how we use time charter in and time charter out to dynamically manage our exposure throughout the cycle. Options. How can we increase options for Ardmore? By that, I don't just mean voyage options. New markets is a new, dedicated, and focused function within the company. Rate derivatives supplement our ability to increase or decrease our exposure. slide 24 makes the point I just mentioned. Allow me to explain what we are looking at here. The green line is the spot market. The bars in blue are the number of ships we have on time charter out. The bars in gray are the number of ships we have time chartered in. As you can see here, looking at the green line, markets were low in 2021.
The world was still affected by restricted mobility due to the COVID pandemic. Markets started to recover last winter and continued to accelerate as of last spring. 2021, when markets were weak, as you can see here, bars in blue, we had a very meaningful amount of TC cover. Starting last winter, we started to take redelivery of those ships, and we put them back in the spot market. Same time, we extended and expanded our time charter in position, so we increased our market exposure. Our average TCE rate at the moment is just above 13K a day. We calculated that over a two-year period, TC versus spot created about $30 million in value.
Of course, we did not predict the Russian invasion of Ukraine. As the world was recovering from the pandemic and the global need for mobility was on the upswing, we felt there was more upside to the market, and certainly more than what the going time charter rates were pricing in at that time. Led us to pivot from a more defensive position to more market exposure. We will now look at some spot voyages in a bit more detail to give you a better sense of how our business works and how we trade our ships. I will show you three case studies, starting with slide 25. Before we look at this slide, remember the base case for a tanker. Base case is every laden leg, there is a ballast leg.
Meaning a ship loads a cargo at the refinery, travels across the ocean to the consumer, then unloads her cargo, or as we say, discharges her cargo. She travels empty to the next refinery to load her next cargo. For instance, a ship brings gasoline from the Netherlands across the Atlantic to New York. She either goes back empty to Europe or empty down to Houston. That's okay, we do those voyages too. To outperform the market, you have to look beyond the base case. Case study number one shows some very long-haul global trades combined. In red are ballast legs or empty voyages. In green are the laden voyages, or you could say paying voyages. This case, the vessel is coming from Asia, a very long-haul voyage to Africa.
Instead of going empty to your next typical load area all the way up north to Europe, she only has a short ballast, and she picks up an export cargo from West Africa straight down to Argentina. From there, she could ballast to the US Gulf or to Europe, but in our case here, she has no ballast at all. Matter of fact, she immediately picks up an export cargo from Argentina back to the east. These voyages combined yielded a 30% premium to average market rates over nearly two quarters. If your base case is for every laden leg, there's a ballast leg, here you can see that for nine laden days, there was only one ballast day. Let me also state that it is not unique to Ardmore to look for ways to combine voyages more creatively. Some of our competitors do as well.
We have worked hard on this, and we believe it shines through in our results. slide 26 shows the next case study. Also here for every ballast day, there are nine laden days. In this case, we are looking at a combination of a whole range of successive cargo categories: oil products, edible oils, and chemical cargoes. Over nearly two quarters, these voyages produced a 45% premium to the market. These great crossover trades can be quite complex. We need the broader organizational capability to do these voyages well and profitably, including ship to shore. It took us many years building this expertise, and you will forgive me for not going into a whole lot more detail here. Going back to how I described our commercial strategy at the start, and back to generating trading options, you can see why this is so important.
It enables us to combine the right voyages. To not only think about the next voyage, but to already sketch out next follow on voyages and the rationale behind combining them. The next case study and last case study I call the whole hog. Short haul, long haul, backhauls, regional, inter-regional, different cargo grades. This ship really has seen it all. Over nearly three-quarters, these combinations yielded a 20% premium to the market. This is about combining voyages creatively, but it is also about just timing the market. Talked about volatility at the start. Our market consists of many mini cycles. Like the macro cycle, which plays out over years, these mini cycles can play out over a number of weeks, days, and sometimes even hours.
Back to how I described our commercial strategy at the start, it is about being very targeted depending on where we are in those mini cycles. We cannot accomplish these results on every voyage, but enough for it to make a difference. I also want to avoid sending the wrong message here. Ballast reduction is not an objective in itself. The real objective is TCE optimization. There are times when reducing ballast goes hand in hand with achieving the optimal TCE, but there are also times we might forego certain cargoes and accept a ballast to take advantage of a hot market, especially during times of extreme arbitrage in commodity markets, as we have been experiencing. This can create more inefficiency in the market, which we can benefit from. Key message, just to repeat, our game is not about ballast reduction as such.
It is about maximizing TCE. They don't have to go hand in hand. This concludes my tour of our commercial platform. I will now provide a brief market outlook. I promise there will be a few more maps. Most topical, of course, the EU embargo on Russia. slide 30. This is a really important slide here. We are using data from commodity platform, Vortexa here. On the left, crude exports from Russia. On the right, diesel exports from Russia. You can see on the left that even before the EU crude embargo came into effect, self-sanctioning had already started. EU and G7 countries started to decrease their oil purchases from Russia well ahead of time, the blue bars. Diesel on the right-hand side, this is not the case. As a matter of fact, there was a buying spree leading right up to the winter.
The diesel story is actually yet to play out. It is an evolving situation, the EU ban just came into effect last week. Therefore, there is little hard data as such. Of course, there's the immediate reality of how clean freight markets have reacted, there's plenty of anecdotal evidence as of last week as well. Really important to note in this context is that Russia essentially only has two buyers for their crude oil, China and India. Now, this does not make for a great bargaining position. Diesel, there are more countries to accept. Within those countries, there are also more receivers. Lots more buyers for Russian diesel than for Russia's crude oil. Russia, it is a lot more attractive instead of exporting crude oil to put their crude through a refinery first and then export it as diesel instead.
We don't run crude tankers here at Ardmore. I don't want to comment too much on the crude market, the point here is that the diesel story is quite differentiated and still to play out. It is not a singular event. It's a structural fundamental shift of refined product supply chains globally. Another important insight from the oil analysts at Vortexa is that it's very easy to have television right now and to only focus on diesel. Of course, refiners are doing their utmost to optimize their product slate for diesel production. This comes at the expense of gasoline and naphtha production. This could create price pressure for gasoline and naphtha. This would kick over the next long haul arbitrage with the obvious positive impact on tanker demand. Road traffic is globally on the rise still, as is aviation demand.
The world cannot live on diesel alone. Something we pay close attention to. slide 31. I have promised you more maps. These are not specific Ardmore voyages now, but I believe this map serves well in visualizing very simply the ton-mile impact related to the EU embargo. The red arrows show two trade lanes, basically how Russian oil products used to get shipped to the European market. Baltic to Northern Europe on top, and below, Black Sea to the Mediterranean Sea. Of any voyages that MR tankers would ever engage in, these are among the shortest by far. Contrast, if diesel gets shipped to Europe from the US, the green arrows towards the left here, we are looking at voyages four times as long. At least five times as long from the Middle East, 10 times as long from the Far East.
Said earlier, this is an evolving situation, and we are in the first week since the ban came into effect. Many traders booking ships loading in Houston nowadays ask for discharge options in Poland. That is new. It really confirms the point this slide is trying to make, which is from short runs in Northern Europe to quadruple the voyage length from Houston to Eastern Europe. Ton-mile impact overall is estimated at between 7%-8%. Where is all the Russian diesel going now? slide 32. The expectation is that it will move fairly long haul, that we will see a fair bit of flow into South America. Again, long-haul voyages replacing short haul voyages. We are already seeing today Russian Baltic cargoes move to North Africa and West Africa, also long haul, prone for voyage delays.
These deals are generally done under the radar by the so-called, shadow fleet. We are keeping a close eye on this activity. Most importantly, remember, this is cheap diesel. Voyage distance is almost irrelevant in the face of price arbitrage. Our analysts have been predicting that even markets east of Suez will be absorbing Russian diesel. India, the Middle East, and Asia might all be importing diesel at all the way from Russia. As of this week, we are starting to see exactly this happening. We are seeing CPP cargoes from the Baltic getting booked for east of Suez discharge on both MRs and LRs. This can either be for consumption or Russian diesel will get blended with other products and then get re-exported. This is a remarkable two-way trade.
Same cargo is shipped twice over a really long distance, west to east, and then back east to west. By the way, not by the same ships. Allow me to clarify here that Arkema does not engage in Russian exports, but we are monitoring what the shadow fleet is doing. The expectation is clearly that many of these vessels, though not all of them, will not be able to slot back into international mainstream trades afterwards. This would create further market inefficiencies and limited tonnage availability in the market even further. Turning to page 33, the industry outlook. Much of this will be familiar to you, and also regret to inform you that we only have 1 map left in the slide deck. You're a very kind audience. Thank you. It is also a very small map. slide 34.
Simple story, but very important. Net fleet growth for product and chemical tankers is slowing substantially, even expected to turn negative in the foreseeable future against an estimated 3.5% annual demand growth. This is the widest supply and demand gap we have seen in a very long time. slide 35. Talked a lot about ton-mile today, but sometimes it is useful to just look at tons as in consumption. This is a combination of data from the IEA, MSI, and IMS. OMC. In brief, the pandemic is behind us, certainly from a point of oil consumption anyway. We are exceeding pre-pandemic consumption levels, and consumption continues to still accelerate. Once again, it is worth looking at what has been happening with global road fuel demand and aviation demand just this past week. slide 36. This is it. Final map of the day.
I will spend very little time here because you will have heard us talk about this all before. The key messages really remain fundamental demand drivers, consumption, refinery dislocation, China emerging from COVID, embargo on Russian oil products. This results in an estimated ton-mile increase of 10% year-over-year for product tankers and 8% for chemical tankers. slide 37. Let's take a closer look at supply. It is worth lingering here for just a moment before I conclude my slides. When you look at the order book for product tankers on the left, you really have to travel quite far back in time to get to a point when the order book was anywhere near this low. I guess you have to zoom out all the way to the year 2000.
I personally dislike the term generational opportunity because it is so overused. It is really hard to argue with these numbers. Equally important is the chart on the right, the green data box here. 40% of the fleet will be older than 20 years in five years' time. That is really old for our sector. It is getting older, there's very little ordering, and this has been a long time in the making. slide 38 makes an important point on where environmental regulation comes in in this context. These older ships we just looked at are less fuel efficient. That means higher carbon footprint. Older ships will become more expensive to operate and to own. Same time, anyone who wants to order a ship today must realize that the useful life of the asset will take them straight to 2050.
By 2050, the industry aspires to have reduced carbon intensity by 70%. There is a lot of meaningful discussion in the industry about future propulsion technology, but a winner has yet to emerge. This creates a mountain of uncertainty for anyone ordering ships today. Environmental regulation disincentivizes the operation of older ships, but environmental regulation also disincentivizes the ordering of new tonnage. Flipping back to slide 37 then, buy-side gap is already significant. Environmental regulation will only increase this gap. This completes my section for today. Of course, I'm happy to answer questions later. Thank you so much for your attention.
Right. Just we're go ahead and just sum everything up now. Regarding the market, in summary, the second half of 2022 market strength is continuing into the first quarter. Near-term outlook is very strong given the reordering of global product tanker trades. The medium-term outlook is positive as well for both products and chemicals, based on the strong supply demand fundamentals. Starting with the company, we're reporting record earnings. We're performing very well and in fact thriving in these volatile markets. Cash break even substantially strengthen our balance sheet, which enhances the quality of our earnings, the quality of the dividend, and the substance behind the NAV calculation for Ardmore. This has enabled us to now pursue all of our capital allocation priorities simultaneously, if we want to.
We're balancing the energy transition with energy reality, above all prioritizing carbon reduction projects which yield very high current returns and improve our operating performance today. As a final, but I think really perhaps the most important point, we feel that we could be in for a really good multi-year run in our markets, and that Ardmore will continue to excel in these conditions. Just before pivoting to Q&A, I wanna thank Curtis for coming up to join us today. Also to Bart and Gernot, along with Mark and Nadine, for their leadership in achieving our results. John and Alan, Brian and Elliot for the great work in putting this whole thing together, and organizing the event. We'll now open up the call for questions.
Congratulations, first of all. Obviously earning extraordinary returns now will continue as long as it continues. We're entering a new era, obviously, hopefully for the industry, for the company. Can you just comment on where you expect the long-term ROE kind of to settle out? I know there are ups and downs and vagaries, kind of where it's been in the last decade and where you think it'll be in the future decade once we're done with this abnormal period and the war.
Again, when anybody says, heralds the beginning of a new era, you wanna, you know, run for the exits. I don't know if it's a new era, it's a continuum. Look, we're in an extraordinary phase. I think it's interesting to think back to the very early 2000s and what kinda kicked off that strong run through the noughties. It was actually a couple of oil spills from single hull tankers. That then led to the growth in China, you know, kind of all unrelated events. Call it Murphy's Law, whatever you wanna call it, these things tend to build.
You know, that's why we do think that, you know, we don't think it's just fundamentals alone or, you know, the Ukraine conflict alone, but probably a, you know, a sequence of things that are gonna continue to drive the market. Ultimately, this is a highly efficient, competitive global industry. I think we do a marvelous job providing the global economy with efficient transport. Occasionally we make a lot of money. I do think that we're gonna be going through a phase of probably very substantial fleet turnover and replacement into new technologies. Personally, I think it's gonna take longer than anyone expects. You know, if you think about what happened with single hull tankers, it took 20 years, right? When you build a ship, it's a 25 year asset.
I don't think the IMO or anyone else is gonna do anything that's gonna create an economic crisis, out of, you know, curtailing, shipping supply.
Follow up.
Yeah.
What is the day rate that is required to get a 10% or 15% rate of return on a new ship?
Well, kind of a normalized new building price, my guess would be maybe $17,000-$18,000 a day. That was a bit of a ramble. Apologies, it was a good question. Yeah. Hello there. How are you?
Not an industry expert by a very long way. Can you give us a sense of two things? One, hopefully the easy question. These assets will have market prices. What's the market value of your-
Assets today versus the share price.
Mm-hmm.
Second question is really unfair. Let's just say the Ukraine invasion hadn't happened and all the repercussions that you've seen, and really appreciate you articulating here. How much has that helped you? If it hadn't happened, where would you think you would have been today?
The first question, you know, we don't typically talk a lot about the asset values because that's what research analysts do. We do think today, our net asset value is still, you know, I would say way ahead, but kinda meaningfully ahead of the stock price. Keeps going up, it's not going up right now because of asset values, but because of accrued earnings, building of equity in the companies. It's probably around $700 million or $720. It just feels like the stock price has been chasing NAV all the way up right now. The other question is, where would we be without the Ukraine War? I think we'd all be a lot happier.
'cause it does, in spite of the fact it's had a positive impact on our business, it does really trouble us. Gernot pointed out that at the beginning of last year, we were pivoting anyway to spot, because we felt it was gonna be a good year, and we thought by that, we thought maybe high teens. I think we would've been in the high teens today without the Ukraine war, which is still quite good.
give you I'll throw a few multi-parts there. You just mentioned you pivoted to spot.
That's okay. I can throw this way.
You know, MR is typically not a market where you have long-term contracts, but just a little bit of customer behavior. They're looking at the same data you're looking at. Are we going to see the emergence of an attractive, you know, three-five-year kind of contract market in MRs? How would you approach that? Totally, different question. I couldn't help but notice on your sensitivity page, started out with $35,000 and went up from there. Is there something we should be reading into that? 'Cause normally you would've put, a few years ago, $35,000 but on the other side of.
The top. Yeah.
of the page.
Yeah. Okay. In terms of the... I think I'd like to ask Gernot to comment a bit more about the market structure, I would just make the observation that, forward rates in our business are not so much a predictor or a guess where people think it's going. It's very often a degree of... It's a measure of risk aversion. A bit like interest rates. I'll hand it over to Gernot. In terms of the sensitivity, look, the fact is that, you know, we fixed ships at $125,000 a day a few months back, okay? You know, you go from fixing a few ships at $125,000 a day to all your ships at that level, not very much, okay?
You know, that's how inelastic this business is. That's why we wanted to show that. Gernot, do you wanna comment on?
Yeah. The longer you go out in terms of duration, liquidity really becomes quite thin for time charter contracts. It is discounted quite heavily, but more importantly, you have to start to wonder about quality of counterparties as well. Obviously looking at this as a, as a bit of an insurance. There are many ways for people to try to weasel out of contracts, and this has been done before. These are not financial contracts, these are physical contracts, where there could be physical situations beyond any owner's control that give the charter abilities to torpedo certain fixed fee contracts. That's just as a general comment. Right now, most liquidity is around six months to 12 months periods. I think I just lost my notes back.
It is mostly around six months -12 months periods. You really have to look at what is the position of the ship, what's the relative strength of the spot market, how does the paper market look compared to it. The answer is there's very little liquidity. The liquidity that is there is usually quite unattractive, sometimes simply from a point of view of pricing or counterparty. Maybe one point I wanted to add. One point I wanted to add on the question of where did the demand come from last year. Of course, you know, Russia, Ukraine really was captivating the headlines.
Of course, it also drove a lot of psychology in terms of, you know, that angst around where do we get our product supplies from and what does this really all mean. If you go back and dissect the ton-mile data for last year, you will see that there was a lot of things happening in the market that had really nothing to do with Russia, Ukraine. There was a lot of ton-mile demand coming from South America. You know, refining system is still fairly inefficient there. A lot of economies, you know, reemerging from COVID and requiring a lot of mobility, industrial demand from South Africa. Just to make the point again, also new streams of demand and ton-mile demand coming into play around non-petroleum based commodities used for biofuel or biofuel blending.
I think an example that is probably now attracting a bit more visibility in the market is used cooking oil. You know, really think it as it is used cooking oil that gets shipped in MR from Asia to Northern European, Our refineries to produce and blend biofuel with. There's a lot of interesting stuff that's happening that goes beyond just Russia, Ukraine, even though, of course, that did have an impact. I feel like it's easy to overlook those, and I wanted to briefly highlight those elements.
Just to actually briefly follow up on that. If looking at the other side of that, if the conflict ended tomorrow, how does that change your, you know, medium-term outlook or short to medium-term outlook? Did the conflict essentially tighten the market faster than it would have naturally, do you still have the supply-demand imbalance going forward even?
Yeah, I think certainly it has done something and it has created a lot of extra volatility. That's helped shift the momentum increasingly in the owner's favor. Even if you look at trade patterns today, there's a lot of demand in places that really have nothing to do with what goes on in Europe. I think it's also important to point out that even if the war were to end tomorrow, I think, you know, these changes in supply routes are probably here to stay. I would be very surprised if politically or for all the other reasons, Northern Europe would shift back quickly towards, you know, using Russian diesel or Russian crude oil. Equally, once some of these trade lanes get established also, they kind of stick.
As some of these people in, you know, Middle Eastern and Asian countries are used to actually importing Russian diesel, you know, the distance really is negligent. It's about the price incentive very strong.
Hi, thank you. I wanted to dig into the energy transition investments you guys have been making. You mentioned in the slides cover investments, 60% IRR. Can you sort of talk about what has changed relative to when IMO 2020 was implemented? Like why now? Why are you investing in scrubbers now? Kind of second part of that is, you mentioned 12 ETP investments, varying degrees of success. Are those sort of all the low-hanging fruit outside of fuel, LNG, methanol, et cetera, ammonia? Sort of do you believe that the low-hanging fruit has been picked on?
I'll start and then hopefully. Yeah, maybe I'll kind of go backwards. I think what we found is that evaluated probably not doing wind assist, we're not doing lubrication, these kinds of things. What's fun and exciting is that these are relatively bite-sized investments that have a cumulatively meaningful impact on fuel consumption. Shows up in our TCE. When we calculate the IRRs and paybacks, they're pretty amazing. We got a really good team that looks at this kind of small team, but our head of innovation is really good. It's surprising how many new things, you know. There are things that we've done that, you know, a year ago we didn't know that they were gonna pop up. I think that'll continue.
Maybe not forever, but for the time being, we're very optimistic when it comes to that.
Certainly, you know, as the industry studies, what is the ship of the future, the fuel, the distribution to service the vessels? You know, emerging technology that's coming up, but then guide to your existing space. I think it goes back to Tony's comments of having this Goldilocks fleet, where the fleet's not too old, not too young, but actually can benefit from these, you know, small incremental CapEx projects. You know, the system that we have in Ardmore where the innovation team can bring it up, we have pretty brief discussion after the rigorous analysis, pilot test it, and if it works, you roll it out to the fleet in due course. If it doesn't, you move on to the other projects. I think it is dual-fold.
You know, we focus a lot on different hardware, but there's also the software component of it as well, which continues to advance. I think there's been a lot of hype in some of the side of it, hardware, software, and it is the rapid ability to deploy it in the routine dry dockings or where, while vessels are underway and in port. I think you'll see more of that from us for sure.
Then a second one, if I could. You had mentioned part of the strategic pillars, well-timed accretive growth. I just wanted to ask about growth, I guess medium term, longer term. I guess first, is there any interest in doing any new builds at this time? I guess the first question is, do you envision seeing growing the fleet outside of time charter ins in the near future, medium term? I think the second part of that, I guess, is that, are new builds, an interest to you, or is it purely secondhand vessels? I guess, where does the preference lie?
Yeah, I think, you know, when you look at the Ardmore fleet compared to others, it's perhaps a little bit on the small side. We have grown a lot in 13 years, and we intend to continue doing that, but we wanna do it in a smart way. What does that mean? We're continually looking at opportunities. It could be secondhand. You know, I think new buildings, you know, I think once we get a bit more clarity or can better figure out what to build and are convinced that they're gonna be good investments for the long term, always a possibility. There are kind of modern secondhand ships out there that are possible. I think this is not a very homogeneous market.
It's very global, and there are pockets of, you know, of kind of opportunity. I, you know, we'll continue to look for things that on a relative basis are sufficiently attractive to make sense on an absolute basis. We tend to buy well. We, we bought six ships, okay, admittedly a while back, but when they were two years old at an average price of twenty-eight and a half million MRs, and that price hasn't been better. The last ship we bought was about two years ago, and that ship has doubled in value. I think we're pretty good buyers. In the moment, people always question us, but this seems to work out pretty well.
Probably a question for Gernot, but on the shadow tanker market, can you quantify that? I mean, how big is it relative to the overall fleet? Is it lower end, dirtier, less
Your point about it.
That's kind of interesting as well from a supply curtailment point of view. Just a little more detail on that would be great.
I think that's a great question because unfortunately, it's not like these ships fly a flag that says shadow fleet. You have to use sort of various data points to extrapolate which ships are likely to end up in the so-called shadow fleet. It's a bit too early to tell. Now we can see as certain ships trade into those Russian export cargoes, it will become more apparent. I've heard a lot of different estimates, I almost don't want to transform myself, I think it's, you know, I think 100 ships to 120 ships could easily be dedicated to those trades. The way you extrapolate is usually age. These are older ships, less sophisticated.
You know, you can look at certain demographics within the distribution of ship owners, you know, owners that would typically be a bit more prone and risk-taking towards potential sanctions violations and just exploring trades that, you know, we would not, you know, get anywhere near to. As an example, just today on a ship of one of our competitors that got into a fair bit of trouble due to their trading history. We also know that our, you know, fairly, high-profile customers are, of course, quite concerned about their reputation and ask a lot of questions during their KYC process, not just about the owner, the counterparty, but also about individual ships and their trading history.
This is, you know, being scrutinized even more. I think, it is a fairly safe assumption to say that these ships will be, not, you know, in a perfect world, from that owner's perspective, he would take a Russian cargo to the Middle East and then load another clean product cargo and take it right back to Europe. That is unlikely to play out. This is just gonna be ships that balance back, essentially back to Russia. Certainly, the way it's traded is still making sense for them. I think for the wider market, the important message is really that, these ships will be dedicated to those, shadow trades and are de facto removed from the markets that, we would find ourselves in.
It is actually still important from a ton-mile perspective, and it's probably even more so important considering that it's very inefficient in terms of how you can actually really ship those cargoes. A lot of empty legs for these ships to get back to the Baltic States.
Starting slide 38, the International Maritime Organization is talking about 20%, 30%, or 40% reduction in carbon intensity. My question is this considered to be a significant reduction as it is now or will be since nobody has really agreed to all of this? Would this type of reduction be met through staggered transition dates going forward?
Fantastic question. It's not clear. This is the frustrating part for us, and I think a lot of companies, is if we just knew what the rules were, we could plan accordingly. This is also what's holding back, you know, ordering activity. The, you know, the IMO has basically come up with short-term measures, which are EEXI, CII, et cetera. They're now working on medium-term measures, which are more market-based, to try to level the playing field of renewable fuels with fossil fuels. That will then hopefully incentivize owners to build ships that burn renewable type fuels, whether it's ammonia, methanol, biodiesel, et cetera. The timing and the nature of that legislation is to be determined.
That's the frustrating part, and it's why we're focusing on what we can do in the near term to just reduce carbon emissions because if that, if that is the.
Hey, thanks, Tony. Sean Morgan from Evercore. I just wanted to get an update on the e1 Marine, JV, and just trying to understand better how long it's gonna take for commercialization of that kind of new nascent business. Like, what are the, I guess, what are the g atekeeping factors for getting that up and running. Also, once you kind of have the technology ready, are you seeing any green shoots of a distribution network of hydrogen imports starting to develop? If so, where are you seeing that distribution network start to pop up?
Sure. Comment on Element one and then, Tony, maybe on the marine side. I think as we think about Element one, certainly, you know, it's an earlier stage company, but the benefit that it actually already is, you know, has revenue today, is cash flow positive. Really for them, it's the evolution of expanding their licensing model on a global basis and across industry verticals and regionally. Then at the same time, engaging with the large, you know, global industrial players that could actually service as a distribution and global partner for them.
I think they have the interesting model where the most critical piece of their equipment is this metal filter that actually produces this ultra-pure hydrogen to like the 99.99% level that can be used in fuel cells. For them to control that core bit of the technology, but then leverage other organizations in terms of distribution, this is a big year for that to continue to play out. Say maybe on the marine side.
Yeah. I think the demand will come when the regulations are set. The advantage of the system is that it takes methanol and water. By the methanol molecule and the water. There's a lot of hydrogen there, right? It takes a mix of roughly 50/50 and reforms it into a high purity hydrogen stream so that you don't have to store hydrogen. We think, you know, the best applications are gonna be generator replacements on ships, or, you know, shore power facilities on docks, and maybe propulsion for river and coastal crafts. The partnership with e1 Marine is three-way between Element 1, Ardmore, and Maritime Partners.
Maritime Partners has announced that they're, you know, financing and building the first ever hydrogen-powered tug, and the hydrogen is gonna be produced by the Element 1.
Another big picture industry question. As you point out, the industry does a great job of efficiently moving these products around the world, they're products that economies absolutely need, or they'll grind to a halt without them. At the same time, you have the governments trying to outlaw petroleum products. You know, the EU's outlawing gasoline-powered cars by 2035. If I'm in your seat at a board meeting talking about capital investment on a long-lived asset for we'll call it 25 years just for rounding purposes, how do you make that decision in the near term?
I would guess as we get closer to that date, no matter how bizarre you think it is what the government's trying to do, doesn't that just mean there's gonna be less supply because more people won't take the risk of spending that kind of capital on an asset that might not be worth very much?
Yeah.
in a decade? How do you think about that?
Carefully. One thing that I think is worth reflecting on is that the global economy, if it just continues to grow at like 3.5%, doubles every 20 years. In 2050, the global economy is gonna be three times or four times the size it is today. China, India, Africa, you know, Latin America, et cetera, they're way behind Europe and the U.S. William. I think in the context of all that global growth, most of which is gonna be happening in Asia, we think there's gonna be a market for petroleum transport. In time, we think the real growth is gonna come from non-CPP, which is kind of chemicals, biofuels, vegetable oils, that kind of stuff. That's where we're heading strategically when the opportunities arise.
Always in a manner which we think is gonna keep building and improving our performance. When I started in this business, products represented about 10% of the world tanker fleet. It's close to 40%. I think, you know, and, you know, versus crude. I think you're gonna see the same kind of migration. You know, kind of type two cargoes, that, you know, over time are gonna become a bigger slice of the pie. That's, that's where we're gonna be.
Hi, Chris Robertson with Deutsche Bank. One of the downside risks here is just the general recession risk. Can you guys talk about demand elasticity for petroleum products during a regular, kind of general recession versus the COVID-driven recession?
That one over to Bart.
I mean, I think for us from the macro perspective, you know, we fully acknowledge that there's potential pressure there. It does feel like it's more of a first half relative to second half potential re-acceleration and, you know, more different geography-based. It feels like we've already, you know, even from Gernot's comments, starting to see increased flows related to China already. I would say in this market environment, and we've looked at the, you know, supply-demand spreads and absent the, you know, February 5th Ukraine potential impact and reordering of the trades, you're still at a 3% - 4% demand growth relative to, you know, near zero fleet growth. There's gonna be volatility there.
As we think about it, you know, even if that were to compress some, for example, in 23, that's not really the driver of the market, and as you're reordering on a ton-mile story, it's really the story Gernot shared.
Maybe just to add a small nuance there, less macro, but for tankers in particular, of course, our demand is ton-mile demand and also ship availability. Even when you might be facing economic headwinds, that could suggest that, for instance, the structure of the oil and product prices goes into a steep contango. All of a sudden, there's potential for more long haul demand and also more storage demand, as we have seen, which could actually bode quite well for tankers. Sometimes what that actually means in terms of tanker demand, at least for a period of time, can be quite counterintuitive and.
One for Gernot right here. When we look at the crossover trades and the maps right there, we're looking at a ballast and laden ratio of about nine to one. Is there a floor to ceiling that you guys like to put on that, especially looking at the vectors over time, environmental regulation, cyclicality, the aging fleets? Is there a floor and ceiling on that on that number? Does it change? How do you assess that, and how do you guys act in the moment when you see that? Is there a lot of variability in that?
There is, and it's actually a decision. We're not looking to say, "Okay, we're striving to have a ballast laden ratio of X across the fleet." It's very much a trading decision that is made almost voyage by voyage.
What's the high and low you're seeing on some of that? Because right now in the examples you gave, they're both nine to one.
Mm-hmm.
Do you see that go up, you know, down pretty heavily by?
Those are probably some of the more, you know... those are examples on more, on the high end.
Yeah.
It's kind of, you know, it's obviously visualizing when these things stack up really well. I'd say if your base case is, you know, laden leg for ballast leg for a, you know, crew tanker, let's say it's 50/50. I think the average, you know, laden ballast ratio for product tankers is roughly 60%, and I think over the last year, we're probably in the 70%-75% range there. It really depends on kind of what profitability dictates. There might well be cases where taking a longer ballast into account just makes more commercial sense, and then we do that.
I'd say, to answer your question, I would like to think that as we progress further towards non-petroleum-based cargos, they can move quite different from your standard petroleum-based trades, which is usually starts with a big refining hub, Northern Europe, US Gulf, Middle East, maybe China, maybe Singapore. You will find, I think ways to quite naturally cut those ballast legs, again, just because it makes commercial sense rather than kind of us looking to kind of move that KPI up or something to that effect.
That commercial sense, I mean, it's obviously not black or white here, but as environmental regulation comes in, it's hard to tell what's gonna happen with that ratio to go either way, apparently.
That's correct. I think, you know, if you were to now really dig into the mechanics of the CII rating, which is in place of this year, you know, some of it can be quite counterintuitive, where, you know, not necessarily the.
Yeah.
Yeah. The, the trades that really, you know, are the most carbon efficient could actually still end up getting penalized. You're right. I mean, there is a lot more complexity, especially once you factor in that, as of next year, of course, Europe has included shipping or is highly likely to be including Europe in the,
Carbon tax.
Car-carbon trading scheme. But, you know, very likely a lot of the other jurisdictions are just waiting to see how this plays out in Europe. We think there's gonna be a lot of regional jurisdictions with similar carbon taxes in North America and other parts of the world as well. You have a real crazy mosaic of different carbon-related taxes as well, which is definitely gonna skew that picture of ballast laden long term. That's sufficient of an answer.
No, yeah.
A lot of
The crazy mosaic example is what I'm taking out of this. I mean, it's how do you systematically create a system where you're okay through all this, you know, crazy mosaic?
I think that's part of the reason why a lot of what we do in terms of setting up our organizational focus is to really make sure we don't, you know, lose sight of this because a lot of this we need to catch on the forefront and it needs to be kind of become part of sort of our muscle memory in terms of how we trade our ships, operate them, and just even what we discuss on a daily and weekly basis. This has to be part of it.
Appreciate it. Thank you.
Yeah. I think Gernot's being modest. I mean, you know, that uncertainty on the regulatory side and otherwise, it adds volatility and the team is set up to trade in that volatility.
Obviously, we're in the financial markets, generally, there's a premium being paid for dividends. It seems they continue. You mentioned the payout ratio. You're in a hugely cyclical business. What has to happen for that dividend to be vulnerable? Secondly, you know, what's your view on growing the dividend over time? Obviously, that's a longer period question.
Sure. I think as we reinstituted the dividend, after a considerable period of time, we thought about it in terms of one-third level being something that you look to have sustainable through the cycle, and, you know, allows us to build strength at this point in the upcycle, but also address the other pillars of our capital allocation policy. You know, if accretive growth opportunities don't emerge, and we continue to be disciplined and patient there, for the long term, we can always review an additional return on capital, above the stated dividend policy, and our board is supportive of that as well.
You know, if you're right on this, on the supply-demand and the market is as tight as you think, are there any relief valves, whether it's steaming speeds, capacity coming back from the dirty side, ships trading older than they are typically allowed to help create some relief? There's really no kind of improvement to the Latin/ ballast ratio across the industry? You know, I'm just trying to think of.
Yeah. Yeah, what could go wrong?
Yeah.
Yeah. Maybe as other during our competition. In spite of the very high rates, ships set up, but not as much as you would. Now, that's possibly just because of the high fuel price as well. If you had a very low fuel price, all the demand, you might see more speed. We haven't seen a lot of congestion. Just a little bit, but, you know, that was the whole container ship story. That's not part of the tanker story now. It's really not even a lot to do with volumes at the moment, it's the distance. You can, obviously, LR2s can clean up from dirty trade and go into clean. You can even have, you know, crude tankers on initial voyages that do multiple voyages in clean.
Not too many of our set up to do that on a sustained basis, but they're there to do that. I think that if the freight rates are high enough, then the market kind of sorts itself out in terms of, you know, of, you know, the trades or the, you know, the oil trades, that are, you know, that are possible. Obviously, I think a lot of what's happened is disruption, which once it kind of settles into more stable trading patterns, again, obviously is a lot more efficient.
I was just thinking, I mean, the oil trades obviously do have that greater sophistication and the just regulation and safety concerns. I mean, when you think about, you know, dry bulk vessels, we're able to put, you know, stack containers on deck and that substitutability, you don't have that in general in the industry.
Touching back on capital allocation for a second. You showed you're down 25% debt to cap. You know, with this extra cash you'll have, I mean, you wanna pay that down to zero. I mean, what, at what level? It sounds like you're not gonna buy a whole lot of ships right now. When would that maybe extra dividends and with what have you done for us lately, you know, beyond the Formula One, you know, come into play?
Well, I can assure you it's something we discuss at every board meeting, Ray Curtis. You know, look, we're trying to find the right balance. We're very, very happy to pay special dividends if we feel that there's no, you know, better use of capital.
Is there a low you want the debt to cap going below which it's not an efficient capital structure?
Not really. I think our delevering is gonna slow down from here because we're paying a dividend. About 2/3, 1/3 of that cash, and the market's not quite where it was. Had some other specific factors in 2022. You know, I think the delevering will happen slower if even if we do not. I also think that there's real benefit in that low leverage in terms of just the quality of the cash flow and earnings.
Few from the webcast here. Most of them have been already. Actually, a handful of them by Greg, so I guess maybe you're reading my emails, I'm not sure. In any case, to MRs are outperforming, is that something you would expect to continuing being the case, or is that something related to February 5?
Yeah. MRs and LRs are correlated, in a way, everything that's good for product tankers is good for kind of all vessel classes. What I think is worth highlighting that in an environment of extreme volatility as we have experienced, and an environment of extreme uncertainty as we have also experienced, that our customers, oil traders and refiners really like that flexibility, ability to continue selling their cargoes as the ship is already on the way, and the ship that offers the most trading flexibility, and the most traded stem sizes are the MRs. For us, of course also, we can access non-petroleum trades more easily with MRs. It's not really possible with LRs. For us, it also creates more flexibility in how we trade ships and how we combine cargoes and how we combine voyages.
In a way, the MRs, I think, inherently offer more flexibility to both our customers and us, which is why I believe that MRs should continue to do quite well. Looking at some of the maps we stared at in terms of shifts in trade flows from short haul within Europe to long haul, that's of course, structurally bullish MRs, bearish handies. These are traditionally handy trades.
I think on the LRs, it's important to point out that, you know, LR2s are already trading as clean as they usually do. There's always a slice of the market that just stays in dirty trades. I think overall, mainly due to its kind of structural, layout, MRs provide a lot of flexibility for both us, and the customers, and I think should continue to do well.
Given where rates are, and also where asset prices are, Look at potentially crystallizing the value in the assets by doing some sales of older vessels? Or would you, for a vessel that you would otherwise look at selling now look to hold on to that vessel? How do you think about, does that change at all your normal process for sort of the aging out process?
Typically, keep ships until they turn around 15 years of age. We sold three last year that were 2008s. We sold them, on a sale leaseback basis, and we took them back at $13,000 a day for years. That actually carries an even
Our next oldest ship now is 2010, so it's 13. It's still a very efficient ship. We like the way it's operating. I guess the question is, would we sell anything now opportunistically? The answer is, you know, yes, maybe, but you have to factor in the cash flow that's quite visible near term. When you get to the other side of that, you know, very visible and reasonably confident, you know, kind of basis, and even look at one-year TC rates and freight futures, et cetera, you get to a point where, you know, if you sold the ship at an impressive price today, back end of all that cash flow, it's actually a pretty low price selling it for.
The final thing I'll say is that, we don't have the luxury that everybody in the audience has here to just sell the shares, right? We're, you know, anytime you wanna sell the ships, just sell the shares. Yeah, so.
Last one from the webcast. You'll answer this, but I'm gonna ask it because they'll let me hear it if I don't. Given what you're generating right now, given some of the slides that you had in the deck, how much dry powder could you accrue over the course of the year?
How much dry powder do we accrue?
Could you accrue over the course of the year? What could it look like a few quarters from now?
Well, I mean, it could be another $150 million at these current levels.
Hey, just a quick one from me.
Yeah.
We're expected to see quite a few bits of refinery runs over the course of first half of 2023, to the tune of roughly 3 million barrels per day, in Middle East and West Africa. Would you mind just sharing your view on how this reads through to tonne mile demand?
Actually, a lot of the seasonal turnaround, particularly in the US Gulf, we're kinda past the peak here already. We've seen, of course, unusually strong winter weather, as I'm sure everybody in this audience can remember, and it did knock out a fair bit of PADD 3 US Gulf refining capacity. Those would typically happen a bit later, but a lot of them actually went straight into an early turnaround. From what we're tracking, we should kind of actually start to move out of it. West Africa, in terms of turnaround, is for us good news because that means it's already an import market, and that just means more of an import draw.
The Middle East is a particularly interesting market because a lot of the product deficit in Europe from the Middle East markets, and we have seen the Middle East actually firm quite substantially. I was just talking to somebody this week and in particular that market and they said it's long, but it's actually still, even at this level, these levels, it's giant. I guess we'll see. The refining turnaround that we typically see in the spring, a lot of it is actually basically in the rearview mirror, particularly due to the heavy weather we've seen here in the U.S.
Hi. Just a quick update on the Ardmore Seavanguard. It's been a year now since it hit all berth in Argentina.
Referring to the Elysian incident?
Yes.
is fully covered by insurance and the.
Is she still anchored?
No, no.
The German-
She's been trading ever since. We the P&I Club posted a their indemnity or something. That's it. I don't have any closing remarks, but thank you for coming. We didn't either.