Shipping Cycle Timing: When to Buy Tanker Stocks
The shipping industry operates in boom-bust cycles driven by the mismatch between fleet supply (slow to adjust, 3-4 year vessel build time) and cargo demand (fast-moving with economic conditions). For dividend investors, understanding where we are in the cycle is essential — it determines both current dividend levels and future dividend sustainability.
The Four Phases of the Shipping Cycle
| Phase | TCE Rate Level | Orderbook | P/NAV | Dividend Yield |
| Trough | Below break-even (<$20k/day MR) | Low orders placed | 0.5-0.8x | 2-5% (low FCF) |
| Recovery | Rising, approaching average | Orders increasing | 0.8-1.2x | 5-10% (rising FCF) |
| Peak | Well above average ($50k+ VLCC) | Heavy ordering | 1.2-2.0x | 10-20%+ (peak FCF) |
| Decline | Falling as new supply arrives | Deliveries surge | 1.0-0.8x | 8-15% (declining) |
Key Timing Indicators
1. Fleet Orderbook as % of Existing Fleet
This is the single most important leading indicator. An orderbook above 20% of existing fleet signals future supply pressure (rates will fall in 3-4 years as vessels deliver). An orderbook below 8% signals supply tightness ahead — a bullish signal. In 2025-2026, the product tanker orderbook is at historically low levels, providing multi-year rate support.
2. TCE Rates vs. Historical Averages
Compare current TCE rates to 10-year averages:
- VLCC long-run average: ~$30,000-35,000/day. Above $50,000 = elevated cycle. Below $20,000 = depressed.
- MR product tanker average: ~$18,000-22,000/day. Above $35,000 = strong cycle.
- LPG (VLGC): Average ~$40,000-50,000/day. Above $70,000 = peak.
3. P/NAV (Price to Net Asset Value)
NAV = Fleet replacement value minus net debt. Historically, tanker stocks trade between 0.5x NAV (trough) and 2.0x NAV (peak). Buying at 0.7-0.9x NAV with a low orderbook and below-average rates has historically generated strong returns over the following 2-3 years.
Entry signal = P/NAV < 0.9x AND Orderbook < 10% AND TCE < Long-run avg
Seasonal Patterns in Shipping
Within the cycle, seasonal patterns create short-term rate volatility:
- Q4 (Oct-Dec): Northern hemisphere heating demand boosts product tanker rates for refined products. Winter storms also create congestion and delays that tighten effective supply.
- Q1 (Jan-Mar): Post-heating season softness. Chinese New Year reduces activity.
- Q2-Q3: Refinery maintenance season in some markets, driving product movements. VLCC rates depend on OPEC production decisions in these quarters.
Geopolitical Overlays
Geopolitical events can dramatically accelerate or disrupt the shipping cycle:
2022-2024 Russia-Ukraine impact: Russian oil re-routed from Baltic to India/China (longer voyages = more ton-miles = higher effective demand). This created a structural tailwind that extended the upcycle beyond what fundamentals alone would suggest. Geopolitical disruptions are difficult to predict but can be cycle-extending events of 2-4 years.
Cycle risk factors:
1. OPEC+ production cuts: Reduce crude tanker demand directly. June 2026 OPEC+ agreed to +411k bbl/day increases — positive for VLCC demand.
2. Trade normalization: If Russia sanctions ease, Russian oil re-routes back to shorter routes — reducing effective fleet utilization.
3. Newbuilding wave: 2025-2026 orders for VLGCs (LPG tankers) could depress LPG rates by 2028-2029.
4. IMO CII penalties: Slow steaming to comply with Carbon Intensity regulations absorbs fleet capacity — a structural supply constraint supporting rates.
The Dividend Timing Trade-Off
Here is the fundamental tension for dividend investors:
- Buy at trough: Low current dividend (rates below break-even), but highest future upside. Best total return if you hold through the cycle.
- Buy mid-cycle: Good dividend (rates above average), moderate P/NAV (0.9-1.2x). Balanced risk-reward.
- Buy at peak: Highest current dividend (10-20%+ yield), but P/NAV is elevated and rates will fall. Risk of large price decline when cycle turns.
Marco Bozem's approach: accumulate shipping positions at or near trough valuations (P/NAV below 1.0x) when the orderbook is favorable, then collect dividends through the upcycle and reassess when P/NAV exceeds 1.5x and orderbook rises above 15%.
Practical Cycle Position Assessment (2026)
| Indicator | Current Reading (Jun 2026) | Signal |
| Product tanker orderbook | ~6-8% of fleet | Bullish (low supply growth) |
| MR TCE rates | ~$20,000-25,000/day | Neutral (near avg, not peak) |
| VLCC orderbook | ~10-12% of fleet | Neutral |
| LPG/VLGC orderbook | ~18-22% of fleet | Cautious (supply coming 2027-28) |
| LNG carrier orderbook | ~30%+ of fleet | Bearish (oversupply risk 2027+) |
Related Concepts
Shipping TCE Rate P/NAV Variable Dividend Orderbook
See also: Tanker Market · Charter Rates · TCE Rate · Shipping Dividends · Best Tanker Stocks 2026 · High-Yield Dividend Stocks
Marco Bozem
Independent Investor & Analyst | Hard Assets, Dividends, Shipping | MB Capital Strategies
Marco holds CMB.Tech, TORM, FLEX LNG and Dorian LPG — all acquired with cycle timing in mind. All analysis is based on publicly available data and personal assessment. Not investment advice.
Disclaimer: All content on this page is for informational and educational purposes only. Nothing here constitutes investment advice. Shipping stocks involve significant cyclical risk. Always conduct your own due diligence.
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