- Shipbroking
Shipbroking is an activity which forms part of the international shipping industry. Shipbrokers are specialist intermediaries between
shipowner s and the charterers who useships to transportcargo , or between buyers and sellers of ships.Larger Broking firms have separate departments specialising in Dry Cargo Chartering, Tanker Chartering, Containers, Sale & Purchase and sometimes also Demolition sales and Research. Major shipbroking centres include
London ,Oslo ,Piraeus ,New York ,Houston ,Hamburg ,Copenhagen ,Singapore ,Tokyo ,Hong Kong andShanghai . Although some brokers cover more than one discipline, most shipbroking activity can be divided as follows:ale and Purchase
S&P brokers handle the buying and selling of existing or new ships (called
newbuildings in industry parlance). S&P brokers discuss opportunities and market trends with shipowners, report on sales, value vessels, calculate freight earnings, advise on finance and try to find ships for specific employment opportunities. When a ship is sold, brokers usually negotiate on behalf of the buyer and seller on price and terms and also provide a route to resolving any disputes which might arise. Some S&P brokers specialise in the sale of ships forscrapping , which requires a different set of skills.Dry Cargo Broking
Dry cargo brokers are typically specialists in the chartering of
bulk carrier s, and are appointed to act either for a ship owner looking for employment for a ship, or a charterer with a cargo to be shipped. Dry brokers typically maintain largedatabase s of vessel positions, cargoes and rates and pay close attention to the direction of the markets so that they can advise their clients accurately on how to maximise profits or minimise expenses. This area of business is often sub-divided into size classes of bulkers -capesize ,panamax andhandysize are the main sectors. Each sector involves different cargoes, trade routes, owners and charterers and dry brokers tend to specialise in one of these sectors.Tanker Broking
Tanker brokers specialise in the chartering of tankers, which requires an entirely different set of skills and knowledge to dry cargo broking. Tanker brokers may specialise in
crude oil , gas, oil products orchemical tanker s.Tanker brokers negotiate maritime contracts which are known as Charter Parties. The main terms of negotiation are freight/hire and
demurrage .Freight or Hire rate (when a time charter) for crude oil tankers is based on universal calculations assessed once a year know as
worldscale . For specialist ships, such as LNG tankers, where the charter market is smaller, prices are agreed at a fixed rate between the parties.Container Broking
Container brokers specialise in the chartering of
container ship s and provide container ship owners and charterers with market-related information.References
*cite book |first=Mark| last=Huber |title=Tanker operations: a handbook for the person-in-charge (PIC) |publisher=Cornell Maritime Press |location=Cambridge, MD |year=2001 | chapter =Ch. 9:Chartering and Operations |pages= |isbn=0-87033-528-6 |oclc= |doi=
*External links
* [http://www.ics.org.uk www.ics.org.uk The Institute of Chartered Shipbrokers ]
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