BERLIAN LAJU's 'so huge and so rare' opportunity |
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Written by Leong Chan Teik
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Monday, 14 September 2009
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This is the first part of our 2-part report on Berlian Laju Tanker, the largest shipping company in Indonesia and one of the largest in the world in the chemical tanker segment, both by tonnage and by number of ships.
 Peter Chayson, GM, investor relations department, Berlian Laju Tanker. Photo by Leong Chan Teik TWO
MAJOR industry rulings are taking effect and look set to significantly
improve the business fundamentals of Berlian Laju Tanker (www.blt.co.id), Indonesia’s largest shipping company, which is dual-listed in Singapore and Jakarta.
These are:
a) International Maritime Organisation (IMO) ruling: Oil tankers which are non-double hull will not be allowed to ply international waters by end-2010.
The impetus for the ruling is that since 1990, ten out of 12 tanker-related oil spills involved vessels with single hulls.
b) Indonesian government ruling (cabotage law): It
is mandatory to use Indonesian-flagged vessels for the shipping of
chemicals, oil/gas and other liquids within Indonesian waters. Chemical
tankers came under the rule from Jan this year while the oil & gas
tankers will start from Jan 2010.
The practical and major hurdle
for foreign players is not just the flag but a shareholding cap for
foreign companies. In addition, the entire ship crew has to be
Indonesian.
As a result of the IMO ruling, many non-double hull
vessels will be available for sale at rock-bottom prices, which Berlian
intends to buy at, according to Peter Chayson, the general manager of
Berlian’s investor relations department.
Berlian will then flag
them and deploy them in Indonesian waters to meet the mandatory
requirement on the use of Indonesian-flagged vessels. Foreign-flagged
ships have until now captured a significant market share in Indonesia's
maritime transportation services.
 Source: Bloomberg “The
timing between the implementation of cabotage rule and the mandatory
scrapping can’t be more perfect and this offers a significant arbitrage
opportunity,” said Mr Chayson. The
key demand will come from Pertamina which currently uses over 70
foreign-flagged vessels out of its fleet of over 100 vessels. According
to analyst reports, state-owned Pertamina spends over US$400 million a
year to charter the 100 vessels.
Mr Chayson said that 56 of
these foreign-flagged ships would come off charter between now and
2010. “This will present a big opportunity for us, and we have a good
chance of getting contracts from Pertamina,” he said in an interview
with NextInsight last week.
"Pertamina
is looking for quality service as it is given a huge responsibility by
the government to distribute all the much needed oil and gas products
across the 17,000 islands in Indonesia on time.”
Mr
Chayson added: “The arbitrage opportunity arising from the cabotage and
IMO mandatory scrapping rules is so huge and so rare we want to use all possible financing alternatives available to get the funding needed for this opportunity.”
Low cost, low borrowing, low insurance
 Berlian owns 91 ships currently. Photo: annual report He
said that the scrapping of non-double hull tankers is gaining momentum,
as owners have various economic reasons to sell now and not later.
“Buying these vessels at low cost means we can lock in our low cost for the long term, which means low borrowings, low interest payments, low insurance premiums - and in the end increase profitability and shareholders’ value,” said Mr Chayson.
Yet
another government mandate looks set to change the industry dynamics
for Berlian: Indonesia is limiting the import of vessels by age. While
vessels of up to 25 years of age are allowed now, the limit will be
lowered to 20 next year, and to 15 in 2011.
“What this means is we will be practically competing only with double-hull vessels in future in the domestic market, as beyond 2011 virtually all non-double hull ships will no longer be available in the market. Our competitors will have to buy double-hull ships at normal market prices which are substantially more expensive,” said Mr Chayson.
The
government is also encouraging local banks to lend to local shipping
companies, which in the past had received ‘practically zero’ lending,
said Mr Chayson.
”Indonesian banks would not lend to foreign parties and they will only lend to local players. Some of these banks have been in talks with us recently. Bank Mandiri recently agreed to lend us 500 billion rupiah.”
He
added: “In addition, we have a substantially bigger balance sheet by
far compared to our domestic competitors and have significantly better
access to financing and we can leverage on our strong relationship with
Pertamina. More importantly is our superior access to Indonesian crews
with our strong affiliation with many prominent Indonesian maritime
schools and maritime academies of which we have continued to provide
scholarships for some of their students.”
Asked for a
target number for the additional vessels to be bought, Mr Chayson said:
“It will be substantial but I don’t have a particular number yet."
Berlian, which currently has 91 vessels in its fleet, recognizes
that it alone cannot capture all the opportunities in the new
environment, and so intends to partner third parties, including foreign
players, who will contribute financing for the purchase of the ships,
especially FPSOs (Floating Production, Storage and Offloading) and FSOs.
These
ships would be for use in offshore support where demand is rising
as Indonesia, now a net importer of oil, steps up its oil production,
especially from offshore areas.
That will lead to higher
demand for Indonesian-flagged offshore support vessels, as the cabotage
rule will also apply – from Jan 2011 - to this business segment. Almost all existing FPSOs/FSOs in Indonesia are now of foreign flags.
Berlian
is currently tendering for contracts in this area, said Mr Chayson,
adding that the company intends to buy non-double hull tankers for
conversion into FPSOs.
 Recent stock price of BLT: 11 cents Look out for our second report in the coming days focusing on other key aspects of BLT’s business.
Recent story: BERLIAN LAJU: Different cargo, different fortunes
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