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Quick profits elude PE investors in capital-intensive shipping industry

Buyoutinvestors in the shipping sector struggle with timely and profitable exit amid overcapacity and falling freight rates

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Investors eyeing 20 per cent returns and a swift exit misunderstood the volatile and capital-intensive industry, say analysts.Photo: Reuters
Jing Yang

Private equity investors who pride themselves on a knack for corporate turnarounds followed by profitable exits have met their match in the shipping industry.

Shipping has been a target for bottom fishing since freight rates and asset prices fell to 25-year lows after the 2008 collapse of Lehman Brothers.

In the wake of the financial crisis, the fragmented, cyclical industry welcomed the professional investors who bet on distressed debt or seized on record-low costs to build ships.

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Private equity was hailed as an alternative source of funding that filled the gap left by the exodus of European banks from the sector. The plunge in asset prices led to impaired portfolios and some banks stopped further lending altogether to an industry whose fortunes soared during the economic boom but then fell harder than most.

As of January, private equity financed 22 per cent, or US$278 billion, of global vessel order books, according to Tufton Oceanic, a maritime fund management firm.

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Such investments peaked last year and continued to slide this year as the shipping market, plagued by overcapacity, failed to recover.

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