Svein Moxnes Harfjeld
Analyst · Jon Chappell from Evercore ISI. Please go ahead. Your line is open
Thank you, Laila. We will here take you through some quarterly highlights. We sold our ownership the DHT Scandinavia built in 2006 for $43.4 million. She delivered in January and we recorded a capital gain of $19.8 million during the quarter. She was debt free and her proceeds will be allocated to general corporate purposes here under investments in vessels and/or share buybacks and/or prepayment of debt. We entered into two time charter contracts. Firstly, the DHT China built 2007 hence one of our oldest ships was fixed to a leading commodity trader for one year at $40,000 per day. The contract commenced in January. Secondly, we fixed the DHT Tiger built 2017 to one of our largest customers on oil major for a year at $52,500 per day. This contract commenced at the end of March. On this slide, we will discuss capital allocation and dividends. As per our capital allocation policy of paying out 100% of ordinary net income as quarterly cash dividends, the dividend for the first quarter of 2025 is declared at $0.15 per share. This is and marks our 61st consecutive quarterly cash dividend. The shares will trade ex-dividend on May 21 and the dividend will be paid on May 28. In the graph to the left, we share our P&L and cash breakeven levels for 2025. As you will see, the difference between the two is estimated at $7,200 per day for the year. This discretionary cash flow will remain in the company and be allocated to general corporate purposes with the intention being to fund installments under our new building program. The graph on the right illustrates the accumulated dividends since updating our capital allocation policy from the third quarter of 2022. The accumulated amount of dividend is $2.51 per share and reflects well during a period in which our share price has appreciated and we made share buybacks totaling $32 million equal to 2.3% of the company, in addition to the quarterly cash dividends. Here we update you on the bookings to-date for the second quarter of 2025. We expect to have 780 time charter days covered for the second quarter at $42,200 per day, an improvement when compared to the prior quarter. This rate assumes profit sharing for the month of April and the base rate only for the months of May and June for the time charter contracts that has profit sharing feature. Given the current spot market, there is potential for additional profit sharing and upside to the time charter earnings for the two vessels once the quarter is done. We assume 1,245 spot days in the quarter of which 72% have been booked at an average rate of $48,700 per day, a meaningful improvement when compared to the first quarter. The current market is strong and we are constructive on the way forward. The spot P&L breakeven for the second quarter is estimated to be $17,500 per day, a number you may use to estimate the net income contribution from our spot fleet for that quarter. We will now discuss updates to our fleet. As earlier announced and subsequently to the first quarter, we entered into a truly long-term time charter and an agreement to sell two older ships. The DHT Appaloosa built 2018 has entered into a seven-year time charter with a global energy company also commonly referred to as an oil major. The contract has a fixed base rate of $41,000 per day plus an index based profit sharing structure calculated on the vessel's specification. The vessel in question is an excellent ship and is expected to provide competitive earnings under the pre-agreed calculator for the profit sharing and the index earnings in excess of $41,000 per day will be shared equally between the customer and DHT. We really like the deal and it offers long-term visibility on base earnings thereby protecting the downside, whilst retaining upside to the market. We agreed to sell the DHT Lotus and DHT Peony for a combined price of $103 million. The vessels were built at Bohai Shipbuilding in 2011 and came into DHT through the BW fleet acquisition in 2017. The vessels were acquired for a combined price of $115.8 million and has served us well during these eight years. The DHT Lotus was delivered to our new owners during April and we expect to record a gain of $17.5 million in the second quarter. The DHT Peony is expected to deliver during July and we project to record a gain of $15.5 million in the third quarter. The proceeds from the sales will be allocated to general corporate purposes again here under investment in vessels and/or share buybacks and/or prepayment of debt. Here is our fleet employment overview. As per usual, we have a mix of spot and term charter contracts in our portfolio. There are currently a total of nine ships on time charter of which three are coming off during this year namely DHT Europe, DHT Lion, and DHT Harrier. The DHT Puma and the DHT Appaloosa in green color have profit sharing features built into the contract since offering a combination of a certain level of earnings visibility without giving away all the upside in the strong markets. We have meaningful exposure to this rising freight market both in the spot market and with potential rerating on new time charter contracts. Further, we will, as you probably know, expand our fleet with four new and very competitive ships in the first half of 2026. These ships have gained a total of close to 800 additional earnings days in 2026 compared to when the contracts were entered into. Here we provide an update on a corporate transaction subsequent to the quarter; we have acquired the remaining outstanding shares in Goodwood Ship Management for a purchase price of $6.1 million. As a result DHT now owns 100% of the company. This company is a very important pillar in DHT's business and strategy, undertaking the technical management of our ships including recruitment, employment and training of our seafarers. The company is now fully integrated into DHT and we will continue to develop and build on its excellent safety and operational track record in support of our long-term strategy. Now an update on our debt financing. We have entered into a $30 million secured reducing revolving facility with Nordea being one of our relationship banks. The new loan will refinance the current facility for the DHT Jaguar with its current outstanding debt of $25.5 million. The new loan is priced at 175 basis points, a bonus offer and is a DHT style financing including a six-year tenure and a 20-year repayment profile. We reiterate our views that the dynamics of our market is increasingly becoming a favorable supply story with a rapidly aging fleet exceeding a benign order book for new ships and a string of sanctions making it increasingly challenging to trade ships in the charter fleet. The graph updates the demographics of the VLCC fleet, apologize for being repetitive, but we think it's important to reinforce the obvious which is at the VLCC fleet is set to shrink at the time when demand for our services is growing. By the end of 2026, we estimate 441 VLCCs to be older than 15 years of age and 199 to be older than 20. Extraordinarily, we estimate 58 to become older than 25 years. All these numbers assume no scrapping, staggering numbers and in support of our markets and business. The order book for new VLCCs is benign with about 11% of capacity on order. There will be five ships delivered for the remainder of 2025, 28 are scheduled for 2026, 48 in 2027, and 19 in 2028. Of the order book, about 20% are being constructed and built in Korea. OPEC has started to bring more of its oil to the markets, contributing to strengthening freight rates evidenced through new highs for the year and higher lows. We believe OPEC's decision to amongst others be supported by the following: One, continued oil demand growth; two, a temporarily moderating growth trajectory of Atlantic based oil production, offering an opportunity for OPEC and Saudi Arabia in particular to regain some market share; low crude oil event inventories in China requiring refilling to support growth and new refining capacity coming on stream; and lastly, a certain sanctioned oil production being at risk with a possible need for replacement. Our markets have for the past two-and-a-half years or so fared better than what most people think. In fact, DHT's average spot market earnings for this period were just shy of $50,000 per day, $49,300 per day to be precise. We think this is a very handsome number. With a favorable supply backdrop and the constructive oil market for freight, we believe it's reasonable to expect rewarding times ahead or in plain English, be bullish. We continue to focus on what we can control and delivering on what we believe is a resilient business approach and strategy. We receive encouragement from our key stakeholders, namely shareholders, customers and lending banks. Irrespective of which constituency you belong to, you should expect us to focus on solid customer relations with safe and reliable services, a competitive cost structure with robust breakeven levels, a solid balance sheet and a clear capital allocation policy to create long-term shareholder value. We appreciate the encouragement. We will stick to our knitting, work hard and operate with leading governance standards and a high level of integrity. And with that, we open up for Q&A. Over to you, operator.