Anastasios Margaronis
Analyst
Thank you, Maria, and welcome to the participants of this quarterly earnings call of Diana Shipping Inc. Looking briefly at the markets, it is troublesome to note that as if the market did not have enough factors creating volatility, such as geopolitical, economic uncertainty and supply issues, we now have the addition of tariffs and trade restrictions introduced by President Donald Trump between the U.S. and practically all its trading partners. The effect on spot and time charter rates have been generally negative so far. Sentiments have certainly taken a downturn as a result of such huge uncertainty about the future. As of May 27, the 12-month time charter rates for Capes stood at about $19,000 per day for a scrubber-fitted ship after reaching a high of $35,000 a day March 2024. Kamsarmax rate stood at $10,750 a day in May with a high of $21,000 per day in March of last year. Similarly, Ultramax time charter rates have dropped from $19,000 a day in February of last year to 11,400 per day only on May 27. Some recent good news on the tariff front is the trade deal reached between the U.S. and the U.K., which even though leaves plenty of details to be agreed provides for lower tariffs for steel and 10% tariffs for cars. More recently, it appears that China and the U.S. are making progress on leaving behind them, the ridiculously high tariffs announced a few weeks ago and are settling for tariffs of 51% on average for Chinese imports to the U.S. and 10% baseline Chinese tariffs on U.S. exports with an effective average of 32.6%. Moving to the next slide on our macroeconomic development now. In view of recent tariff announcements and the risk of a trade war developing, the IMF has streamed the 2025 growth rate estimates for China, India, the U.S. and the euro area by between 0.2% and 0.5%. So based on these predictions, China is expected to grow by 4% this year and at the same rate in 2026. India is expected to show a GDP growth of 6.2% this year and 6.3% in 2026. In the U.S., the economy is expected to grow by 1.8% this year and by 1.7% in 2026. Most importantly, though, World GDP growth is expected to be 2.8% this year and just 3% in 2026. Nevertheless, Chinese GDP grew by 5.4% during the first quarter of 2025, driven by robust consumer demand and increased industrial production. Escalating trade tensions with the U.S. and headwinds in the property market create huge challenges going forward. Slight encouragement comes from the fact that the revised measures announced in mid-April by the USTR reduced in scope the number of vessels and port calls that will be impacted versus the previous proposals. We need not go into greater detail in the short presentation, but we'll just mention that the effect on the Diana fleet and its charters of such measures in their current form will be relatively minor. Going for a brief now commodities update. According to Commodore Research, steel output at large and medium-sized steel mills in China is up 5% so far this year. while stockpiles of flat and construction steel have been going down over the last two months. Indian steel production has also risen this year by about 9% on a year-on-year basis. However, there is considerable overall weakness on steel output outside of China and India, which is bound to create a headwind for the dry bulk area market. Global iron ore trade is expected to fall by 1% this year with Chinese demand dropping, while field production trends remain soft in most key economies outside China and India. World seaborne volumes are expected to drop to 1.57 billion tons. And for 2026, shipments are expected to be flat compared to this year. Global seaborne coking coal trade is expected by Clarkson to decline by 1% this year as macroeconomic headwinds put pressure on demand for steel in key economies. Chinese imports are expected to go down by 4% this year, mainly due to softer Chinese demand, thermal coal shipments are expected by Clarksons to drop by 4% this year to just over 1 billion tons and dropped by a further 2% in 2026. Chinese imports are expected to drop by 6% this year compared to 2024. Again, due to softer Chinese demand, seaborne grain trade is expected to drop by 2% in the 2024, '25 season. Strong stockpiling and high domestic output are cited as the main causes for this trend. In the coming trade years, starting next month, the trend is expected to reverse course. The USDA anticipates growth of between 4% and 6% for global corn, soybeans and wheat exports. Growth in soybean exports will be led by Brazil, where exports of this commodity alone are expected to reach 12 million tons. According to Braemar, the greatest significance for shipping of the soybean projections would be first the ever-greater reliance from Brazil's port and supply chain infrastructure. Plus, secondly, additional long fall Panamax trade from Brazil to China, Taiwan and Vietnam. Minor bulk trades are expected to remain stable this year and increased by 2% in 2026, reaching nearly 2.3 billion tons. Metals such as bauxite as well as minerals such as cement, pet coke and aggregates are anticipated to play a key role in achieving growth for shipments in this sector going forward. Moving now to our slide on fleet development. Looking at the order book, we stood at the end of March this year at the $107.2 million deadweight, representing 10.3% of the trading fleet. On the Handymax side, there were $28.6 million that weight on order, equivalent to 11.5% of the fleet. On Panamax, Kamsarmaxes, the $35.9 million deadweight on order represents 13.3% of the fleet, and on Capes, the $32.1 million deadweight on the order book are equivalent to just 8% of the trading fleet of Capes. Deliveries this year are projected by Clarksons traction to reach 38 million deadweights followed by an increase to $42 million deadweight in 2026. So far this year, the bulk carrier fleet has increased by 1.1% in deadweight terms with 135 ships delivered with an aggregate of 9.3 million deadweight. Dry bulk contracting, as our CEO mentioned earlier, was very subdued during the first quarter of this year with just 14 vessels of a combined 1.4 million deadweight reported orders down 88% year-on-year on an annualized basis. As for demolitions, Clarksons expect these to reach 5.8 million deadweight this year and about $8.6 million in 2026. These figures will obviously depend on the state of the freight market for the rest of this year and sentiment based on anticipated future developments and earnings. A quick look at asset values and how they have developed. According to Clarksons, asset values in bulk shipping remained surprisingly robust compared to the end of 2024 levels in the face of relative weakness seen in current and projected earnings. Newbuilding Cape resales are trading at around $76 million, about the same as the end of last year, while the price of a 10-year-old Cape has gone up from $43 million at the end of last year to around $45 million this month. Kamsarmax resale prices have come down slightly to 38.5 million since the end of last year, while 10-year-old vessel values have remained steady at around $25 million. Prices for Ultramaxes have remained steady according to Clarksons on both the retail and 10-year-old vessel price levels. Resales are at around 37 million and 10-year-old vessels are trading at around $23.5 million. On a 12-month basis, however, prices have eased off by about 20% on average from the firm levels seen around the middle of last year on the back of firm earnings and expectations. Let's look at the market outlook now. The overall market outlook according to Clarksons for 2025 is for a softer year than 2024, with the fleet expected to grow by a reasonably modest 3% year-on-year, but demand on track to fall this year due to several headwinds. However, given slower speed, greater off-hire time due to special surveys and dry docking as well as pockets of port congestion could not limit the downside. Red fee rerouting is expected to continue in 2025 and with arrivals in the Gulf of Aden still 70% below 2023 levels. On the demand side, seaborne dry bulk trade according to Clarksons is expected to drop by 1% this year with a more modest decline of 0.4% projected in ton miles, supported by firm growth in long-haul bauxite shipments from Guinea, reduced market share for short-haul Indian iron ore shipments to China, and expectations for growth in South American grain exports promoted by fresh Chinese capes on U.S. grain, assuming, of course, these materialize. Commodore Research expressed some concern, which we share as regards Chinese steam coal imports going forward. For as long as coal, derived electricity remains in contraction, which was 7% year-to-date, and domestic coal production continues to surge, it is obvious that Chinese coal imports will go down. This is not good news for the dry bulk carrier market, if it continues for several quarters. Braemer agreed with this forecast and state that China's coal import requirements will do much to determine vessel demand across the Panamax and Supramax, Ultramax sectors. According to Commodore research, there is no other trade that can increase sufficiently to compensate a year-on-year contraction in global coal trade imports. Looking out to 2026, Clarksons predict another year of softer earnings for bulk carriers with fleet projected to grow by 3% year-on-year and trade growth being determined by prevailing macroeconomic conditions at the time, which are not sufficiently positive to justify much optimism. However, we need to wait for more developments on the macroeconomic front, which will affect demand next year. Turning to the last slide of this presentation. Analysts quoted in this short presentation mentioned several factors which they expect will influence the short- and medium-term future of the dry bulk carrier market. We summarize the most important point. On the positive side, we see strong Brazilian soybean as well as other grain crop season. The commencement later this year of iron ore shipments from Simandou in Guinea. Revised measures announced in mid-April by the USTR, reducing the number of vessels and port calls that will be impacted by them. Red rerouting expected to continue for the rest of the year. Gradual resolution of conflicts affecting Ukraine and Israel, leading to reconstruction. And finally, lifting of sanctions against Syria, leading to the reconstruction of Syria itself. On the negative side, worldwide lower steel production outside India and China. Protectionist measures with high tariffs leading to trade wars. Bulk carrier fleet growth outpacing demand growth for 2025, '26, except for the Cape sector. Large increases of hydropower output in India and in China. Anticipated long-term reduction in coal imports by China. And finally, weaker world GDP growth, if tariffs don't settle soon at reasonable levels. On this note, I will pass the call to our CEO, Semiramis Paliou to present the most important financial highlights on the first quarter of this year as well as some takeaway points from this earnings call. Thank you for your attention.