Ian Webber
Analyst · B. Riley
Thank you, George. On slide 5, we have an overview of our fleet. We have a total of 43 containerships with total capacity of almost 0.25 million TEU. 25 of these ships are Post-Panamax wide-beam containerships, which collectively represent over three quarters of our fleet capacity. Wide-beam by the way allows ships to carry more cargo, more efficiently by giving lower slot costs and lower emissions per slot. And nine of these ships at an ECO dimension, they are designed to be inherently more fuel-efficient and are the jewels of our fleet. On slide 6, we show the role that our ships the ships of our size play flexible assets that form the backbone of global trade. Our midsize and smaller ships all of which with one exception of below 10,000 TEU set at a sweet spot between high-operational flexibility and low costs and emissions per cargo slot. The map at top left illustrates the first of these points well. Midsize and smaller ships trade everywhere. In contrast to the big ships above 10,000 TEU right the way up to 23,000 TEU, which tend to be limited to the East West arterial trades as you can see from the map at bottom left. Over 70% of global containerized trade volumes are accounted for by the non-mainlane trades, intermediate and regional trades, which are predominantly served by midsize and smaller ships such as ours. Much of our fleet also has best-in-class reefer capacity positioning us well to meet our customers' demands for transporting ever more refrigerated cargoes, which is premium rated and shows growth at higher rates than non-reefer or dry cargo as has been the case for some time. On slide 7, you can see our charter contract cover the engine room of our business. The detail is broken out on our website and we've provided information on each of our recent new charters and extensions in our earnings press release issued this morning, but I will make a few bigger picture points here. The dark blue bars show new charters, which have been agreed during the course of 2020. And as you can see, we've been busy in securing charter coverage, securing multiple years of cover at attractive rates. The chart shows that charters agreed in 2Q 2020 hit a low and we're generally very short in duration as we sought to secure employment for our vessels to ride out the trough period, but expecting the next renewal to be in a better market. This strategy has played out very well for us with vessels coming back into the charter market under greatly improved circumstances. For example, feeders fixed in the second quarter in the mid-60s [indiscernible] per day was subsequently fixed in Q3 in the low to mid-9s an increase of over 40%. And today rates for such ships and we have a few coming open are over $12,000 per day double that were in the second quarter. For larger ships, the improvement has been even more dramatic. Tom will come back to this in a moment. But 8,500 TEU ships that we're fixing in the markets at rates of around $12,000 per day in the second quarter have climbed into the 20s in the third quarter and are now being fixed at rates as high as $30,000 per day. You will see that we've also taken advantage of this market to lock in attractive charters for three of our larger ships. The latest of these are Anthea Y one of our ECO 9,000 TEU ships is for 33 months to 35 months. For commercial reasons, we can't yet disclose either the charterer or the exact day rate, but you can back into a good approximation of the rate if we tell you that the implied adjusted EBITDA that we expect over the medium charter term is close to $30 million; 3-0 million dollars. As George mentioned, this charter portfolio announced more than $670 million of contracted revenue over an average of 2.3 years, giving us significant forward visibility. Put it another way, we've already locked in pretty much all of our adjusted EBITDA for this year 2020 and also have strong downside cover in -- for 2021 combined with some potential upside. As we are entering the winter period, when the containership charter market normally sees a seasonal downturn, we continue to see very positive market conditions. And whilst there remain important questions about the further trajectory and the implications of COVID-19, Global Ship Lease has a strong base to weather any challenges whilst capitalizing on the opportunities ahead of us. With that, I'll ask Tom to walk us through the market.