Swedish tanker shipping company Concordia Maritime has inked a sale and leaseback agreement for the 158,000dwt Suezmax tanker Stena Supreme.
Under the deal with a Japanese ship owning company, the vessel will be chartered back on a bareboat basis for a period of 12 years, with annual purchase options from year three onwards. The company said that the senior debt funding will be provided by one of Japan's 'mega banks'.
Concordia Maritime said that the transaction, which is scheduled for late November, gives rise to an accounting profit of around US$1.8m and a positive liquidity effect of US$22m.
"The leaseback arrangement means that we can continue employing Stena Supreme in the successful Stena Sonangol Suezmax pool for many years to come," said Kim Ullman, CEO of Concordia Maritime.
Less than a month ago, the company entered into a sale and leaseback agreement for the IMOIIMAX tanker Stena Image with a Japanese financial institution.
Ullman added that both of these transactions are a way of preparing the company "for a subdued market situation and good business opportunities that may arise. We are not sitting still, but are actively working on the fleet's structure and disposition."
With the transactions, the company said it is taking a further step into the Japanese financing market, and added it is 'continuously evaluating the possibility of similar arrangements.'
Concordia Maritime Inks Sale-Leaseback for Stena Supreme
2016-10-31
3055人
Source:World Maritime News
Most ViewsHOT
- Xiamen Feihongshun upsizes boxship fleet with newbuild pair in China
- Eastern Pacific adds fresh suezmax pair in China push
- Peter Döhle extends boxship run with Chengxi contract
- COSCO targets dozen LNG dual-fuel boxships in $2bn move
- Zhonggu Logistics backs Wuhan Qingshan restart with 10-ship order
- Erasmus taps Huangpu Wenchong for boxship newbuilds
- Ciner adds six ultramaxes in fresh $204m China order
- Ningbo Ocean Shipping lines up fresh feeder boxship order
- China Merchants Energy stacks orderbook with 10-ship VLCC series
- Schoeller books more MPP tonnage in China
