%2520HERO%2520week%252029.png&w=3840&q=75)
Freight (Lite) 17/07/2026
Overview
Dry bulk conditions became increasingly divided by vessel size and region this week. Handysize weakened across most Atlantic loading areas, Supramax and Ultramax remained the strongest geared segment despite early signs of easing in the US Gulf, and Panamax stayed broadly steady with East Coast South America continuing to outperform the wider Atlantic.
Higher bunker prices and maritime-security risks increased voyage costs, but local cargo volumes and vessel availability remained the main drivers of freight direction.
Handysize
The Handysize market softened, with the Timecharter Average easing to around USD 16,300/day.
East Coast South America, the US Gulf and the Continent all faced limited cargo demand and increasing vessel availability, giving charterers greater negotiating leverage. North Europe also remained under pressure as available tonnage exceeded fresh grain and shortsea enquiry.
The Mediterranean and Black Sea were firmer because prompt vessels remained scarce. However, continued attacks on vessels and grain infrastructure have increased execution, insurance and cancellation risks.
Pacific conditions held up better than the Atlantic but also eased slightly.
Supramax
Supramax and Ultramax remained the strongest grain-relevant segment, with the Ultramax Timecharter Average reaching around USD 21,900/day.
East Coast South America stayed firm as a tight end-July vessel list supported grain fronthauls. The US Gulf also remained at elevated levels, although a growing tonnage list and slower enquiry produced the first signs that the market may be approaching a short-term peak.
Black Sea levels remained supported by limited prompt supply, while the Continent stayed firm without showing a meaningful tightening in vessel availability.
The Pacific improved, particularly around North and South China, giving the segment support across both major basins.
Panamax
Panamax remained broadly steady, with the Timecharter Average holding near USD 20,300/day.
East Coast South America continued to command the strongest Atlantic grain premium, supported by Brazilian soybean and corn exports. The Pacific also firmed on North Pacific and Australian round voyages.
Elsewhere in the Atlantic, momentum weakened. Continent and North Atlantic route assessments declined, while US Gulf grain demand provided some support without matching the strength of East Coast South America.
Black Sea Panamax conditions remained difficult to assess because limited fresh pricing and vessel-supply information were available.
Regional Pulse
Atlantic Basin
- Handysize weakened as cargo demand failed to absorb available tonnage.
- Supramax remained firm, although the US Gulf began to ease from recent highs.
- Panamax stayed strongest in East Coast South America while the wider Atlantic lost momentum.
Pacific Basin
- Handysize remained comparatively stable but lacked a clear upward driver.
- Supramax improved around North and South China.
- Panamax firmed on North Pacific and Australian demand.
Black Sea
Prompt geared tonnage remained limited, but attacks on vessels and export infrastructure substantially increased the risk of delay, cancellation and force majeure.
Handysize-Specific Notes
- East Coast South America offers more negotiating room as potential ballasters increase.
- Thin US Gulf grain demand and a longer vessel list favour charterers.
- Continent and Baltic cargo formation remains insufficient to tighten the market.
- Exact prompt Black Sea positions should be secured early because executable tonnage remains scarce.
Market Drivers
Fuel and Security
Higher bunker prices, war-risk premiums and restricted Gulf transit conditions have raised voyage costs and reduced the effective availability of vessels on longer routes.
Grain Flows
Brazilian soybean and corn exports continue to support East Coast South America, while current US Gulf grain activity remains comparatively light.
Black Sea Disruption
Damage to vessels and export terminals has reduced the reliability of Black Sea grain movements despite continued underlying wheat demand.
Forward Market
Forward pricing suggests firm Supramax sentiment, broadly stable Panamax earnings and limited additional near-term downside in Handysize before a weaker seasonal period.
Outlook
Handysize buyers should remain patient in East Coast South America, the US Gulf and the Continent, while securing exact prompt Black Sea requirements early.
Supramax buyers should prioritise prompt East Coast South America and executable Black Sea cargoes, while covering only essential US Gulf requirements as the vessel list begins to grow.
Panamax buyers should secure East Coast South America grain exposure where timing is fixed, but remain selective in the wider Atlantic and Pacific as regional conditions continue to diverge.
Higher fuel and security costs should limit the depth of any freight correction, although weak cargo demand can still push individual markets lower.
Other weekly recaps



