Weekly Freight Recap: 26/02/2026
Overview
Headline indices are sending mixed signals. The composite dry index has softened slightly compared with last week as Capesize corrects, but the picture in our space is clearly firmer: Panamax, Supramax and Handysize averages have all moved higher through late February, with the sharpest daily gains on the geared indices in the last couple of sessions.
Against that backdrop, the Atlantic is splitting by size and basin. ECSA and US Gulf geared tonnage is tightening, particularly on Handysize and select Supramax routes, while Atlantic Panamax is under pressure where North Coast South America and US Gulf grain enquiry is still thin. In contrast, the Pacific is doing more of the heavy lifting for Panamax and is now providing a solid floor for Supramax and, increasingly, for Handysize after the Lunar New Year lull.
For agri flows, this is a constructive but very positional market: strong South Atlantic grains are pulling freight up from a tight base, while Europe, the Black Sea and parts of the US Gulf remain much more price sensitive.
Handysize
Handysize has quietly become one of the relative winners over the past week. The Baltic Handy index and the associated time charter average have pushed higher again, with the biggest daily improvements on the Americas and intra Far East routes.
Supramax and Ultramax
Supramax has flipped from laggard to leader over the last few days. The Baltic Supramax index and the composite time charter basket have jumped noticeably, with particular strength on US Gulf to Atlantic, US Gulf to Far East and South China to India routes.
Panamax and Kamsarmax
Panamax remains a two-speed market.
For agri flows, that means ECSA and Pacific load programmes are increasingly the drivers of Panamax earnings, while US Gulf and North Atlantic grains are still playing catch up.
Regional Pulse for Agri Flows
ECSA South America is now centre stage for grains. Brazilian soybeans are moving into their main export window and Argentine corn prospects remain favourable, pointing to a solid multi month run of long-haul cargoes into Europe, North Africa and Asia. That is already visible in firmer sentiment on Panamax ECSA fronthaul and in the aggressive Handy and Supramax ideas from Recalada and North Brazil, where owners know they can triangulate into a strong US Gulf or West Coast South America position afterwards.
Costs, Policy and Fleet Signals
Bunker prices in Singapore are drifting slightly lower from recent peaks but remain high in absolute terms, limiting the room for owners to discount long haul freight without eroding returns.
Asset markets remain firm. Allied value benchmarks show five year old Kamsarmax, Ultramax and Handy units all priced well above their five year averages, with recent secondhand deals for modern Japanese geared tonnage clearing at healthy premia.
Period rates for our focus sizes have moved up in parallel with spot, especially for Supramax and Handysize, which is consistent with the firmer Americas outlook and the tightening feel into Q2.
On the policy side, Russian wheat’s loss of some price edge to EU origin and continued heavy tendering by North African buyers keep trade flows dynamic between Black Sea, EU and South America. The broader geopolitical backdrop remains noisy, but nothing in the last week has fundamentally altered the grain freight landscape.
Outlook
Into March, the freight story for grains looks broadly supportive but uneven by region and size:
For grain merchants and regional originators, this argues for continuing to buy freight opportunistically: lean into Continent and Med softness where stems are flexible, but do not expect cheap cover out of ECSA or on US Gulf Handies in the near term. For asset light operators, the clearest near-term upside still lies in disciplined exposure to Panamax on ECSA and Pacific grains, paired with selective geared cover in the Americas where the size premium remains in their favour.
Other weekly recaps



