Weekly Freight Recap: 18/12/25
Overview
The dry bulk market slid further into a year-end “coverage-first” mindset. Overall fixing volume remained thin, and most negotiations stayed charterer-led as owners showed less resistance to secure employment ahead of the holidays. Forward visibility is patchy, so positioning and prompt tonnage availability continue to matter more than headline sentiment.
Handysize
Handysize trading was generally soft, with limited fresh enquiry and enough prompt availability to keep pressure on levels. The Atlantic saw some tradable pockets, but the tone was still defensive as owners largely prioritised getting ships fixed rather than holding out. In Asia, activity remained muted and list length and positioning was a key driver: where lists built, charterers were comfortable waiting.
What stood out this week was how “holiday behaviour” is now shaping the market: even when demand appears, it tends to be quickly absorbed and doesn’t snowball into sustained tightening, because both sides are trying to manage end-of-year exposure rather than chase momentum.
Supramax
Supramax remained under pressure across basins, with subdued enquiry and ample tonnage keeping the market charterer-driven. The Atlantic was active at times but still softer in direction, with a noticeable willingness from owners to adjust ideas to conclude business. The Pacific stayed seasonally weak, and the general expectation in the market is for softness to persist into the holiday window unless a meaningful cargo wave appears.
Period appetite also looked reduced compared with earlier weeks, reinforcing the “wait-and-see” feel and limiting the ability for spot sentiment to turn quickly.
Panamax
Panamax continued to trade on the back foot. The core issue remains the same: thin fixing activity gives charterers time, and owners, especially those trying to avoid idle days over the holiday period, are gradually conceding. The Atlantic has shown intermittent support, but not enough to shift control away from charterers, while the Pacific remains seasonally soft with comfortable prompt supply.
That said, the market is starting to feel “closer to a base” rather than set up for a dramatic further correction, mainly because sentiment is already cautious and much of the near-term positioning has been adjusted.
Regional Pulse
Atlantic Basin
Pacific Basin
Indian Ocean
Cost, Policy, and Fleet Signals Bunkers:
Fuel costs in Singapore showed a softer bias through the week, offering marginal voyage-cost relief, but not enough to change the freight narrative in a demand-light holiday market.
Policy watch (demand sensitivity):
Asset / fleet tone:
Secondhand activity remains steady, with continued interest in geared tonnage, reflecting the market’s preference for operational flexibility when spot visibility is limited.
Outlook
Expect the market to remain thin and position-driven into late December, with charterers retaining leverage unless regional tonnage lists tighten sharply. In Handysize and Supramax, recovery signals are more likely to appear first as “list tightening” rather than as a broad-based demand surge. In Panamax, stabilisation is plausible if Pacific oversupply starts clearing, but a durable move higher probably needs a clearer cargo catalyst rather than year-end positioning alone.
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