Atlantic Aframaxes find a hard floor as tonnage thins
Aframax earnings in the North Sea and Mediterranean pushed higher again this week as prompt tonnage lists shortened and refinery pull stayed firm into May.
The Atlantic crude market entered May with an unusually thin prompt list. Aframax units in the North Sea were fixed faster than expected through the second half of the week, while Mediterranean owners gained leverage from repeated replacement enquiries. The result was not spectacular by historical standards, but it was firm enough to shift sentiment back toward owner confidence.
The fleet figures are the cleanest place to begin. The global VLCC fleet stands at approximately 905 vessels. Of these, ninety-eight are over twenty years old — a vintage that, in normal markets, would be in active conversation with demolition yards. In the present market, twenty of those ninety-eight are idle in the so-called "shadow fleet" servicing Russian and Iranian crude. The remainder are trading, but at sharply reduced utilisation.
The replacement gap
The orderbook tells the other half of the story. Eighty-six VLCCs are presently on order — a number which, against a 905-vessel fleet, equates to 9.5 per cent. By historic standards this is unremarkable. The Newbuilding desk reports that Korean yards have effectively closed their books for 2028 delivery, which means the headline orderbook number is misleading: most of those eighty-six are 2029 stock. The unremarkable orderbook combined with the ageing trading fleet creates what brokers are now calling, with some understatement, "the replacement gap".
Approximately twenty-eight VLCCs will deliver in 2026. Roughly twenty-five vessels will pass twenty-five years of age in the same period. Net fleet growth at the modern end is therefore close to zero. With trade volumes flat to slightly up, the implication for utilisation — and therefore for spot rates — is direct.
The orderbook isn’t the problem. The age curve is. Senior tanker broker, Athens
Product tankers diverge
The clean side of the market is telling a different story. LR2 earnings on the AG–Japan route are firm — up close to six per cent week-on-week — driven by sustained jet fuel demand and continuing arbitrage out of the Middle East. MR earnings, by contrast, are flat. The transatlantic gasoline trade has not recovered the lift it lost in early March.
The reasonable interpretation is that the strength in clean is real but narrow: long-haul molecules, particularly distillates moving east-to-west and west-to-east on LR1s and LR2s, are pulling rates higher. Short-haul triangulation in the Atlantic basin remains structurally weaker.