“Let us do what we do best. The future is larger companies with highly liquid stocks that give [investors] access to a tanker play without the risks of ownership and good transparency. Don’t invest in ships!”
Euronav’s Paddy Rodgers advises that investing in new tankers is only for Groundhog Day weathermen.
(Mister Rodgers’ neighbourhood)
“Certain banks are certainly not able to do it because it is a life-and-death situation. What they are obviously after is minimising the haircut at all cost.”
Philip Clausius of Transport Capital warns it is not just shipowners who are finding times tough, some banks are also near the edge.
(Flaschen shows owners how to play Chapter 11 game)
“We want to get a new good man to fill out the chair after Carsten....We have to find someone knowledgeable about shipping with a strategic mind.”
Norden chairman Mogens Hugo is not looking for someone to fill Carsten Mortensen boots but his chair. Which is easier?
(Danish rumour mill spinning as Mortensen moves to BW)
Doctor Einar Chr Lange prescribes a dose of shipowning as a remedy against advancing years as he turns 71.
(Lange mulls return to direct shipowning)
“Accumulated losses are rapidly approaching £3m. This situation cannot continue. Costs need to be covered, or the venture should be shut down.”
Former Baltic Exchange chairman Peter Kerr-Dineen warns that the Baltex futures trading platform is based on a flawed business plan and needs to be axed unless it can be dragged out of the red.
(Baltex close to LCH.Clearnet lifeline deal but doubts linger)
“I had a dream, and still have a dream, that we provide and maintain an ability to provide 99.9% availability of safety services.”
Words from Inmarsat’s Peter Blackhurst but not delivered from the steps of the Lincoln Memorial. Let's hope that one in a thousand missed call is not from a sinking ship.
(Inmarsat seeks IMO nod for online safety service)
“One of the hijacked tankers was released quickly possibly because the pirates realised it had the wrong type of cargo.”
Is the International Maritime Bureau suggesting that picking a cargo that the pirates don’t want is a good way of avoiding prolonged seizure?
“We are believers in diversification and have been doing that since the beginning but we will grow gradually and with a purpose.”
The Swedish Club’s Lars Rhodin is not going to be jumped into a hasty response to the ambitions of others.
“They want to use my 40 years of making mistakes to try to avoid the same experience.”
Is Jonathan Jones suggesting that getting it wrong is better than getting it right as a mentoring qualification?