Commercial Vessel Types and Their Financing Profile
The commercial shipping world is not one category — dry bulk, tanker, container, RoRo, LNG. Each has a different operating profile, revenue structure, and risk allocation. Financing takes a separate approach for each. This guide summarises the main commercial vessel types and their financing profiles.
What this guide covers
- Main commercial vessel types (dry bulk, tanker, container, RoRo, LNG)
- Operating character of each
- Charter models and revenue structure
- Typical financing LTV + tenor ranges
- Market cycles
Note: This page is educational. We do not quote specific prices, revenues, or LTV; every segment + size + market differs.
Dry bulk
Carries: iron ore, coal, grain, cement, alumina
Sub-categories (by size)
- Capesize — 100,000+ dwt, iron ore / coal
- Panamax — 60,000–80,000 dwt, multi-purpose
- Supramax / Handysize — 25,000–60,000 dwt, smaller ports
Operating character
- Spot market heavy
- High sensitivity to China / India demand
- Seasonality (grain season, coal demand)
- Market cycle 5–10 years
Financing profile
- LTV typically 50–65%
- Tenor 7–12 years
- Charter contract is an advantage
- Spot-only exposure → conservative terms
Tanker
Carries: crude oil, product oil, chemicals, LPG
Sub-categories
- VLCC / ULCC — 200,000+ dwt, crude oil
- Suezmax — 120,000–200,000 dwt
- Aframax — 80,000–120,000 dwt
- Product tanker — 40,000–60,000 dwt, refinery products
- Chemical tanker — 10,000–50,000 dwt, specialised cargo
Operating character
- Charter contracts common
- High sensitivity to IMO environmental regulation
- Volatile market cycle
- Geographic concentration (Middle East, US Gulf)
Financing profile
- LTV 50–65%
- Tenor 8–12 years
- Time charter contract → bank comfortable
- Refinancing opportunity at market peaks
Container
Carries: standardised containers (measured in TEU)
Sub-categories
- Ultra Large Container Vessel (ULCV) — 14,000+ TEU
- New Panamax — 10,000–14,000 TEU
- Post Panamax — 5,000–10,000 TEU
- Feeder — 1,000–5,000 TEU, short routes
Operating character
- Large operators (Maersk, MSC, CMA CGM)
- Long-tenor time charter standard
- Liner services (scheduled sailings)
- Heavily consolidated market
Financing profile
- LTV 60–75% (higher due to charter contract)
- Tenor 10–15 years
- Charter contract is the financing backbone
- Charterer credit standing is critical
RoRo (Roll-on / Roll-off)
Carries: road vehicles, trailers, MAFI
Sub-categories
- Pure Car Carrier (PCC) — cars only
- Pure Truck Carrier — trucks
- RoRo passenger — passenger + vehicle
Operating character
- Strong tie to the automotive sector
- Specific manufacturer routes (Europe–US, Japan–EU)
- Market cycle parallel to automotive cycle
- A niche segment
Financing profile
- LTV 50–65%
- Tenor 8–12 years
- Long-tenor operator contract is an advantage
- Niche market → limited financier choice
LNG / LPG
Carries: liquefied natural gas / petroleum gas
Operating character
- Long-tenor (10–25 years) charter contracts standard
- Specific routes (Qatar–Asia, US–Europe)
- High technical complexity
- Heavy environmental regulation
Financing profile
- LTV 70–80% (due to long-tenor charter)
- Tenor 15–20 years
- Project finance structure common
- Multi-bank syndication
Market cycles
The commercial shipping market is cyclical:
- Peak periods: high charter rates, high vessel prices
- Trough periods: low charter rates, low vessel prices
The professional shipowner strategy: buy at the trough, sell at the peak. On the financing side: financing is hard at the trough, easy at the peak.
Typical cycle length: 5–10 years. Prediction is hard, but trend clues exist (investment wave, IMO regulation, global trade).
Financing LTV + tenor summary
A general overview (per type):
| Type | LTV | Tenor | Charter advantage | |---|---|---|---| | Dry bulk | 50–65% | 7–12 yr | Time charter +5–10% LTV | | Tanker | 50–65% | 8–12 yr | Time charter +5–10% LTV | | Container | 60–75% | 10–15 yr | Liner contract critical | | RoRo | 50–65% | 8–12 yr | Long contract advantage | | LNG/LPG | 70–80% | 15–20 yr | Project finance |
FAQ
Which vessel type is most financing-friendly?
LNG / container — long-tenor charter contract structures make financing easier. Spot-dependent dry bulk is the hardest.
Does spot market hurt financing?
It doesn't kill it but tightens conditions: high owner equity (40%+), shorter tenor, conservative LTV. With 2–3 years of spot market track record, things improve.
Does financing make sense at market trough?
Yes — vessels are cheap; if financing is available, value emerges at the peak. But financing is hardest at the trough because banks are conservative. Owner equity strength is critical.
Do IMO regulations affect financing?
Directly. Older vessels falling under IMO 2030/2050 targets are in the scrappable category. New vessels with green tech command a premium. Financiers watch vessel age + IMO compliance.
Which segments are Turkish owners active in?
Historically dry bulk is the Turkish strength (various Turkish holdings). There is also a Turkish presence in tanker and container segments. Owners with access to international financing reach the larger segments.
Related
Talk to us about your project: let us evaluate the financing strategy + market timing for your commercial vessel type. Reach out via the contact form.
