MSC has tapped one
of its new favourite yards, Hengli Heavy Industry, formerly known as STX
Dalian, for ten 24,000 teumegamaxes in a deal estimated to cost somewhere in
the region of $2.35bn, small change for a line that is estimated to have been
earning around $1.8bn a month during the third quarter this year, based on
cumulative Q3 liner results.
MSC signed a strategic cooperation
framework agreement with Hengli Heavy earlier in the year under which the
Swiss-headquartered line would use the yard for ship orders, engines, repair
and conversion work. In September, MSC ordered 10 LNG dual-fuel 21,000 teu
ships at the northern Chinese yard.
This latest series of 24,000 teu ships
will deliver from 2028 onwards and once confirmed would take MSC’s orderbook to
2.13m teu, larger than the existing fleet of Ocean Network Express (ONE), the
world’s sixth largest liner.MSC has been
gearing up for years to go it largely alone on the main east-west tradelanes,
something that will happen from February 1 next year, when its 10-year
partnership with Maersk in the 2M alliance comes to an end.
It is not just newbuilds where the Soren
Toft-led line has been highly active. MSC has now surpassed 400 secondhand ship
purchases since it embarked on a historical buying spree in August 2020. MSC now commands a global liner market
share in excess of 20%, becoming the first liner in the world to break multiple
size records such as surpassing 5m teu, then swiftly afterward 6m teu.
Alphaliner listed this week another three
secondhand ships bought by the Gianluigi Aponte-founded liner.