🌍 JONES ACT & GLOBAL MARKET
With bulk carriers trading 39% above decade averages and MR tanker yields barely outpacing savings accounts, the market is signaling caution – while Jones Act operators quietly maintain structural advantage.
The shipping industry has never lacked for complexity – but it has often lacked for honest voices willing to call the market as they see it. At Horizon Offshore Services, we believe that navigating capital deployment in maritime assets demands the same discipline we apply to every offshore project: rigorous analysis, situational awareness, and the courage to say not yet when the data demands it.
Today’s global shipping market is sending a clear, uncomfortable signal. Asset prices are elevated, compressed yields are offering little premium over risk-free alternatives, and the gravitational pull of mean reversion is waiting patiently in the background. This is not a pessimistic view – it is a strategic one
The Yield Picture: Thin Margins In A High-Price Environment
Let us start with the numbers that matter most to any capital allocator:
The numbers speak plainly. A Supramax bulk carrier, after you account for operating expenses and depreciation against today’s time-charter rates, yields approximately 3.2% annually. An MR product tanker fares better at 6.4% – but when a federally insured savings account offers 4% with zero operational liability, zero crew risk, and zero dry-docking exposure, the risk-adjusted calculus for physical asset ownership becomes difficult to justify on yield grounds alone.
👉 When a savings account is your primary competition, the yield argument for owning the ship has already lost the debate.
The MR tanker position is more defensible – 6.4% clears the risk-free rate by a meaningful 240 basis points – but it remains structurally thin relative to the operating and liquidity risk profile of owning and operating a physical vessel. For institutional or private capital seeking yield, the bar is no longer simply “beat cash.” It is: beat cash by enough to justify everything else that comes with the vessel.
🚢 The Asset Play: Above-average prices, below-average opportunity
If the yield case is uncompelling, what about an asset appreciation thesis? Here the data is equally sobering.
- Eliminates foreign competition on domestic U.S. waterborne trade lanes.
- Insulates fleet operators from global overcapacity cycles.
- Supports premium vessel valuations and time-charter rates on protected routes.
- Structurally higher operating costs are offset by pricing power unavailable in open markets.
- Critical strategic asset for U.S. defense logistics and national security sealift.
While global shipping operators navigate the full weight of cyclical volatility described above, Jones Act carriers operate within a fundamentally different economic ecosystem. The foreign competition that drives rate compression in global bulk or tanker markets simply cannot access U.S. coastal and inland waterway trade. Puerto Rico, Hawaii, Alaska, Guam – these are captive, protected markets where supply is constrained by statute, not just by economics.
This matters enormously in the current environment. When global asset prices are elevated and yield spreads are thin, Jones Act assets – while priced at their own premium – retain pricing power that their international counterparts cannot claim. A Jones Act MR tanker or chemical carrier operating between Gulf Coast refineries and East Coast distribution terminals does not compete with foreign-flagged vessels. It cannot, by law.
For Horizon Offshore Services, this structural reality underpins our operating philosophy and our conviction in the long-term value of domestic maritime investment – even in periods where the broader global market warrants caution.
✅ The Four Disciplines of Smart Shipping Capital
At Horizon Offshore Services VA Group, we have long operated by a set of capital discipline principles that align closely with the best practices we observe among the most successful shipping investors across cycles. They are deceptively simple. Their execution is anything but.
1. Maintain liquidity reserves.
– Cash is not idle capital in shipping – it is strategic optionality. The ability to move decisively in a distressed market is the single greatest competitive advantage a shipping investor can possess.
2. Acquire in downturns.
– The optimal entry point for both vessel purchase and newbuild orders is when rates are depressed, orderbooks are empty, and sentiment is bearish. Fear is a discount mechanism.
3. Position for the upturn.
– The fleet acquired at cycle lows must be operationally ready – crewed, maintained, and commercially positioned – to capture the full rate appreciation of the recovery. Late preparation means leaving money in the water.
4. Sell into the boom.
– Discipline at the top of the cycle is rarer and more valuable than discipline at the bottom. Begin monetizing assets at approximately two-thirds of the way through a boom. The final third is almost always given back.
➡️ These principles apply whether you are operating a fleet of Jones Act chemical tankers or evaluating a position in listed shipping equities. The cycle is the cycle. The discipline is the discipline.
📈 The Retail Investor’s Entry Point: Equities Over Asset
For private investors and smaller capital pools without the balance sheet to own and operate physical vessels – or our operational infrastructure to manage them – the publicly listed shipping equity markets offer a compelling alternative access point, particularly in the current environment. Whilst we also offer private opportunities strictly confidential for financing of a wide range of marine assets that can utilize our marine bases with secured international trading contracts under our ship management.
Quality shipping stocks across tankers, dry bulk, LNG carriers, and product transportation are currently delivering dividend yields of 10 to 16% per annum. These are genuine, recurring cash yields – not projected capital appreciation that depends on a favorable exit. For a capital allocator who recognizes the cyclical strength of the current shipping market but lacks the capacity to deploy at the asset level, dividend-paying shipping equities provide meaningful exposure with substantially lower operational and liquidity risk than direct vessel ownership.
For more active traders willing to navigate the volatility inherent in the sector, return potential extends well beyond the base dividend yield. Shipping equities respond dynamically to rate movements, geopolitical disruptions, and supply-demand shifts – creating tactical opportunities that are simply unavailable to those locked into multi-year time charter contracts on physical assets.
👉 Shipping is not merely an investable sector today – it is, for those who understand its cycles, one of the most structurally compelling capital allocation opportunities available.
📊 Our Strategic Assessment
🌍 The global shipping market in its current configuration presents a nuanced picture that demands intellectual honesty rather than promotional enthusiasm. Physical asset acquisition – in open-market bulk or tanker tonnage – is difficult to justify on either yield or asset appreciation grounds at today’s valuations. The yield is thin, the assets are dear, and the mean reversion trade is working against new qualified buyers.
The exceptions – and they are significant – lie in structurally protected markets and operationally differentiated positions. Jones Act operators benefit from legislative insulation that global operators cannot replicate. Niche offshore service vessel categories retain demand characteristics tied to energy infrastructure investment cycles that do not move in lockstep with commodity shipping. And listed shipping equities, for investors without the capacity or appetite for direct asset ownership, continue to offer exceptional risk-adjusted income in the 10 – 16% annual yield range.
🚢 At Horizon Offshore Services, our mandate is to deploy capital where structural advantage aligns with cyclical opportunity – and to hold powder dry where it does not. In today’s market, that means maintaining strategic liquidity, monitoring for the correction that elevated asset prices will eventually produce, and positioning our Jones Act operations to continue generating returns that the open global market simply cannot match.
➡️ The tide will turn. It always does. Our job is to be ready when it does – and to avoid being carried out by the current one.
⚓ Ready to deploy capital into marine assets – the right way, at the right time?
Whether you are exploring vessel acquisition financing, structured newbuild contracts, or a confidential discussion about your next marine asset transaction, our team is here to navigate it with you.
📩 Management: management@horizonoffshoreservices.com
💼 Vessel Financing & Structured Finance Division: bluewater@horizonoffshoreservices.com
All enquiries are handled with strict confidentiality. We work with owners, investors, and operators across the full asset lifecycle – from first conversation to financial close.
⚓ Horizon Offshore Services – Our Word Is Our Bond. 🌊