Ship Sales and Charters Navigate Choppy Waters in 2025
In 2025, the global ship buying and selling market is experiencing significant shifts. Geopolitical tensions, evolving trade policies, and economic uncertainties are influencing ship sales, charters, and valuations. These factors are reshaping strategies for shipowners, investors, and charterers worldwide.
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Newbuild Orders and Shipbuilding Trends
The shipbuilding industry is witnessing a nuanced landscape.
- Global Market Growth: The global shipbuilding market was valued at $115.2 billion in 2024 and is projected to reach $140.3 billion by 2030, growing at a CAGR of 3.3%.
- Segment Growth: Bulk carriers are expected to reach $52 billion by 2030, with a CAGR of 3.5%, while oil tankers are set to grow at 4.3% CAGR over the same period.
- Regional Insights: The U.S. market was valued at $30.4 billion in 2024, and China's market is forecasted to grow at a 3.3% CAGR to reach $22.6 billion by 2030.
Secondhand Ship Market Dynamics
The used ship market is influenced by various factors:
- Rising Prices: Secondhand vessel values are hitting new highs due to increased demand and limited newbuild availability.
- Regulatory Pressures: Evolving environmental regulations are prompting shipowners to upgrade fleets, impacting the supply of compliant vessels.
- Geopolitical Factors: Trade shifts and sanctions are affecting buying decisions, with some regions experiencing heightened demand for specific vessel types.
Charter Market Developments
Charter markets are adapting to current challenges:
- Dry Bulk Charters: Companies like Diana Shipping have secured time charter contracts, such as with Cargill Ocean Transportation for the m/v DSI Andromeda at $14,000 per day.
- Yacht Charters: The yacht charter market is projected to grow from $21 billion in 2025 to around $34 billion by 2035, driven by luxury tourism and demand for private travel experiences.
The global ship sales and charter landscape in 2025 is anything but stable. Market participants are contending with evolving regulations, uneven demand, shifting regional activity, and tight financing conditions. Yet opportunity remains for those who adapt early and act decisively.
Key conclusions shaping today’s maritime asset environment:
- Used vessel prices are peaking
Limited newbuild delivery slots and high charter rates are keeping secondhand prices elevated, especially for compliant dry bulk and tanker vessels. - Environmental regulations are rewriting asset values
IMO and EU climate rules are pushing older ships into early retirement or requiring costly retrofits—shifting buyer demand to younger, greener tonnage. - Geopolitical shifts are redrawing trade patterns
Sanctions, shadow fleets, and new alliances are influencing which buyers can acquire which ships, and where they can operate them. - Charter rates remain uneven but active
While container markets have softened, the dry bulk and LNG sectors are still seeing strong charter activity, with multi-month commitments for mid-age ships. - Asian shipyards are filling order books fast
Buyers delaying newbuild commitments may find delivery slots scarce as China and South Korea’s yards operate near full capacity through 2027. - Smaller owners face financing constraints
Rising interest rates and bank caution around older ships are making leveraged acquisitions harder, opening space for leasing and private capital deals.
In short: 2025’s ship sale market rewards those with capital, speed, and regulatory foresight. Sellers with younger, clean-compliant ships will find strong interest, while buyers must navigate a more segmented and competitive playing field than at any time in the last five years.