GMS Weekly Podcast | Week 41 Ship Recycling Market Recap - “Whoananza?!” Global Tensions, Currency Slides, and the Sub-Continent in Flux

13/10/2025 4 min Episodio 59
GMS Weekly Podcast | Week 41 Ship Recycling Market Recap - “Whoananza?!” Global Tensions, Currency Slides, and the Sub-Continent in Flux

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Episode Synopsis

In this Week 41 edition of the GMS Weekly Podcast, we review another dramatic week across global ship recycling, marked by geopolitical uncertainty, volatile currencies, and weakening steel fundamentals across India, Bangladesh, Pakistan, and Turkey.
 
Global Market Overview
• Global markets endured a turbulent week as renewed Middle East tensions and wider economic jitters weighed on sentiment.
• Oil prices fell further to around USD 59.81 per barrel, nearly 18 percent lower than the same time last year.
• The Baltic Dry Index rose slightly by 13 points, supported by Capesize and Panamax gains, while smaller vessels softened overall.
• Currencies remained under pressure across the sub-continent, with the Indian rupee approaching 89, the Pakistani rupee at 283.20, and the Turkish lira at 41.82 to the dollar.
• Steel plate prices fluctuated across regions, with most markets showing mild declines through the week.
 
Regional Highlights
Bangladesh:
Activity is finally showing signs of recovery after nearly two quarters of an HKC-induced standstill. A few well-priced sales, including a Capesize bulker, were concluded from cash-buyer inventories as local recyclers with open credit lines returned to action. The Taka weakened to about BDT 121.55 per USD, and steel plates held steady near USD 519 per ton. Market sentiment is cautiously improving as attention shifts toward national elections scheduled for early 2026.
 
India:
Fundamentals continue to weaken. Steel prices slipped another USD 7 per ton to around USD 391, while the rupee eased to Rs 88.75 per USD, moving closer to the Rs 90 mark. Despite this, activity stayed strong with more than 10 vessels totaling nearly 120,000 LDT arriving in Alang this week, including the Bow Cedar and Shaurya II. India remains the region’s volume leader but continues to face pricing pressure.
 
Pakistan:
The headline says it all: War = 2 / HKC = 0. Despite adopting the Hong Kong Convention more than eight months ago, no yard has yet achieved accreditation. Ongoing border tensions and tariff uncertainty are straining local economics. The Pakistani rupee weakened to PKR 283.20 per USD, while steel plates eased to about USD 616.80 per ton. With little new tonnage arriving, Gadani yards remain largely inactive.
 
Turkey:
The Turkish lira lost another 30 basis points to close at TRY 41.82 per USD. Although local recyclers remain relatively steady, tonnage availability is limited as most deep-sea units continue heading for sub-continent destinations instead of EUSRR-regulated yards.
 
Market Sentiment:
Volatility, political uncertainty, and fluctuating currencies continue to define the ship-recycling landscape. India holds the fort, Bangladesh is gradually reawakening, Pakistan struggles with instability, and Turkey keeps sliding lower.


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