GMS Weekly Podcast | Week 43 Ship Recycling Market Recap: "Woefully Slow" Global Freight Holds, Oil Rises, and Sub-Continent Prices Sink

27/10/2025 3 min Episodio 63
GMS Weekly Podcast | Week 43 Ship Recycling Market Recap: "Woefully Slow" Global Freight Holds, Oil Rises, and Sub-Continent Prices Sink

Listen "GMS Weekly Podcast | Week 43 Ship Recycling Market Recap: "Woefully Slow" Global Freight Holds, Oil Rises, and Sub-Continent Prices Sink"

Episode Synopsis

In this Week 43 edition of the GMS Weekly Podcast, we review another subdued week in the global ship recycling markets as currencies fluctuated, steel plate prices softened, and sentiment across India, Bangladesh, Pakistan, and Turkey remained weak.
Global Market Overview
Markets slowed across the board as the Baltic Dry Index slipped about 3.2% to its lowest level since early October. Oil prices found mild traction, firming to USD 62.14 per barrel, up roughly 1% on expectations of a possible China–U.S. trade deal. Inflation in the United States rose to 3%, while sanctions and tariff pressures added further uncertainty.
Recycling prices across the Sub-continent continued to fall, with levels below USD 400 per LDT now widely discussed. Supply of tonnage remained extremely limited, leaving yards mostly idle despite steady freight markets.
Bangladesh
Chattogram showed sporadic activity with a few larger LDT units drawing attention, including LNG carriers PUTERI NILAM and PUTERI DELIMA sold en bloc on private terms, and bulker MONICA P (7,779 LDT) sold at USD 380 per LT LDT “as is” Belawan. The Taka weakened to BDT 122.35, while local steel plate slipped another USD 3 per ton. Elections scheduled for February 2026 continue to shape local sentiment.
India
Alang endured another quiet week as Diwali holidays passed with little recovery. Steel plate prices remained near USD 389 per ton, and the rupee closed at INR 87.54. More than 100 HKC-certified yards remain empty, as prices for clean tonnage fall below USD 400 per LDT and the arrival of shadow-fleet vessels further depresses sentiment.
Pakistan
After recent optimism, Gadani slowed again due to an influx of cheap Iranian scrap steel. Local recyclers hesitated to offer on limited tonnage as plate prices held near USD 614 per ton. The rupee weakened to PKR 283.50 per USD. Larger dry units remain preferred, while smaller vessels are avoided amid certification delays.
Turkey
Little movement was recorded in Aliaga as the Lira slipped to TRY 42.08 per USD and local steel values remained largely unchanged. Offers stayed within USD 250–270 per LDT as sentiment stayed weak.
Market Sentiment
With October ending, global freight remains firm and oil prices higher, but the recycling sector continues to face record-low supply, fading prices, and growing uncertainty.
For full details, vessel rankings, and port positions, download the GMS Weekly on our website or mobile app. Follow GMS on LinkedIn, Facebook, Instagram, and Twitter for daily updates.

More episodes of the podcast GMS Podcasts