
18 Jan 2013
Sembcorp Marine: S$60m cruise refits at Sembawang yard. Sembcorp Marine subsidiary Sembawang Shipyard is cementing its name in cruise-ship refits and repairs, securing up to S$60m in work so far. The yard said it has finished repair, refit and refurbishment on four cruise ships this month it has also lined up eight more ships for refits through this year. (Source: The Business Times)
Trading Central | 2013-01-14 01:26:00
Update on supports and resistances.
Pivot: 4.5
Our preference: Long positions above 4.5 with targets @ 4.95 & 5.2 in extension.
Alternative scenario: Below 4.5 look for further downside with 4.3 & 4.1 as targets.
Comment: the RSI is supported by a rising trend line.
Key levels
5.45
5.2
4.95
4.79 last
4.5
4.3
4.1
Copyright 1999 - 2013 TRADING CENTRAL


Sembcorp Marine’s Jurong Shipyard announced today they have successfully righted the jack-up drilling rig which tipped over on December 3rd of last year.
The operation to right the rig was completed on 14 January.
A stop-work order is still in effect however as authorities continue their investigation into the accident with injured upwards of 80 shipyard workers.
A Busy Year Ahead for Sembawang Shipyard, 8 More Cruise Ships Scheduled for Refit
SINGAPORE – The new year has started off well for Sembawang Shipyard. In the first two weeks of January, the Singapore-based yard carried out concurrent repairs, upgrading and modification to 4 cruise ships and today announced that another 8 cruise ships have been secured for refits in 2013. Total estimated sales have been noted to be in the region of S$60 million.
Currently undergoing major upgrading and revitalization works in the yard are Superstar Libra from Star Cruises and Legend of the Seas from Royal Caribbean Cruises Ltd, the Shipyard’s new Favoured Customer Contract (FCC) partner since December 2012. The Azamara Journey, also from Royal Caribbean Cruises, completed its regular docking and repairs in Sembawang Shipyard and successfully sailed on 13 January 2013 while another cruise ship, Henna, owned by HNA Group of China and managed by Star Cruises, completed its refit on 16 January 2013.
Mr Ong Poh Kwee, Deputy President of Sembcorp Marine said “2013 is expected to be another busy year for Sembawang Shipyard in the area of cruise ship refits, upgrading and modification. Besides the 4 cruise ships in the shipyard in January, we have been awarded another 8 cruise ships for repairs from various cruise ship owners and operators. These awards reinforce Sembawang Shipyard’s reputation as one of the world’s leading shipyards and Asia’s number 1 shipyard in highly specialized cruise ship repairs, refurbishment and conversion. We would like to thank our partners and customers for selecting Sembawang Shipyard to execute these prestigious and important contracts and for their trust and confidence in our capabilities.”
SINGAPORE: Sembcorp Marine said its subsidiary Sembawang Shipyard has secured deals to refit another eight cruise ships for a total of S$60 million this year.
In a statement, Sembcorp Marine said the contracts are on top of the repairs, upgrading and modification work done to four cruise ships in the first two weeks of January.
It added that cruise ships such as the Superstar Libra from Star Cruises and Legend of the Seas from Royal Caribbean Cruises are currently undergoing major upgrading and revitalisation works in the yard.
Sembcorp Marine said the contracts are not expected to have any material impact on the consolidated net tangible assets per share and earnings per share of Sembcorp Marine for the year ending December 31, 2013.
- CNA/xq
krisluke ( Date: 02-Jan-2013 23:25) Posted:
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It is rather rare to see the chinese performing weldment work in local shipyard and cleaning of oil and any oil tank.
In china, I think they are subject to weather and long holiday. They may only quote the price for certain percentage of work to be done.
for example hull minus equipment installation and so on.
Dirty work like hull, I don't think china is willingly to do except employment of FT like those in singpore.
One important thing is the pay to the worker....
The offshores were mostly trading higher yesterday.
Sembmar took the bullish lead as it is able to break its resistance and recent high.
This breakout will lead Sembmar towards its next resistance at 4.90 level, which is a strong resistance level that Sembmar will face.
Kepcorp is the next in line to show bullishness as it manage to inch higher.
Despite indecisiveness for its past few days of trades, Kepcorp is able to break its resistance at 11.20 level and is now attempting to head for the next resistance.
Currently, it is facing a minor resistance at 11.25 level while its major resistance stands at 11.38 level.
With its bullish momentum, Kepcorp will likely to seek these levels.
Sembcorp is still struggling to gain its bullish momentum was its 100ma resistance continue to depress the upside.
It needs to break 5.37 level in order to follow its counterparts and seek for a higher resistance level.
Overall, the offshores are still sustaining their bullishness and might continue to head higher today.
Keppel and Sembcorp to hit record deliveries but leaner new contracts in 2013
Nomura sees volatile yard stock performance.
2012 closed with the Singapore offshore yards securing solid new offshore rig and production vessel orders, well above expectations at the outset of 2012. To-date Keppel has secured SGD9.9bn in new orders (FY11: SGD10bn) and SMM SGD11bn (FY11SGD 3.7bn).
As set out Nomura's 2013 outlook published 23 Nov-2012 titled “Record deliveries but leaner new contract orders”, it expects new orders secured in 2013 to total SGD6.5bn for both yards. " This projected decline is mainly due to lack of chunky multi- billion dollar Petrobras rig orders secured in 2012, but is in fact still a robust new order-flow, and should help sustain earnings into 2015."
Here's from Nomura
Singapore based offshore yards’ (KEP, SMM, SCI) strong stock performance of 2011 was sustained in 2012 on continued new order wins and record high order books. Singapore based offshore yards outperformed the benchmark FSSTI index by 2.9% (up 22.5% vs 19.7% for the index). In contrast, Chinese yards (YZJ, COS) lagged behind in the year, up only 4.3%, underperforming the FSSTI by 15.3%.
With Petrobras orders given out in 2012, the focus in 2013 will return to JU and semi-subs, the staple for Singapore yards. An upturn in commercial shipbuilding coupled with stronger-than-expected margins as yards start booking late-cycle higher-priced orders will be catalysts in our view.
Despite a slowdown in new order activity, we believe there are pockets of opportunity that should continue to witness robust activity and new orders. Encouraged by stubborn oil prices and continuing offshore drilling momentum, we remain bullish on new orders from semi-subs, new product categories such as accommodation semis and also FPSO/FLNG related orders.
To ride the offshore upcycle, Maybank-KE picked players with good earnings visibility such as Keppel, Sembcorp Marine and Ezion
China shipyards are undercutting kep corp n semb mar
[HONG KONG] China's shipbuilders are set to spark a price war in the oil-rig market.
With orders for new ships plunging to an eight-year low in 2012, China Rongsheng Heavy Industries Group Holdings Ltd and its local rivals are foraying into the offshore business, lured by a market that will reach about US$328 billion in 2017. The new entrants are lowering prices to grab contracts, hurting margins at Singapore-based Keppel Corp and Sembcorp Marine Ltd, the world's two biggest rig makers.
" It's like moving from one bottomless pit to another," said Park Moo Hyun, an analyst at E*Trade Securities Co in Seoul. " Chinese shipyards are competitively trying to get into what they see as a lucrative business. But the consequence of that is they could end up distorting the whole market."
China Rongsheng, the nation's biggest yard outside state control, announced in October its first order to make a tender barge and rival Yangzijiang Shipbuilding Holdings Ltd got its first rig contract last month. Shanghai-based China Rongsheng warned in December of posting a loss in 2012 after three straight years of profits.
this is bad news for Semb Mar..with its recent safety incident .. reputation tarnished..
China Shipyards Set to Spark Price War Among Rigmakers
China’s shipbuilders are set to spark a price war in the oil-rig market.
With orders for new ships plunging to an eight-year low in 2012, China Rongsheng Heavy Industries Group Holdings Ltd. (1101) and its local rivals are foraying into the offshore business, lured by a market that will reach about $328 billion in 2017. The new entrants are lowering prices to grab contracts, hurting margins at Singapore-based Keppel Corp. (KEP) and Sembcorp Marine Ltd., the world’s two-biggest rig makers.
“It’s like moving from one bottomless pit to another,”said Park Moo Hyun, an analyst at E*Trade Securities Co. inSeoul. “Chinese shipyards are competitively trying to get into what they see as a lucrative business. But the consequence of that is they could end up distorting the whole market.”
China Rongsheng, the nation’s biggest yard outside state control, announced in October its first order to make a tender barge and rival Yangzijiang Shipbuilding Holdings Ltd. (YZJ) got its first rig contract last month. Shanghai-based China Rongsheng warned in December of posting a loss in 2012 after three straight years of profits.
Jinhai Heavy Industry Co., based in Zhejiang province, China, also secured its first offshore equipment contract last month.
“Whether or not the Chinese yards can earn money from the current orders is pretty much in the air,” said Vincent Fernando, an analyst at Religare Capital Markets in Singapore.“There’s a steep learning curve.”
Drill Ships
Rongsheng climbed 1.3 percent to HK$1.62 in Hong Kong trading as of 3:08 p.m. The city’s benchmark Hang Seng Index was up 0.6 percent. Yangzijiang gained 2.9 percent to S$1.055 in Singapore. Sembcorp (SMM) rose 1.5 percent to S$4.86 and Keppel advanced 0.5 percent to S$11.23 in Singapore. The city-state’s benchmark Straits Times Index was little changed.
Hyundai Heavy Industries Ltd. (009540), the world’s biggest shipmaker, and other South Korean yards are also seeking to win more orders for drill ships and floating production units amid rising energy demand.
Shipyards are boosting offshore equipment business asPetroleo Brasileiro SA (PETR4), Exxon Mobil Corp. (XOM) and other energy companies develop new fields amid depleting oil reserves at existing wells.
Price Decline
The global onshore and offshore plant construction market is expected to rise to $1.26 trillion in 2017 from $989 billion in 2012, according to South Korea’s Ministry of Knowledge. The offshore oil and gas market may account for 26 percent of that, the ministry said in a Jan. 7 statement.
While demand for rigs has been booming, ship orders have plummeted because of excess fleet capacity and global economic uncertainties. Vessel prices have fallen as much as 27 percent in the past two years, according to Clarkson Plc (CKN), the world’s biggest shipbroker.
About 464 shipyards in China won 18.7 million deadweight tons of orders worth $14.3 billion last year, the lowest since 2004, according to Clarkson. That compares with contracts for 14.6 million tons worth $29.6 billion received by 88 yards in South Korea, the world’s second-biggest shipbuilding nation.
Thirty-eight percent of yards in China didn’t get contracts for new vessels in 2012, and 10 percent had no deliveries scheduled beyond the end of that year, the London-based shipbroking unit of ICAP Plc said in a report sent by e-mail on Dec. 24.
That’s prompting Chinese shipyards’ diversification into rigs at cut-rate prices.
China Rongsheng said it has set up an offshore unit in Singapore, where the company has hired engineers with more than 20 years of experience. That “will help compensate Rongsheng China’s lack of experience in building rigs and drill ships and shorten the company’s learning curve,” it said in an e-mail.
Lower Margins
Yangzijiang, based in Jiangyin, China, announced last month it got a $170 million order for a jack-up rig, lower than the $205 million contract Keppel got in April for a similar product. It’s an indicator of lower margins in the future, Keppel Chief Executive Officer Choo Chiau Beng said in a December interview.
Yangzijiang said in an e-mail it doesn’t expect prices to drop because of the competition, while Jinhai said Chinese yards’ lack of experience in building offshore equipment wouldn’t lead to lower prices.
Complex Vessels
Cosco Corp. Singapore Ltd. (COS), the shipbuilding unit of China’s biggest shipping company, said in August it expects to incur higher costs as it worked on offshore projects it had never done before. That includes a contract to build a semi-submersible accommodation rig.
Net income at Cosco Singapore fell for six straight quarters partly because of costs for building the offshore projects. In 2011, the company set aside S$150.4 million ($123 million) on expected losses from these contracts, more than double the loss a year earlier.
Shipyards in China are the world’s biggest builders of bulk ships, used to haul iron ore, grain and coal. Only a handful of companies in the country have built more complex vessels such as liquefied natural gas carriers and container ships that are longer than the Eiffel Tower.
“Yards that were making medium to smaller dry bulk ships aren’t simply going to wake up one day and be able to do jackup rigs,” said Jon Windham, a Hong Kong-based analyst at Barclays Plc.
The offshores continue to trade flat yesterday as they are still trying to gain momentum.
Kepcorp formed a hanging man pattern yesterday which indicates its refusal to trade lower.
Its 100ma support at 11.00 level is now providing bullish support which can push Kepcorp to greater heights.
Sembcorp is still struggling with its 100ma resistance at 5.37 level yesterday.
It will likely to have consolidative actions first before it can attempt to break this resistance level.
Sembmar failed to impress yesterday as it slide slightly lower yesterday.
This is in reaction to the resistance by the 100 & 200ma resistance line at around 4.76 level.
It might test 4.65 support level before it can gain momentum to break this resistance level.
Overall, the offshores are likely to continue their consolidative actions before any significant bullish movement can occur.
if all the banking counters coming down then need to lookout for investors sentiments on STI?
krisluke ( Date: 08-Jan-2013 15:08) Posted:
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Trading Central | 2013-01-07 01:35:00
Update on supports and resistances.
Pivot: 4.5
Our preference: Long positions above 4.5 with targets @ 4.95 & 5.2 in extension.
Alternative scenario: Below 4.5 look for further downside with 4.3 & 4.1 as targets.
Comment: the RSI is bullish and calls for further advance.
Key levels
5.45
5.2
4.95
4.73 last
4.5
4.3
4.1
Copyright 1999 - 2013 TRADING CENTRAL
