Mitsubishi Heavy To Scale Down Shipbuilding Operations
October 12 2016 - 12:10PM
Dow Jones News
Mitsubishi Heavy Industries Ltd. plans to shrink its
shipbuilding business after a big fall in orders and a heavy loss
in its cruise-ship operations, people familiar with the matter said
Wednesday.
These people said Mitsubishi will no longer take orders for
large passenger and general cargo ships and instead concentrate on
smaller vessels and marine engines. It is also exploring the spin
off of its ship-design division.
The moves are the latest in a world-wide consolidation and
reordering of the global ship building industry.
A Mitsubishi Heavy spokesman declined to comment.
Overcapacity and falling demand for seaborne trade have pushed
freight rates to unsustainable levels over the past two years,
causing billions of dollars in losses for the world's biggest
shipping companies and a near halt to orders of new vessels.
Japanese shipbuilders are known for producing high-quality
ships, but at a higher cost than competitors in Korea and China.
Labor costs at Japanese shipyards on average are about two to three
times higher than their competitors.
Mitsubishi Heavy, Japan's fourth largest shipyard in terms of
capacity, relies largely on orders from Japanese shipping companies
that have all but halted their demand for new vessels after years
of heavy losses. The industrial conglomerate also builds cars,
aircraft, defense equipment and electricity plants.
"The order-book for Japanese yards is down around 80% year on
year," said Basil Karatzas, of New York-based Karatzas Marine
Advisors and Co. "It is one of their worst years ever."
The 81 shipyards in Japan have a total of 113 orders this year
compared with 497 in 2015. Mitsubishi Heavy has receive only five
orders this year and nine in 2015, according to Maritime data
provider VesselsValue.
Mr. Karatzas said some yards will exit the industry, while
others like Mitsubishi Heavy will look for shipbuilding partners to
cut costs and focus on higher-margin products like ship engines
that make up around 20% of a new ship's price tag.
Mitsubishi Heavy said in August it was in talks with Imabari
Shipbuilding Co. Ltd., Oshima Shipbuilding Co. and Namura
Shipbuilding Co. Ltd. to form a shipbuilding alliance. Domestic
peer Kawasaki Heavy Industries Ltd. said last weeks it was
considering exiting the shipbuilding business.
Mitsubishi's decision to halt orders for big ships came after
the company took a nearly ¥ 104 billion ($1.01 billion) loss on its
cruise-ship operations earlier this year after delaying the
delivery of the cruise vessel ordered by U.S. operator Carnival
Corp. by more than a year, the people familiar with the matter
said.
Write to Costas Paris at costas.paris@wsj.com
(END) Dow Jones Newswires
October 12, 2016 12:55 ET (16:55 GMT)
Copyright (c) 2016 Dow Jones & Company, Inc.
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