HCB Magazine December 2020

Page 30

28

HOUSTON-BASED KIRBY Corporation, the largest domestic tank barge operator in the US, reported net earnings for the third quarter of $27.5m, down from $48.0m a year earlier, with revenues down 25.5 per cent year-onyear at $496.6m. Explaining the slump in earnings, David Grzebinski, Kirby’s president and CEO, says: “The Covid-19 pandemic and the associated economic slowdown adversely impacted Kirby’s businesses during the third quarter. Although general economic activity was slightly improved and increased profitability was realised in

the marine transportation businesses experienced lower volumes and barge utilisation. “In marine transportation, our inland and coastal businesses were heavily affected by weak demand for liquid products including refined products, crude, and black oil,” Grzebinski adds. “Throughout the third quarter, refinery utilisation was well below historical norms as many of our customers experienced low consumer demand, high product inventories, and unfavourable economics. Additionally, a very active hurricane season resulted in further

BARGE DEMAND LOW In the inland market, average barge utilisation fell from the low 90 per cent range in third quarter 2019 to the low 70 per cent range, with average spot rates off by some 10 per cent year-on-year. Contract renewals were also done at weaker prices. Revenues were 22 per cent lower, despite the impact of the acquisition of the assets of Savage Inland Marine in April 2020. In the coastal sector, spot market activity was limited and barge utilisation was in the mid-70 per cent range. Spot market pricing was generally stable, though, but average term contract prices were slightly off the 2019 levels. Looking ahead, Grzebinski says: “Although Kirby continues to be challenged by unprecedented declines in demand as a result of the Covid-19 pandemic, our business activity and utilisation levels have bottomed. Economic activity is slowly improving, and we have seen pockets of increased demand. While this is encouraging, in the fourth quarter our results are expected to be impacted by continued low barge utilisation and pricing pressure, normal seasonality from weather in marine, and likely, customer budget exhaustion in distribution and services. “Looking beyond 2020, while the timing and magnitude of a material economic recovery are unclear, we believe this demand-driven downturn is temporary and demand will rebound sometime in 2021,” Grzebinski adds. “In marine, pricing typically does not improve until barge utilisation is in the mid-80 per cent range. Nevertheless, Kirby is in a strong financial position, and we will continue to tightly manage our costs, maintain capital discipline, generate free cash flow, and pay down debt.” Absent potential new lockdowns related to Covid-19, Kirby expects improvement in barge utilisation going forward as refinery and chemical plants along the Gulf Coast recover from recent hurricanes and economic

the distribution and services segment,

reductions in volumes and widespread disruptions including prolonged closures of some refineries, chemical plants, waterways, and major ports. These challenging market conditions during the quarter contributed to low barge utilisation and limited spot market activity.”

activity gradually increases. The reopening of the Illinois River in October is also expected to contribute some sequential improvement in barge utilisation. However, until a meaningful recovery in demand occurs, market conditions are expected to remain challenging. kirbycorp.com

LOW WATER MARK TANK BARGES • COASTAL AND WATERWAY BARGING IN THE US HAS BEEN SEVERELY AFFECTED BY THE COVID-19 CRISIS AND LOW COMMODITY PRICES, AS KIRBY’S LATEST RESULT REVEAL

 THE DOUBLE HIT OF COVID-19 AND LOW OIL PRICES HAVE REDUCED BARGE UTILISATION BOTH ON INLAND AND COASTAL OPERATIONS

HCB MONTHLY | DECEMBER 2020


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Articles inside

Joint Meeting gets to work on tanks

17min
pages 60-65

The legal view of containership fires

6min
pages 58-59

Incident Log Stem the tide

6min
pages 56-57

Conference Diary

2min
page 55

Project Brenntag shaping up

6min
pages 50-51

News bulletin – chemical distribution

5min
pages 52-54

RIPA counts US reconditioning

2min
page 49

Greif introduces new concepts

2min
page 48

Recognition for Schütz IBC

3min
page 47

Time Technoplast arrives in the US

2min
page 46

News bulletin – storage terminals

5min
pages 44-45

Vopak holds up well

2min
page 42

Power-to-methanol for North Sea Port

2min
page 43

UM Terminals centralises services

2min
page 41

Tarragona hosts Med Hub Day online

13min
pages 34-37

GPS adds to ethanol in Amsterdam

2min
page 40

Stainless tanks for Maastank

2min
page 39

Bidvest, Petredec open LPG terminal

2min
page 38

BW LPG starts LPG fuelling

2min
page 29

Tough times for Kirby Corp

2min
pages 30-31

News bulletin – tanker shipping

5min
pages 32-33

Stena, Proman add to methanol plans

3min
page 28

Making headway in hydrogen shipping

4min
pages 26-27

Odfjell eyes normalisation

2min
page 24

HGK converts for Covestro

2min
page 25

News bulletin – tanks and logistics

5min
pages 20-21

Consolidation in chemical tankers

3min
pages 22-23

Fort Vale reflects on a strange year

6min
pages 18-19

A lighter tank from Van den Bosch

3min
pages 16-17

Dachser’s links in warehousing

3min
pages 14-15

Obituary – William O’Neil

5min
pages 4-5

STC disapproves of flexis

2min
page 10

VTG adds temperature sensors

3min
page 12

ITCO reports on rule changes

6min
pages 8-9

Cotac expands depot network

2min
page 11

Letter from the editor

2min
page 3

Learning by Training

2min
page 7

30 Years Ago

2min
page 6
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