Chartering practices in liner shipping

Chartering rather than owning a vessel is a recurrent question for liner operators. This article aims at identifying the extent of such chartering practices, the characteristics of vessels chartered and if an impact on liner profitability can be found. To do so, an initial dataset collected in 2009 on 510 liner operators and 5,005 vessels is used. Results from random effect Probit models point out first that chartering rates are not different between small and large operators. Furthermore, findings suggest that chartering of small and young vessels is more common and that chartering rates have increased for companies subject to higher fleet growth from 2007 to 2009. An analysis using a fixed effect Logit model on intra-fleet management of 17 selected liner companies further stresses that larger companies have chartered more small vessels during the last 2 years, a result that may be explain by the need to allocate the financing to new larger vessels. We then study whether the chartering rate and the size of these 17 liner companies have had an influence on their observed profitability in 2007, 2008 and 2009. Our results suggest that those variables impact profitability, but in variable ways over time.

Data and Resources

Additional Info

Field Value
Source https://hal.science/hal-00760989
Author Cariou, Pierre, Wolff, François-Charles
Maintainer CCSD
Last Updated June 2, 2026, 07:00 (UTC)
Created June 2, 2026, 07:00 (UTC)
Identifier hal-00760989
Language en
Rights https://about.hal.science/hal-authorisation-v1/
contributor Euromed Marseille - École de management ; Association Euromed Management - Marseille
creator Cariou, Pierre
date 2012-12-04T00:00:00
harvest_object_id b6a2613e-dd8a-45c9-897f-8916bc3733e4
harvest_source_id 3374d638-d20b-4672-ba96-a23232d55657
harvest_source_title test moissonnage SELUNE
metadata_modified 2025-11-17T00:00:00
set_spec type:UNDEFINED