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Here we check out companies with minimal analyst coverage at best, but that still generate high marks from investors for your next home run investment.
Most of the investment theses behind Diana Containerships Inc (NASDAQ:DCIX) seem to hinge on its juicy dividend that currently yields 17%, but with the vessel glut and falling charter rates making the industry look like a shipwreck, will investors jumping in now just find themselves in Davy Jones’ locker? Five Wall Street analysts cover the container ship operator, and all of them believe it will outperform the broad market indexes, so let’s look at why they think Diana Containerships might be able to ride out the storm.
Hiding in plain sight
Fortunately for Diana, it operates in the more favorable spot market than in the medium- and long-term charter categories, like its former parent Diana Shipping Inc. (NYSE:DSX) that it was spun off from several years ago. Spot market rates tend to be higher than time charter rates because it’s hit or miss whether the vessels will be hired out — which also makes the niche riskier — but that hasn’t stopped rates from falling.
Last quarter, the container ship operator reported higher revenues and higher profits than in the year-ago period, but only because it took deliveries of several new ships. Time-charter equivalent rates fell more than 16% in the third quarter, and they’re down almost 8% for the nine-month period, suggesting the rate of decline is accelerating. At the same time, its expenses were rising, up 10.5% in the quarter and 17% year to date, which could present problems down the road.
Even in the better-performing oil tanker market, operating in the spot rate market is no guarantee of success. Just ask Frontline Ltd. (NYSE:FRO), which nearly sank as its very large crude carriers, or VLCCs, lost 60% of their value in the spot and period market from one period to the next, while its Suezmax rates were down 35% period to period.
Between Scylla and Charybdis
In fact, all vessel sizes across all industries are seeing their rates sucked down. The Baltic Dry Index, which is a composite of the rates realized by Capesize, Supramax, Handymax, and Panamax dry bulk shippers, is heading lower again after having started 2013 on a high note. While rates are about 15% above where they were a year ago, the downturn is a worrisome development in the near term.
Diana Containships, with its a fleet of Panamax ships — the largest vessels that traverse the Panama Canal — is not immune, either.
According to analysts at Alphaliner, an industry consultant, container ship capacity is expanding at a rate just as fast as those in dry bulk shipping and oil transport. They estimate capacity will grow 9% this year while demand will only widen somewhere between 3% and 6%, suggesting the 16% average rate hikes shippers are seeking might not be so easy to achieve.