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European Oil Markets
1JUN

Baltic Aframax bid eases off the spike

3 min read
09:19UTC

TD3C peaked at WS458.75 on 11 May on the Hormuz surge; with the BDTI still reading 2,249 on 20 May, GL 134C's restored cover is pulling the compliance premium out of TD7 and TD19 first.

EconomicAssessed
Key takeaway

Restored vessel cover eases the Baltic Aframax compliance bid before the VLCC index catches down.

TD3C had sat near WS408 on 7 May 1 before the Hormuz-closure surge drove it to a WS458.75 peak on 11 May . The BDTI still read 2,249 on Wednesday 20 May 2, so the dirty-tanker complex is carrying a risk level set when the strait looked closed for the season. No clean post-spike VLCC assessment is public this week, which leaves the headline freight number stale and the pullback directional rather than printed.

The cleaner read sits on the Baltic Aframax routes. GL 134C's restored in-transit cover takes the forced-rerouting premium out of TD7 and TD19, the North Sea-Continent and cross-Baltic legs that carry Russian crude, because owners no longer have to price the loss of insurance and classification mid-voyage. The compliance bid eases rather than collapses, the same shape Urals-Brent showed once the vessel-services umbrella came back.

That split, a sticky VLCC headline and a softening Aframax compliance bid, is the tell that this is a sentiment unwind catching up to a policy fact, not a fresh supply shock. The freight desk reprices forced rerouting faster than it reprices an all-time-high index, so the Baltic routes lead and the BDTI lags. The 17 June 134C expiry is the next event that could re-arm the compliance premium overnight.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

When Russian oil moves by ship through the Baltic Sea, tanker companies normally charge extra because of the legal and insurance complications ; they call this a compliance premium. When the US issued GL 134C on 18 May, restoring legal shipping cover for Russian oil, that extra charge began to ease. A separate index called the Baltic Dirty Tanker Index, which tracks oil tanker freight rates globally, still read over 2,200 on 20 May ; far above its normal level ; because the Hormuz war premium on large tankers elsewhere in the world hasn't gone away yet.

First Reported In

Update #2 · GL 134C reverses the cliff, Brent -$14

Cyprus Shipping News· 26 May 2026
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