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Iran Conflict 2026
9JUL

Med Aframax freight jumps as VLCCs hold

3 min read
12:10UTC

Med Aframax route TD19 jumped 50 points to WS228 in the week to 6 June while the VLCC Gulf-China route held flat, a split that shows the freight curve rotating from Hormuz panic to a Mediterranean scramble.

ConflictDeveloping
Key takeaway

Freight has rotated from a Gulf-wide panic to a Mediterranean grab for non-Hormuz medium sour.

The Baltic Exchange, London's freight benchmark publisher, reported Med Aframax TD19 (the Ceyhan-Lavera route) up 50 points to WS228, worth $67,100/day, in the week to 6 June 1. WS is the Worldscale freight index; the dollar figure is the time-charter-equivalent earnings a shipowner nets. Suezmax CPC/Augusta reached WS218 ($121,200/day) as desks bid Kazakh CPC Blend. The VLCC Gulf-China route TD3C held flat at WS402.5, and the product route MR TC2 (ARA to US Atlantic coast) fell to $2,400/day, the weakest since November 2024.

A Gulf-wide panic lifts every class, especially the very large crude carriers that haul the longest Gulf legs. Here the long-haul VLCC leg held at WS402.5 while the Mediterranean Aframax and Suezmax bids lit up. That divergence reads as a sourcing scramble for specific grades reaching Med refineries, not a blanket risk premium on Gulf shipping.

The grade slate explains the split. Med refiners chasing the medium sour barrels lost to the Iran and Russia squeeze are pulling crude through Ceyhan and CPC, which bids the tanker classes that serve those routes. In early May the same instruments told a different story, with TD3C near WS458 when the whole Gulf was the trade . Now the curve has rotated: same routes, same desks, a different supply map underneath.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

Freight rates measure how much it costs to hire a ship to move oil. When demand for ships on a particular route rises, freight rates go up. The Worldscale system expresses this as a percentage of a standard reference rate, so 'WS228' means you are paying 228% of the standard price for that route. The main story here is that Med Aframax ships, mid-sized tankers running between Turkey's Ceyhan terminal and southern France, saw their rate jump 50 points to WS228. This reflects European refiners scrambling to book those ships as one of the few remaining ways to import crude that does not have to pass through the Hormuz blockade. Meanwhile, the rate for smaller tankers carrying refined products from Rotterdam to the US fell to its lowest since November 2024, suggesting European petrol and diesel are not flowing west to America as freely as they were.

What could happen next?
  • Consequence

    The TD19-TD3C freight rotation from VLCC Gulf panic to Med Aframax sourcing scramble means European refiners' crude access cost is now priced by Med basin vessel availability, not Gulf supertanker scarcity.

  • Risk

    GL 134C expiry on 17 June without renewal would release compliance-bid Aframax tonnage from Baltic routes into the Med pool simultaneously with the Ceyhan cargo programme intensification, potentially spiking TD19 above WS250.

First Reported In

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Baltic Exchange· 8 Jun 2026
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