Pacific Basin Closes New Credit Facility

May 19, 2019

Hong Kong-based dry bulk shipping company Pacific Basin Shipping Limited has closed a new USD 115 million 7-year reducing revolving credit facility secured over 10 of the Company’s owned ships.

The new facility is supported by a syndicate of three leading international banks, said a press release from the dry bulk shipping company.

Borrowings under the facility will carry an interest cost of Libor plus 1.35%, extend the Company’s overall amortisation profile and enhance its financial flexibility, it said.

Peter Schulz, CFO of Pacific Basin, said: “We are very pleased with the terms of this new facility which further increases our funding flexibility with access to long-term committed funding on a revolving basis for the next seven years at an attractive cost and reinforces our already very competitive vessel P&L breakeven levels. We appreciate the continued excellent support of these three first rate banks, which is a testament to the quality of our long-term relationship."

Peter added: "The facility demonstrates Pacific Basin’s strong access to diverse sources of capital reflecting the attraction of our solid balance sheet, corporate profile, business model, track record and reputation which set us apart as a preferred, strong, reliable and safe partner for finance providers, customers and other stakeholders.”

Logistics News

Maersk Reports First Quarter Drop in Revenue Growth

Maersk Reports First Quarter Drop in Revenue Growth

Container Shipping Companies Cut Asia-US Services

Container Shipping Companies Cut Asia-US Services

Israel Attacks Yemen’s Hodeidah Port

Israel Attacks Yemen’s Hodeidah Port

Panama Canal Administrator Outlines the Waterway’s Evolving Role in Global Trade

Panama Canal Administrator Outlines the Waterway’s Evolving Role in Global Trade

Subscribe for Maritime Logistics Professional E‑News

After US-Houthi truce deal, seafarers stuck in Yemen ports are looking for a way out
Sources and tanker tracking say that traders rebrand Venezuelan crude oil as Brazilian for China.
Container shipping companies cut Asia-US services as Trump tariffs disrupt trade