Publications

Our research findings contribute to the public debate on current financial and economic issues. By publishing our work in international academic journals and in our Working Paper Series, we aim to make it accessible to the widest possible audience.

HFRC Working Paper Series

Our working papers summarize the latest findings from the institute’s research activities. They are intended as contributions to academic discussion and are designed to encourage critical reflection and commentary on the results.

Alle Working Papers

Publications by Stefan Albertijn

Financing shipping companies and shipping operations: A risk‐management perspective

Stefan Albertijn, Wolfgang Bessler, Wolfgang Drobetz
Journal of Applied Corporate Finance | 12/2011
Shipping has always been a volatile and cyclical business. The extreme changes in revenues, operating cash flows, and asset values during the recent financial crises have upset the usual means of financing shipping companies. While bank debt will remain important in the future, the new regulatory environment has been forcing shipping banks to shift these risks from their balance sheets to capital markets through instruments such as loan securitization. As a result, the shipping industry will increasingly look to capital markets for external funds. And shipping banks are likely to change from being commercial bank lending institutions to becoming more like investment banks that arrange a variety of financing solutions, including high yield bonds or public equity. Risk management will be central to shipping companies in this new environment. Shipping companies can manage their own risks by modifying operations, employing freight and vessel price derivatives, or adjusting their capital structures. To arrive at the value‐maximizing combination of these three basic methods, they must decide which risks to bear, which to manage internally, and which to transfer to the capital markets. These decisions require shipping financial managers to assess the effect of each risk on firm value, understand how each contributes to total risk, and determine the most cost‐effective way to limit that risk to an acceptable level.