Table of Contents

Gas Carriers

The 30-Second Summary

What are Gas Carriers? A Plain English Definition

Imagine trying to ship a cloud across the ocean. That, in essence, is the challenge solved by a gas carrier. Natural gas and petroleum gases are incredibly useful, but at normal temperature and pressure, they take up an immense amount of space. To transport them efficiently from energy-rich regions like Qatar or the United States to energy-hungry markets like Japan or Germany, you need to shrink them. The solution is a feat of engineering: liquefaction. By cooling natural gas down to a frigid -162°C (-260°F), it transforms into a liquid (LNG), reducing its volume by a factor of 600. It's like shrinking an entire sports stadium down to the size of a small car. Liquefied Petroleum Gas (LPG)—think propane and butane—is liquefied more easily, under pressure. Gas carriers are the custom-built, floating thermos flasks designed for this job. They are not just ships; they are complex, mobile cryogenic plants that cost hundreds of millions of dollars to build. There are two main families of gas carriers you'll encounter as an investor:

Building and operating these vessels requires immense capital and deep technical expertise. This creates significant barriers to entry, which is something that should always pique a value investor's interest. Unlike a simple t-shirt company, you can't start a global gas shipping business out of your garage.

“The key to investing is not assessing how much an industry is going to affect society, or how much it will grow, but rather determining the competitive advantage of any given company and, above all, the durability of that advantage.” - Warren Buffett

While Buffett wasn't speaking about shipping specifically, his wisdom is perfectly applicable. The competitive advantage of a gas carrier company lies not just in owning ships, but in its operational excellence, financial prudence, and its ability to navigate the violent waves of the shipping cycle.

Why It Matters to a Value Investor

At first glance, a capital-intensive, cyclical industry like shipping might seem like a minefield for a prudent value investor. And it can be. But for those willing to do their homework, the gas carrier sector offers several characteristics that align with core value principles. 1. Tangible, Hard Assets: Unlike a software company whose value lies in intangible code, a gas carrier company's primary assets are massive chunks of steel, advanced machinery, and complex containment systems. These ships have a finite life (around 20-30 years) and a real, physical value. Even in a worst-case scenario, an old ship has a “scrap value”—the price its steel will fetch. This provides a tangible, albeit low, floor to the company's asset value, a concept Benjamin Graham would appreciate. The investor's job is to buy the company for less than the long-term, cash-generating value of these assets. 2. The Inevitability of Cycles: Shipping is the poster child for economic cycles. This is where a value investor's temperament becomes a superpower.

A value investor understands that the best time to buy is not during the euphoric boom, but deep in the pessimistic bust, when good companies with strong balance sheets are trading for cents on the dollar. The margin_of_safety is at its widest when the consensus view is at its bleakest. 3. Long-Term, Predictable Cash Flows (Sometimes): This is where LNG carriers, in particular, stand out. Many are chartered on very long-term contracts (10, 15, or even 20 years) to state-owned energy giants or supermajors like Shell and BP. These contracts, called “time charters,” are like a long-term lease. The shipping company provides the ship and crew, and the energy company pays a fixed daily rate, regardless of the volatile short-term “spot” market. For a company with a high degree of contract coverage, these ships become “floating pipelines,” generating predictable, bond-like cash flows that can be used to pay down debt and reward shareholders. 4. A Play on Global Energy Infrastructure: Gas carriers are not a luxury; they are essential cogs in the global energy machine. As long as the world needs natural gas—increasingly seen as a “bridge fuel” in the transition away from coal—and LPG for heating, cooking, and industrial feedstocks, it will need these ships. Investing in a well-run gas carrier company is a bet on the durable, long-term need for global energy transport.

How to Analyze a Gas Carrier Company

Analyzing a gas carrier company is different from analyzing a brand like Coca-Cola. You must become a shipping analyst, focusing on the fleet, the contracts, and the balance sheet.

The Method

A disciplined value investor should follow a systematic approach: Step 1: Deep Dive into the Fleet The fleet is the company's primary revenue-generating asset.

Step 2: Scrutinize the Contract Book This reveals the company's risk profile and cash flow visibility.

Step 3: Stress-Test the Balance Sheet In a cyclical industry, the balance sheet is the difference between survival and bankruptcy.

Step 4: Judge Management's Capital Allocation Skill This is the ultimate test. A brilliant management team in a terrible industry can still create value.

Interpreting the Analysis

A “good” gas carrier company from a value perspective is not necessarily the one with the highest growth or the most ships. It's the one built to last.

A Practical Example

Let's compare two fictional VLGC (Very Large Gas Carrier) companies at the same point in the shipping cycle. The market is currently weak, with spot rates near breakeven levels. Both stocks are trading at 50% of their book value.

Metric Steady Seas Gas (SSG) High Tide Shipping (HTS)
Fleet 25 modern “eco” VLGCs. Average age: 4 years. 28 mixed VLGCs. Average age: 12 years.
Contract Coverage (Next 12m) 80% of fleet days fixed on time charters. 25% of fleet days fixed on time charters.
Balance Sheet Net Debt / EBITDA: 2.2x. $200m cash on hand. Net Debt / EBITDA: 4.8x. $50m cash on hand.
Recent Capital Allocation Used cash to buy back 5% of shares outstanding. Just ordered 4 newbuild ships for delivery in 2 years.
Investment Thesis The Value Investor's Choice The Speculator's Gamble
The Story SSG's high contract coverage ensures it remains profitable even in the weak market. Its strong balance sheet and cash flow allow it to take advantage of the low stock price by buying back shares, increasing each shareholder's claim on the fleet. An investment in SSG is a bet on survival and prudent management. HTS is bleeding cash on the 75% of its fleet exposed to the low spot market. Its high debt is a major concern. Ordering new ships now adds future capacity to an already oversupplied market and puts further strain on its balance sheet. An investment in HTS is a highly leveraged bet that spot rates will recover dramatically and soon. If they don't, the company could face a liquidity crisis.

A value investor would overwhelmingly favor Steady Seas Gas. The margin of safety is immense. The company is protected by its contracts and strong balance sheet. The investor doesn't need to predict the exact timing of the market recovery. They just need to trust that a well-run company, purchased at a significant discount to its intrinsic value, will be worth much more in the long run. High Tide Shipping, on the other hand, offers a much more uncertain, binary outcome.

Advantages and Limitations

Strengths

Weaknesses & Common Pitfalls