The search for additional vessel tonnage is continuing across global shipping markets, though activity has become noticeably more subdued compared with earlier periods of aggressive expansion.
Shipowners and charterers remain cautious as freight rates stabilise and market volatility persists across several segments. While demand for capacity has not disappeared, negotiations are taking longer and are increasingly selective, with buyers focusing on fuel efficiency, age profile and operational flexibility rather than outright volume growth.
In the container and dry bulk sectors, industry sources say interest in modern, mid-sized vessels remains steady, but speculative ordering and spot chartering have slowed. Owners are prioritising balance sheet discipline amid uncertain trade growth and evolving regulatory costs linked to decarbonisation.
The tanker market, too, is seeing quieter tonnage pursuits, as companies weigh geopolitical risks and fluctuating energy demand against still-healthy earnings. Rather than expanding fleets aggressively, many operators are opting to optimise existing assets through longer charters or incremental fleet upgrades.
Shipbrokers note that the softer tone does not signal a retreat from growth, but a shift toward more measured decision-making. Environmental compliance, financing conditions and residual asset values are playing a larger role in fleet planning than in previous cycles.
Market participants expect the hunt for tonnage to persist through the year, albeit at a slower pace, with strategic acquisitions and targeted chartering replacing broad-based expansion as the dominant trend.
