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DHT vs FRO: April 2026 Update — Hormuz Crisis & Extended Rate Scenarios

Deep-Dive Using Day1Global Framework (Quad-Scenario: $100K / $150K / $200K / $250K)

April 8, 2026

The Context: The Strait of Hormuz crisis has sent VLCC spot rates to an ALL-TIME RECORD of $445K/day on Baltic TD3C. Both DHT and FRO have fallen -4.3% and -7.9% respectively since March despite the most bullish rate environment in history — the market is pricing normalization risk, not current earnings. This report extends the March 5 deep-dive with crisis-rate scenarios ($200K, $250K), updated fleet data, and a Hormuz blended-outcome framework.


TL;DR — Quad-Scenario Summary Table

Metric DHT @ $100K DHT @ $150K DHT @ $200K DHT @ $250K FRO @ $100K FRO @ $150K FRO @ $200K FRO @ $250K
EPS $3.10 $4.94 $6.79 $8.63 $6.78 $10.99 $15.20 $19.41
P/E 6.0x 3.8x 2.7x 2.2x 5.2x 3.2x 2.3x 1.8x
P/B 2.63x 2.63x 2.63x 2.63x 3.36x 3.36x 3.36x 3.36x
Implied ROE 44% 70% 96% 122% 65% 105% 146% 186%
Div Yield 15.9% 25.3% 34.7% 44.2% 16.4% 26.6% 36.8% 47.0%
TP @ 7x PE $21.69 (+17%) $34.61 (+86%) $47.52 (+156%) $60.43 (+225%) $47.47 (+35%) $76.92 (+119%) $106.38 (+203%) $135.84 (+287%)
Annual Profit $499M $796M $1,093M $1,390M $1,512M $2,451M $3,389M $4,327M

Key finding: At $200K TCE, DHT trades at 2.7x P/E with 34.7% dividend yield. FRO trades at 2.3x P/E with 36.8% yield. Both are absurdly cheap if crisis rates sustain. At $250K — which is below the current spot headline — both stocks would return their entire market cap in dividends within ~2.3 years.

Key finding (vs March): DHT fell 4.3% and FRO fell 7.9% since our March 5 report. Yet VLCC spot rates have quadrupled. The market is aggressively pricing in a quick Hormuz normalization. If normalization takes 6-12 months instead of weeks, both stocks are deeply mispriced.

Key finding (structural supply — April 10 update): Regulated VLCC fleet is only ~650-700 ships (not 900). IEA’s record 400M barrel release created ~1.1B barrel restocking need over 3-5 years. Market enters structural deficit in 2027 even without Hormuz. Earnings floor is $100-120K TCE, not the $80K in FFAs. Sweet spot: now through mid-2028.


What Changed Since March ⭐

Price & Market Cap Movement

Metric March 5, 2026 April 8, 2026 Change
DHT Price $19.40 $18.57 -4.3%
FRO Price $38.10 $35.08 -7.9%
DHT Market Cap $3,130M $2,990M -$140M
FRO Market Cap $8,500M $7,823M -$677M
Baltic TD3C (MEG→China) ~$107K/day $445K/day +316%
Shanghai CTFI TCE ~$85K/day $267K/day +214%

Fundamental Changes

Parameter March Report April Update Impact
DHT Charter Mix 54% spot (shifting to 75%) 75% spot (confirmed) Higher rate sensitivity
DHT Fleet Size 23 VLCCs + 1 pending 24 VLCCs (4 newbuilds delivered) +4.3% capacity
DHT TC Wtd Avg $49,400/day $52,000/day Opal at $90K lifts avg
Tiger TC Expiry Q2 2026 (upcoming) Q2 2026 (imminent) Will flip to spot → 79% spot
Newbuild Deliveries Antelope (Jan) Antelope (Jan), Addax (Mar), Gazelle (Mar), Impala (Q2) 4 eco VLCCs in service
VLCC Spot (headline) $107K sustained $445K record spike Hormuz crisis driven
War Risk Insurance Normal Withdrawn by major insurers Strait near-closure
Anchored Tankers Normal flows 150+ tankers anchored Massive supply disruption
FFA Q3 2026 ~$65-80K ~$90K Market expects normalization

Book Value & Derived Metrics

Metric DHT FRO
Equity (book) $1,138M $2,328M
Book Value/Share $7.07 $10.44
P/B (trailing) 2.63x 3.36x
Shares Outstanding ~161M ~223M
Enterprise Value $3,350M $10,643M

Why are stocks DOWN while rates are at records? Three reasons: (1) The market expects Hormuz to reopen within weeks, collapsing rates back to $70-90K. (2) War risk has physically prevented some tankers from loading — including 3 DHT vessels near the Gulf. (3) General risk-off sentiment in energy equities due to geopolitical uncertainty. The disconnect between spot rates and stock prices creates the analytical challenge this report addresses.


Hormuz Crisis — Market Context ⭐⭐⭐ (NEW)

What Happened

In late March 2026, escalating military tensions in the Strait of Hormuz region led to a near-closure of the world’s most critical oil chokepoint. Approximately 21 million barrels per day (~21% of global petroleum liquids) transit the Strait. The crisis has triggered the most extreme VLCC rate environment ever recorded.

Rate Impact

Benchmark Pre-Crisis (Feb 2026) Crisis Peak (late Mar) April 8 (current)
Baltic TD3C (MEG→China, headline spot) ~$107K/day $445K/day ~$380K/day
Shanghai CTFI (Chinese charterer TCE) ~$85K/day $267K/day ~$240K/day
Suezmax TD20 (WAF→Europe) ~$77K/day ~$185K/day ~$150K/day
LR2 TC1 (MEG→Japan) ~$62K/day ~$140K/day ~$110K/day
Demurrage / Floating Storage ~$35K/day >$100K/day ~$90K/day
FFA Q3 2026 Forward ~$75K/day ~$95K/day ~$90K/day

Why TD3C ≠ Achievable TCE

The Baltic TD3C headline rate of $445K/day is a spot assessment, not a realized TCE. The difference:

Factor Impact
War risk premium Charterers pay +$3-5M per voyage for Hormuz transit willingness
Bunker costs Elevated due to supply disruption; erodes ~$15-25K/day
Waiting/positioning time Unpaid days reduce annualized TCE
Shanghai CTFI Lagging indicator but represents real fixtures: $267K/day
Realistic achievable TCE $200K-$300K/day for vessels actively trading MEG

Critical: Our $200K and $250K scenarios are NOT fantasy numbers. They represent the conservative end of what currently-fixing VLCCs can achieve. The $445K headline is the upper bound — our scenarios model the achievable middle.

Physical Market Disruption

DHT Vessel Positioning (Gulf Region)

Vessel Status Location Implication
DHT Taiga ⚓ Anchored Fujairah anchorage Waiting for Hormuz reopening / safe passage
DHT Colt 🚢 Approaching Indian Ocean, ETA Gulf 5 days Positioned for crisis-rate fixture
DHT Addax 🚢 Approaching Arabian Sea Newbuild, first voyage — potential $200K+ fixture
DHT Opal 📋 On TC ($90K) MEG loading area TC rate holds — no upside/downside from crisis
DHT Harrier 📋 On TC ($47.5K) Gulf region Stable TC income
DHT Leopard 📋 On TC ($49K) Gulf Stable TC income
DHT Tiger 📋 On TC ($45K) Gulf area ⚠️ TC expires Q2 — will re-fix at crisis rates?

DHT has 3 spot VLCCs near the Gulf positioned for crisis fixtures. If Taiga, Colt, and Addax each secure a single $200K+ voyage, that’s ~$15-20M in incremental profit (~$0.10/share) in Q2 alone — on top of normal fleet earnings. The Addax, as a newbuild eco-VLCC, is particularly attractive to charterers willing to pay premium for modern tonnage.

Normalization Timeline — Why “Quick Resolution” May Not Mean Quick Rate Collapse

Even if Hormuz reopens tomorrow, normalization takes time:

  1. Queue clearance: 150+ anchored vessels need to load/discharge sequentially — 4-8 weeks
  2. Insurance reinstatement: Lloyd’s underwriters typically require 30-60 days of sustained safety before reinstating war risk cover
  3. Re-routing reversal: Vessels already committed to Cape of Good Hope add 15-20 extra sailing days
  4. Floating storage unwind: 80-100M barrels must be discharged — 6-12 weeks at normal port capacity
  5. Charterer restocking: Asian refineries that delayed purchases will scramble to refill — sustaining demand
  6. Geopolitical risk premium: Even after reopening, a “Hormuz premium” of $10-20K/day likely persists for 6-12 months

Historical precedent: After the 2019 Strait of Hormuz tanker seizure incidents, VLCC rates took 5 months to fully normalize despite no sustained closure. A near-closure with 150+ anchored vessels could take 12-24 months for complete normalization.

Hormuz Crisis — Winners & Losers

Category Winners Losers
Shipowners (spot) DHT, FRO, INSW, Euronav — any vessel NOT in the danger zone Owners with trapped vessels earning $0
Charterers None — paying record rates Oil majors, Chinese NOCs, Indian refiners
Refiners None — crude supply disrupted Asian refiners dependent on MEG crude
Insurers P&I clubs (withdrawn = no exposure) Hull & cargo underwriters with existing policies
Floating storage Owners earning $90K+/day for anchored vessels Traders locked into contango plays at old rates
Alternative routes West Africa, US Gulf, Brazil crude exporters MEG-dependent exporters (Saudi, UAE, Kuwait)

Ton-Mile Impact of Cape of Good Hope Rerouting

The rerouting of VLCC traffic from Hormuz/Suez to the Cape of Good Hope has profound structural implications:

Route Normal Distance Cape Routing Increase Impact on TCE
MEG → China ~6,500 nm ~11,500 nm +77% +$25-40K/day at current bunker
MEG → Japan/Korea ~5,800 nm ~11,200 nm +93% +$30-45K/day
MEG → India ~2,500 nm ~8,000 nm +220% +$40-60K/day
MEG → Europe ~6,200 nm ~11,800 nm +90% +$30-50K/day

The ton-mile increase alone could support $80-100K+ rates even after the political crisis ends, as long as vessels continue to avoid the Strait. This is the structural case for elevated rates persisting into 2027.


Fleet & Charter Update ⭐⭐

DHT Fleet — 24 VLCCs (April 2026)

DHT now operates 24 VLCCs following the delivery of 4 newbuild eco-VLCCs:

Delivery Vessel Type Status
Jan 2026 DHT Antelope Newbuild eco-VLCC ✅ In service
Mar 2026 DHT Addax Newbuild eco-VLCC ✅ Delivered, approaching Gulf
Mar 2026 DHT Gazelle Newbuild eco-VLCC ✅ Delivered, on 5-7yr TC
Q2 2026 DHT Impala Newbuild eco-VLCC 🔜 Delivery imminent

Charter Mix: 75% Spot / 25% TC (Confirmed)

The strategic shift announced on the Q4 2025 earnings call is now confirmed. With Tiger TC expiring Q2 2026, the mix will shift further to approximately 79% spot / 21% TC by mid-2026.

Period Spot VLCCs TC VLCCs Spot % TC %
Q4 2025 (actual) ~13 ~10 54% 46%
Q1 2026 ~18 ~6 75% 25%
Q2 2026 (post-Tiger) ~19 ~5 79% 21%

Time Charter Vessel Detail

Vessel TC Rate Until Notes
DHT Opal $90,000/d Q1 2027 Best rate in fleet; lifts TC average significantly
DHT Harrier $47,500/d Q4 2030 Long-term, stable anchor revenue
DHT Leopard $49,000/d Q4 2027 Solid mid-range TC
DHT Tiger $45,000/d Q2 2026 ⚠️ Expiring imminently — will flip to spot at crisis rates
DHT Osprey $48,000/d Q2 2027 Steady earner
DHT Gazelle $52,000/d Q1 2031 New 5-7yr TC on newbuild; longest TC in fleet

Weighted average TC rate: $52,000/day (up from $49,400 in March — DHT Opal’s $90K rate and Gazelle’s $52K addition lift the average)

TC Earnings Floor

Metric DHT FRO
TC vessels 6 (→5 post-Tiger) ~14 across segments
TC gross earnings $53M/yr ($0.33/sh) $182M/yr ($0.82/sh)
Annual interest cost ~$20M ~$155M
TC floor (net of interest) $33M ($0.21/sh) $27M ($0.12/sh)
Minimum sustainable yield 1.1% 0.3%

Tiger TC Catalyst: When DHT Tiger’s $45K TC expires in Q2 2026, it re-enters the spot market. In the current crisis environment, if Tiger fixes at even $150K/day for one quarter, that single vessel generates ~$9.5M incremental profit vs the old TC — equivalent to $0.06/share uplift. At $250K, the incremental is $18.5M ($0.11/share). This is a live catalyst within the next 60 days.

FRO Fleet Overview (Unchanged)

Segment Count Avg Age Spot %
VLCCs 42 Dropping (9 newbuilds) ~83%
Suezmax 21 ~9 yrs ~85%
LR2/Aframax 18 ~8 yrs ~80%
Total 81 Mixed ~83%

FRO’s fleet is unchanged at 81 vessels. The 9 newbuild eco-VLCCs continue to deliver through 2027, progressively lowering the fleet’s average age and improving fuel efficiency.


Earnings Sensitivity — 7-Scenario Analysis ⭐⭐⭐

Full Rate Sensitivity Table

Avg VLCC Rate DHT EPS DHT P/E DHT Div Yield FRO EPS FRO P/E FRO Div Yield
$75K $2.18 8.5x 11.1% $4.68 7.5x 11.3%
$90K $2.73 6.8x 14.0% $5.94 5.9x 14.4%
$100K $3.10 6.0x 15.9% $6.78 5.2x 16.4%
$120K $3.84 4.8x 19.6% $8.46 4.1x 20.5%
$150K $4.94 3.8x 25.3% $10.99 3.2x 26.6%
$200K (NEW) $6.79 2.7x 34.7% $15.20 2.3x 36.8%
$250K (NEW) $8.63 2.2x 44.2% $19.41 1.8x 47.0%

Assumptions: DHT 75% spot / 25% TC (wtd avg TC $52K/d), 24 VLCCs, 340 revenue days/yr, breakeven $25K/d, 95% payout. FRO 83% spot, 81 vessels (42V/21S/18L), Suezmax rate = 0.72x VLCC, LR2 = 0.58x VLCC, breakeven ~$25K/d, ~85% payout. Prices: DHT $18.57, FRO $35.08.

Rate Sensitivity Per $1K

Metric DHT FRO FRO/DHT Ratio
Profit per $1K rate increase $5.9M $18.8M 3.2x
EPS per $1K rate increase $0.037 $0.084 2.3x
DPS per $1K rate increase $0.035 $0.071 2.0x

FRO captures 3.2x more profit per $1K rate increase than DHT. This is because FRO has ~81 spot-exposed vessels vs DHT’s ~18. However, on a per-share basis the ratio narrows to 2.3x due to FRO’s larger share count (223M vs 161M). And on a dividend-per-share basis, DHT’s higher payout ratio (95% vs 85%) narrows it further to 2.0x.

Profit by Scenario (Annual)

Rate DHT Profit FRO Profit Combined FRO/DHT
$75K $351M $1,044M $1,395M 2.97x
$100K $499M $1,512M $2,011M 3.03x
$150K $796M $2,451M $3,247M 3.08x
$200K $1,093M $3,389M $4,482M 3.10x
$250K $1,390M $4,327M $5,717M 3.11x

At $250K TCE, DHT and FRO together would generate $5.7 billion in annual profit — more than half of their combined market cap ($10.8B) in a single year.


Hormuz Blended 2026 Scenarios ⭐⭐⭐ (NEW)

The key question is not “what is the spot rate today?” but “what will the average 2026 rate be?” Here are three scenarios based on when Hormuz normalizes:

Scenario Construction

Blended Outcome Table

Scenario Q1 Rate Q2 Rate Q3 Rate Q4 Rate Blended Avg DHT EPS DHT P/E FRO EPS FRO P/E
Opens May (fast) $79K $120K $75K $70K $85.9K $2.58 7.2x $5.60 6.3x
Opens Aug (slow) $79K $200K $120K $80K $119.8K $3.83 4.9x $8.44 4.2x
Stays closed (extreme) $79K $250K $200K $150K $170.0K $5.68 3.3x $12.67 2.8x

Scenario Analysis

Scenario 1: Opens May (Quick Resolution)

Scenario 2: Opens August (Gradual Normalization)

Scenario 3: Stays Closed Through Year-End (Extended Crisis)

Probability-Weighted Expected Value

Stock Weighted EPS Weighted P/E Weighted TP (7x) Current Upside
DHT $4.15 4.5x $29.05 $18.57 +56%
FRO $9.22 3.8x $64.54 $35.08 +84%

On probability-weighted expected values, DHT has +56% upside and FRO has +84% upside from current prices. Even the “quick resolution” scenario (25% probability) has both stocks roughly fairly valued — the downside is limited while the upside in the other two scenarios is enormous. The risk/reward is asymmetric in favor of longs.


Valuation Matrix (Updated April 8, 2026) ⭐⭐

Metric DHT FRO Winner
Market Cap $2,990M $7,823M
Enterprise Value $3,350M $10,643M
P/B (trailing) 2.63x 3.36x DHT
EV/EBITDA (est @$100K) 6.1x 6.2x ~Tie
P/E @ $100K 6.0x 5.2x FRO
P/E @ $150K 3.8x 3.2x FRO
P/E @ $200K 2.7x 2.3x FRO
FCF Yield @ $100K 15.0% 16.4% FRO
FCF Yield @ $200K 32.9% 38.9% FRO
MktCap / VLCC-eq $125M $116M FRO
EV / VLCC-eq $140M $158M DHT
Dividend Yield @ $100K 15.9% 16.4% FRO
Dividend Yield @ $200K 34.7% 36.8% FRO

Changes vs March

Metric DHT (Mar → Apr) FRO (Mar → Apr) Comment
P/B 2.75x → 2.63x 3.65x → 3.36x Both cheaper on book (price drop)
P/E @ $100K 5.7x → 6.0x 5.1x → 5.2x Slightly more expensive (EPS adj)
MktCap/VLCC-eq $130M → $125M $146M → $116M FRO’s -$677M cap drop makes it significantly cheaper per unit
EV/VLCC-eq $145M → $140M $165M → $158M Both cheaper on EV basis

FRO’s -7.9% price decline has restored relative value. In March, FRO was $146M/VLCC-eq vs DHT’s $130M — a 12% premium. Now FRO is $116M vs DHT’s $125M — FRO is actually 7% cheaper per VLCC-equivalent. This is a meaningful shift in the relative value picture.


FRO Segment Breakdown ⭐⭐

FRO’s multi-segment fleet is a key differentiator. Here’s how profit distributes across segments at each rate scenario:

Profit by Segment (Annual, assuming rate ratios: Suezmax = 0.72x VLCC, LR2 = 0.58x VLCC)

Avg VLCC Rate VLCC Profit (42 ships) Suezmax Profit (21 ships) LR2 Profit (18 ships) Total FRO
$75K $630M $252M $162M $1,044M
$100K $1,008M $315M $189M $1,512M
$150K $1,597M $526M $328M $2,451M
$200K $2,186M $736M $466M $3,389M
$250K $2,775M $947M $605M $4,327M

Segment Contribution Mix

Rate VLCC % Suezmax % LR2 %
$75K 60% 24% 16%
$100K 67% 21% 12%
$150K 65% 21% 13%
$200K 64% 22% 14%
$250K 64% 22% 14%

Why Multi-Segment Matters in a Crisis

The Hormuz crisis affects Suezmax and LR2 rates too — not just VLCCs:

FRO’s 39 non-VLCC vessels generate $315-947M/year depending on rates — this is effectively a “second company” inside FRO that DHT doesn’t have. At $200K VLCC equivalent, FRO’s Suezmax+LR2 profit alone ($1.2B) exceeds DHT’s entire profit ($1.09B).


Operating Leverage — The Non-Linear Profit Engine ⭐⭐

The Core Mechanism

Tanker costs are essentially fixed at ~$25,000/day (crew, insurance, maintenance, depreciation, G&A, debt service). Revenue is variable. Every dollar above breakeven flows almost entirely to profit. This creates exponential profit growth as rates rise.

Profit Multiplier Table (vs Breakeven)

Avg Rate Rate / BE Margin Profit Multiplier (vs $50K base) DHT Annual Profit FRO Annual Profit
$25K (BE) 1.0x 0% 0x ~$0 ~$0
$50K 2.0x 50% 1.0x (base) $202M $616M
$75K 3.0x 67% 2.0x $351M $1,044M
$100K 4.0x 75% 3.0x $499M $1,512M
$150K 6.0x 83% 5.0x $796M $2,451M
$200K 8.0x 88% 7.0x $1,093M $3,389M
$250K 10.0x 90% 9.0x $1,390M $4,327M

The $250K Reality Check

At $250K/day (10x breakeven):

What a $10K Rate Increase Does (Marginal Impact)

Base Rate DHT Profit +% FRO Profit +% DHT EPS + FRO EPS +
$75K +16.8% +18.0% +$0.37 +$0.84
$100K +11.8% +12.4% +$0.37 +$0.84
$150K +7.4% +7.7% +$0.37 +$0.84
$200K +5.4% +5.5% +$0.37 +$0.84
$250K +4.2% +4.3% +$0.37 +$0.84

The dollar impact is constant ($0.37/$0.84 per $10K), but the percentage impact is highest at lower rates — this is operating leverage. Near breakeven, small rate moves create massive percentage swings. At $250K, the same $10K move barely registers as a percentage.

This is why the crisis rate environment is so transformative. Moving from $100K to $200K doesn’t just double profit — it triples it (3.0x → 7.0x the base). The relationship between rate and profit is convex: accelerating gains as rates rise, but also accelerating losses if rates fall toward breakeven.


INSW as Value Benchmark ⭐ (NEW)

International Seaways (INSW) provides a useful third-party benchmark for DHT and FRO relative valuation. INSW operates a mixed tanker fleet (VLCCs, Suezmaxes, Aframaxes, MRs) and trades at a meaningful discount to both.

Comparative Valuation

Metric INSW DHT FRO
Market Cap ~$4,200M $2,990M $7,823M
Fleet (VLCC-eq) ~45 24 67.3
P/B 1.84x 2.63x 3.36x
MktCap / VLCC-eq $93M $125M $116M
EV / VLCC-eq ~$130M $140M $158M
D/E Ratio ~0.55x 0.38x 1.31x

What INSW Tells Us

Comparison Premium/Discount Implication
DHT vs INSW (MktCap/eq) DHT is 34% more expensive DHT’s pure-VLCC premium + lower leverage justifies ~15-20%; remaining 14-19% = potential overvaluation
FRO vs INSW (MktCap/eq) FRO is 25% more expensive FRO’s scale + fleet renewal justifies some premium, but 25% is elevated
DHT vs INSW (P/B) DHT is 43% more expensive Book value gap is wide — DHT’s higher ROE partially justifies
FRO vs INSW (P/B) FRO is 83% more expensive Most of the gap = fleet renewal NPV + Fredriksen premium

INSW suggests both DHT and FRO carry meaningful premiums to the broader tanker sector. INSW’s $93M/VLCC-eq is 25-35% cheaper than DHT/FRO. Investors seeking pure value may find INSW more attractive. However, INSW lacks DHT’s dividend purity and FRO’s scale/catalyst advantages. The premium is partially justified but serves as a reminder that DHT and FRO are NOT the cheapest tanker plays available.


Day1Global Framework — Module Updates ⭐

Module C: Cash Flow (现金流) — Updated

Metric DHT (March) DHT (April) FRO (March) FRO (April)
Market Cap $3,130M $2,990M $8,500M $7,823M
Est. Peak CF (@$150K) ~$830M ~$830M ~$2,550M ~$2,550M
CF Yield @ $150K ~27% ~28% ~30% ~33%
Est. Crisis CF (@$200K) ~$1,140M ~$3,530M
CF Yield @ $200K ~38% ~45%

The price declines have improved cash flow yields. At $200K TCE, FRO generates a 45% free cash flow yield — meaning the company would generate nearly half its market cap in cash in a single year. DHT’s 38% is also extraordinary. These yields are characteristic of deep-cycle companies trading at maximum pessimism, not at the peak of the most bullish rate environment in history.

Module L: Ownership (所有权) — No Change

Factor DHT FRO
Insider ownership ~5% (BW Group) ~40% (Hemen/Fredriksen)
Institutional ~65% ~45%
Free float quality HIGH (broad institutional) MODERATE (Fredriksen block reduces float)
Recent insider activity No material changes No material changes

Module O: Accounting Quality (会计质量) — No Change

Factor DHT FRO
Revenue recognition Simple (voyage/TC revenue) Simple (voyage/TC/pool revenue)
Related-party risk LOW ⚠️ MODERATE (Hemen transactions)
Depreciation policy Conservative (25yr useful life) Conservative (25yr useful life)
Off-balance sheet items Minimal ~$1.2B newbuild commitments
Audit quality Clean Clean

No structural changes in Module L or O since March. The key difference remains FRO’s Fredriksen/Hemen related-party risk — the $136M/vessel newbuild purchases from related parties (at ~$118M cost, netting ~$162M profit for Hemen) remain a governance concern that warrants a 5-10% discount to intrinsic value.


6 Investment Philosophy Perspectives — April Update (6大投资哲学视角)

1. Quality Compounder (Buffett/Munger) — 质量复利

Verdict: DHT 95% payout, 2.63x P/B, D/E 0.38x. At $100K, DHT generates 15.9% dividend yield — Buffett loves cash return machines with low leverage. DHT is the “bond with equity kicker” even at 75% spot.

2. Imaginative Growth (Baillie Gifford/ARK) — 想象力成长

Verdict: FRO Fleet renewal (9 eco-VLCCs), scale advantage (81 ships), $4.3B profit potential at $250K. FRO is transforming its fleet while generating extraordinary cash. The crisis accelerates the replacement cycle.

3. Fundamental Long/Short (Tiger Cubs) — 基本面多空

Verdict: FRO long / DHT as partial hedge FRO is cheaper on P/E (5.2x vs 6.0x), cheaper on MktCap/VLCC-eq ($116M vs $125M), and has 3.2x more rate sensitivity. The long/short ratio has improved since March.

4. Deep Value (Klarman/Marks) — 深度价值

Verdict: DHT Lower P/B (2.63x vs 3.36x), lower D/E (0.38x vs 1.31x), simpler business. Klarman would note that DHT’s downside in a rate collapse is -30-40%, while FRO’s is -45-55% due to leverage. Margin of safety favors DHT.

5. Catalyst Driven (Tepper/Ackman) — 催化剂驱动

Verdict: FRO Catalysts: (1) Hormuz crisis fixtures on 34+ spot VLCCs, (2) 9 newbuild deliveries continuing through 2027, (3) potential $2+ special dividends if Q2 rates sustain $200K+, (4) fleet renewal gains. DHT has the Tiger re-fix catalyst, but FRO has more and larger catalysts.

6. Macro Tactical (Druckenmiller) — 宏观战术

Verdict: FRO — even more so than March In a Hormuz crisis, you want maximum exposure to the rate environment. FRO’s 81 vessels × 83% spot × 1.31x D/E = maximum leverage to the most extreme rate environment in tanker history. If you have conviction that normalization takes 6+ months, FRO is the single best expression of that view.

Score: FRO 4, DHT 2 (unchanged from March)

Summary Scoring Matrix

Dimension DHT Score FRO Score Comment
Quality/Safety ★★★★★ ★★★☆☆ DHT’s low leverage and high payout dominate
Growth/Catalysts ★★★☆☆ ★★★★★ FRO’s fleet renewal + scale advantage
Rate Sensitivity ★★★☆☆ ★★★★★ FRO captures 3.2x more per $1K rate move
Downside Protection ★★★★☆ ★★☆☆☆ D/E 0.38x vs 1.31x matters in a downturn
Dividend Reliability ★★★★★ ★★★★☆ DHT 95% payout vs FRO ~85%
Crisis Upside ★★★☆☆ ★★★★★ 81 ships × 83% spot = maximum leverage to Hormuz
Overall ★★★★☆ ★★★★☆ Different strengths — complementary portfolio positions

Anti-Bias Check (反偏见框架)

Cognitive Traps to Monitor in April

Trap Description Risk Level
Recency bias Anchoring on $445K headline and extrapolating crisis rates indefinitely ⚠️ HIGH
Availability bias Hormuz dominates headlines → overweighting crisis continuation probability ⚠️ HIGH
Anchoring to March prices Viewing $18.57/$35.08 as “cheap” because they were $19.40/$38.10 last month MODERATE
Narrative fallacy Constructing elaborate “crisis persists” stories that feel convincing but are probabilistic MODERATE
Neglect of base rates Historical Strait closures/near-closures have lasted weeks, not years ⚠️ HIGH

Bear Case Reminders

Risk Probability Impact if True
Hormuz reopens in April 15% Rates collapse to $60-70K within weeks; stocks may drop 10-15%
Normalization by June 25% Blended 2026 avg ~$86K; stocks fairly valued at current levels
Global recession triggers demand destruction 10% Rates fall to $40-50K; DHT -30%, FRO -45%
OPEC production cuts (response to price spike) 15% Fewer cargoes = lower rates despite crisis

Honest assessment: There is a non-trivial (25-40%) probability that Hormuz normalizes quickly and 2026 average rates are $80-90K. In that scenario, both stocks are roughly fairly valued — not cheap, not expensive. The bull case depends on the crisis lasting through H2 2026, which history suggests is possible but not assured. Size positions accordingly.


Pre-Mortem (事前尸检)

“It’s October 2026 and your investment lost 25%. What went wrong?”

DHT Bear Case

FRO Bear Case

Risk asymmetry: FRO has higher downside (-32% vs -25%) due to leverage. But in the base/bull scenarios, FRO has +84% expected upside vs DHT’s +56%. The asymmetry favors FRO for risk-tolerant investors.

Historical Benchmark: Extreme Rate Duration

Understanding how long extreme rate environments have historically persisted is critical for the blended scenario analysis:

Event Trigger Rate > $100K Duration Rate > $150K Duration Total Elevated Period
2008 Super Cycle China + tight supply ~8 months ~4 months ~14 months
2020 Float Storage OPEC war + COVID ~2 months ~1 month ~4 months
2004-05 China Boom China industrialization ~5 months ~2 months ~10 months
2026 Hormuz Strait closure Ongoing Ongoing TBD

Key observation: Geopolitically-driven spikes (2020) tend to be shorter than structural supply-demand driven elevations (2004-05, 2008). The 2026 event is geopolitical in trigger but may become structural if rerouting persists — making the duration harder to predict than prior events.


Updated Investment Recommendation ⭐⭐⭐

Framework: Match Your View to Your Position

Your View VLCC Rate Assumption DHT Assessment FRO Assessment
Hormuz normalizes quickly $75-90K avg Fairly valued. 8.5-6.8x P/E. Hold for 11-14% yield. Fairly valued. 7.5-5.9x P/E. Hold for 11-14% yield.
Supercycle base case $100K avg Attractive buy. 6.0x P/E, 15.9% yield. Attractive buy. 5.2x P/E, 16.4% yield. FRO has more upside leverage.
Crisis persists H1 $120-150K avg Strong buy. 3.8-4.8x P/E, 19-25% yield. Strong buy. 3.2-4.1x P/E, 20-27% yield. FRO is a screaming buy.
Extended crisis $200K+ avg Screaming buy. 2.7x P/E, 34.7% yield. Screaming buy. 2.3x P/E, 36.8% yield. FRO is generational.

If You Want Maximum Safety

→ DHT

If You Want Maximum Upside

→ FRO

Portfolio FRO Weight DHT Weight Rationale
Base recommendation 55-60% 40-45% Unchanged from March — FRO’s price drop has restored relative value
High conviction (crisis persists) 65-70% 30-35% Maximize rate sensitivity
Conservative / income focus 40-45% 55-60% Maximize dividend certainty

The allocation is unchanged from March despite FRO’s larger decline (-7.9% vs -4.3%). FRO’s relative value has actually improved — it’s now cheaper per VLCC-eq than DHT ($116M vs $125M). The 55-60% FRO / 40-45% DHT split balances FRO’s superior upside leverage against DHT’s superior downside protection.

Action Prices (Updated)

  Entry Add Aggressively Reduce Exit
DHT < $19 ✅ (current) < $16 > $28 > $35
FRO < $36 ✅ (current) < $30 > $55 > $70

Both stocks are currently at or below entry prices. DHT at $18.57 is in the entry zone. FRO at $35.08 is in the entry zone. For investors who agree with the probability-weighted analysis (+56% DHT / +84% FRO expected upside), current prices represent an attractive entry.

Position Sizing Guidance

Conviction Level Total Tanker Allocation FRO Size DHT Size Rationale
Low (Hormuz resolves fast) 5-8% of portfolio 3-5% 2-3% Small position; ride the dividend while waiting
Medium (supercycle $100K base) 10-15% of portfolio 6-9% 4-6% Core position; both undervalued
High (crisis persists 6+ months) 15-20% of portfolio 9-12% 6-8% Large position; outsized risk/reward
Maximum (multi-year structural bull) 20-25% of portfolio 12-15% 8-10% Concentrated bet; requires strong conviction and stop-loss discipline

Risk management: Regardless of conviction level, set stop-losses at -20% from entry. If DHT breaks below $15 or FRO below $28, the market is pricing a scenario worse than our bear case — re-evaluate thesis before adding.

Key Monitoring Metrics (April → May)

Metric Watch For Bullish Signal Bearish Signal
Baltic TD3C Daily rate assessment Sustains > $200K/day Drops below $100K/day
Lloyd’s war risk Insurance reinstatement Still withdrawn Reinstated (Hormuz safe)
DHT Tiger re-fix TC expiry and new fixture Spot fixture > $100K Re-TCs at $50K
FRO Q1 earnings Report ~May 20 Q1 EPS > $3.50 with strong Q2 guidance Weak guidance, dividend cut
FFA Q3 2026 Forward rate curve > $100K (crisis priced in) < $70K (normalization priced in)
Anchored tanker count Vessel count near Hormuz Rising or stable (>100) Declining rapidly (<50)

What the Market Is Pricing (Implied Rate Expectations)

We can reverse-engineer the market’s implied rate assumption from current stock prices:

Metric DHT FRO
Current Price $18.57 $35.08
Implied P/E (at fair value ~6x) 6.0x 5.2x
Implied EPS $3.10 $6.75
Implied Avg VLCC Rate ~$100K/day ~$100K/day

Both stocks are pricing in approximately $100K/day average for 2026 — essentially ignoring the Hormuz crisis entirely and pricing a “quick normalization + normal supercycle” scenario. If the crisis persists through even Q2, the market is significantly underpricing both stocks.


Structural Supply Thesis — Beyond Hormuz ⭐⭐⭐ (NEW — April 10, 2026)

This section introduces a fundamentally different bull case: Even if Hormuz opens tomorrow and crisis premiums vanish, VLCC rates are structurally supported at $100-150K by three irreversible trends. The previous sections modeled rate scenarios; this section explains WHY those rates are sustainable.

The Real Fleet Is ~680, Not ~900

The headline VLCC fleet of ~870 is misleading. Approximately 166 VLCCs operate as “shadow fleet” — carrying sanctioned crude for Russia, Iran, and Venezuela. These ships:

Compliant, regulated VLCC fleet: ~650-700 vessels

With Venezuela’s capitulation (Maduro captured, oil sector surrendered to US-led reform) and escalating enforcement (14+ shadow tankers seized Dec 2025-Mar 2026), the shadow fleet is actively dissolving. Ghost ships are stranded off the Venezuelan coast. This tonnage is heading to the breakers, not back to the market.

Effective Available Fleet (Operating Day Adjustment)

A VLCC operates ~330-335 days/year (drydock every 5 years, unplanned maintenance, repositioning). At any given moment:

Metric Value
Compliant fleet ~680
Availability factor ×0.92
Effective fleet (ship-equivalents) ~626
Ships offline on any given day ~54

The SPR Restocking Supercycle

The March 2026 IEA coordinated release — 400 million barrels, the largest in history — created an unprecedented restocking obligation:

Country Released (Mar 2026) Post-Release Level Capacity Gap to 80% Fill
United States 172M bbl ~243M 714M 328M
Japan 80M ~180M ~400M 140M
South Korea 22.5M ~77.5M 146M 39M
EU aggregate ~62M varies varies ~80M
China (building) 400-500M 1,000M+ target ~500M
India (expanding) ~25M 87M (after expansion) ~45M
Total       ~1,132M bbl

Historical refill rates are slow: the US managed only 32M barrels in 2.5 years after the 2022 drawdown (<1M bbl/month). This means restocking plays out over 3-5 years, absorbing 44-70 VLCCs continuously.

Supply/Demand Balance (2026-2030)

Period Gross Fleet Avail. (×0.92) Demand Surplus/(Deficit)
2026 680 626 620 +6 (razor thin)
2027 680 626 640 -14 (deficit)
H1 2028 680 626 645 -19 (deep deficit)
H2 2028 715 658 645 +13 (relief begins)
2029 760 699 650 +49 (easing)

Key insight: The market has +6 ships of cushion in 2026 — less than 1% slack. By 2027, we’re in deficit. The newbuild wave arriving mid-2028 provides relief, but even then the market remains historically tight with SPR restocking demand persisting.

Revised Earnings With Structural Floor

If the structural thesis holds, the floor for annual average TCE is $100-120K through mid-2028, not the $60-80K the market currently prices in FFA curves. This changes the earnings picture materially:

Scenario TCE DHT EPS DHT PE FRO EPS FRO PE
Market consensus (FFA) $80K $2.38 7.8x $4.52 7.8x
Structural floor $100K $3.10 6.0x $6.78 5.2x
Structural base $120K $4.03 4.6x $8.89 3.9x
Structural bull $150K $4.94 3.8x $10.99 3.2x

If the market is pricing $80K forward TCE but the structural floor is $100-120K, both stocks have 30-50% earnings upside that isn’t in the price.

The 2004-2008 Analog

The current setup most closely resembles 2004-2008, when:

The difference today: the supply constraint is even tighter (shadow fleet exit + regulation) and there’s an additional ~1.1 billion barrels of SPR restocking demand that didn’t exist in 2004-2008.

Investment Sweet Spot: Now Through Mid-2028

The highest-conviction window is the next ~2 years. After mid-2028, newbuild deliveries create supply relief (though not collapse — rates likely normalize to $70-100K).

For portfolio positioning:

Both are trading at 3-6x PE on the structural floor scenario — historically cheap for a multi-year earnings cycle.


Appendix A: FRO Target Price Implications (PE-based)

Target PE FRO @ $100K FRO @ $150K FRO @ $200K FRO @ $250K
4x (peak compression) $27.12 (-23%) $43.96 (+25%) $60.80 (+73%) $77.64 (+121%)
5x $33.90 (-3%) $54.95 (+57%) $76.00 (+117%) $97.05 (+177%)
7x (mid-cycle) $47.47 (+35%) $76.92 (+119%) $106.38 (+203%) $135.84 (+287%)
9x (re-rate) $61.02 (+74%) $98.90 (+182%) $136.80 (+290%) $174.70 (+398%)

Appendix B: DHT Target Price Implications (PE-based)

Target PE DHT @ $100K DHT @ $150K DHT @ $200K DHT @ $250K
4x (peak compression) $12.39 (-33%) $19.77 (+6%) $27.15 (+46%) $34.52 (+86%)
5x $15.49 (-17%) $24.71 (+33%) $33.93 (+83%) $43.15 (+132%)
7x (mid-cycle) $21.69 (+17%) $34.61 (+86%) $47.52 (+156%) $60.43 (+225%)
9x (re-rate) $27.88 (+50%) $44.50 (+140%) $61.11 (+229%) $77.72 (+318%)

Appendix C: Dividend Projection Matrix

DHT Dividend Per Share (95% payout)

Rate EPS DPS Yield @ $18.57 Payback Period
$75K $2.18 $2.07 11.1% 9.0 yrs
$100K $3.10 $2.95 15.9% 6.3 yrs
$150K $4.94 $4.70 25.3% 4.0 yrs
$200K $6.79 $6.45 34.7% 2.9 yrs
$250K $8.63 $8.20 44.2% 2.3 yrs

FRO Dividend Per Share (~85% payout)

Rate EPS DPS Yield @ $35.08 Payback Period
$75K $4.68 $3.98 11.3% 8.8 yrs
$100K $6.78 $5.76 16.4% 6.1 yrs
$150K $10.99 $9.34 26.6% 3.8 yrs
$200K $15.20 $12.92 36.8% 2.7 yrs
$250K $19.41 $16.50 47.0% 2.1 yrs

At $250K TCE, FRO pays back your entire investment in dividends within 2.1 years. DHT does it in 2.3 years. Even at $100K (the conservative base case), both pay back within 6 years — well above any competitive fixed-income or equity alternative.


Appendix D: Methodology & Data Sources

Calculation Engine

Data Sources

Data Source Date
DHT Price ($18.57) Yahoo Finance April 8, 2026
FRO Price ($35.08) Yahoo Finance April 8, 2026
INSW Price Yahoo Finance April 8, 2026
Baltic TD3C ($445K/day peak) Baltic Exchange Late March 2026
Shanghai CTFI ($267K/day) Shanghai Shipping Exchange April 2026
DHT Fleet List dhtankers.com/fleetlist April 2026
FRO Fleet List frontline.bm / company filings Q4 2025 report
DHT TC rates & expiries DHT Q4 2025 earnings presentation Feb 2026
FRO bookings & rates FRO Q4 2025 earnings report Feb 2026
Newbuild delivery schedule Company press releases Jan-Mar 2026
AIS vessel positions VesselFinder April 8, 2026
War risk insurance status Lloyd’s List, TradeWinds April 2026
FFA forward rates Baltic Exchange / Clarksons April 8, 2026
INSW valuation data Yahoo Finance / SEC filings April 2026

Key Assumptions

Parameter DHT FRO
Fleet size 24 VLCCs 81 vessels (42V + 21S + 18L)
Revenue days/year 340 340
Spot % 75% 83%
TC weighted avg $52,000/day N/A (varies by segment)
Cash breakeven $25,000/day $25,000/day
Payout ratio 95% 85%
Suezmax rate ratio 0.72x VLCC
LR2 rate ratio 0.58x VLCC
Shares outstanding 161M 223M
D/E ratio 0.38x 1.31x
Annual interest cost ~$20M ~$155M

VLCC-Equivalent Conversions (Rate-Adjusted)

FRO Segment Count Rate Ratio VLCC-eq Contribution
VLCC 42 1.00x 42.0 62.4%
Suezmax 21 0.72x 15.1 22.4%
LR2/Aframax 18 0.58x 10.4 15.5%
Total 81 67.5 100%

Note: VLCC-eq conversions use Q1 2026 rate ratios. These ratios shift with market conditions — in a VLCC-specific crisis, VLCCs may outperform other segments, increasing FRO’s effective VLCC-eq count.


Appendix E: Historical Context — Extreme Rate Events

Event Year Peak VLCC TCE Duration Trigger
Super Cycle 2008 $230,000/day ~6 months at >$150K China demand + supply constraints
Floating Storage Boom 2020 ~$200,000/day ~3 months at >$100K OPEC price war + COVID contango
Hormuz Crisis 2026 $445,000/day Ongoing (2+ weeks) Strait near-closure, military tensions
Iranian Revolution 1979-80 ~$120,000 (inflation-adj) ~12 months Oil embargo, Strait threat

The current $445K/day rate is unprecedented. The 2008 super cycle peaked at $230K and the 2020 floating storage boom at ~$200K. The Hormuz crisis has blown past both records. However, those historical events saw rates normalize within 3-6 months of the peak. The duration of extreme rates is the key uncertainty.

What History Teaches About Post-Crisis Rate Behavior

Phase 2008 Analog 2020 Analog 2026 Expected
Peak-to-half (time) ~4 months ~6 weeks 3-8 months (depending on Hormuz)
Half-to-normal (time) ~8 months ~3 months 6-18 months (Cape rerouting drag)
“New normal” level $40-60K (post-GFC demand shock) $25-35K (fleet oversupply) $70-90K (structural supply deficit)
Key differentiator Demand collapsed (GFC) Supply flooded (OPEC peace) Supply deficit persists (no newbuilds until 2028+)

Critical insight: Unlike 2008 (demand crash) and 2020 (supply flood), the 2026 post-crisis “new normal” is likely to be $70-90K — well above historical averages — because the structural VLCC supply deficit remains intact. The orderbook-to-fleet ratio is at multi-decade lows, and no new orders can deliver before 2028-2029. Even after Hormuz normalizes, the base rate environment should remain highly profitable.

Implied Returns by Post-Crisis “New Normal” Rate

Post-Crisis Rate DHT P/E DHT Yield FRO P/E FRO Yield Assessment
$50K (bear) 12.5x 7.5% 10.2x 8.0% Overvalued — sell on rally
$70K (cautious) 9.2x 10.2% 8.0x 10.5% Fairly valued — hold
$80K (base) 7.6x 12.4% 6.5x 13.0% Modestly undervalued — accumulate
$90K (constructive) 6.8x 14.0% 5.9x 14.4% Undervalued — buy
$100K (supercycle) 6.0x 15.9% 5.2x 16.4% Significantly undervalued — strong buy

Source: Day1Global Framework

Analysis methodology adapted from tech-earnings-deepdive-openclaw-skill by Ruby & Star (Day1Global). Applied modules: A (Revenue Quality), B (Profitability), C (Cash Flow), D (Forward Guidance), E (Competitive Landscape), K (Valuation Models), L (Ownership), O (Accounting Quality). 6 investment perspectives, anti-bias framework, pre-mortem analysis, Hormuz crisis scenario framework, and INSW benchmark comparison applied.

This report is an update to 05_Deep_Dive_Day1Global_Framework.md (March 5, 2026). All tables use the corrected 75% spot parameters established in that report’s March 3 charter strategy correction. New additions: $200K/$250K rate scenarios, Hormuz blended-outcome analysis, INSW value benchmark, and AIS-based vessel positioning.


Report updated April 8, 2026. Prices: DHT $18.57, FRO $35.08. Previous version: March 5, 2026 (05_Deep_Dive). Not investment advice.