Commodity trader Mercuria is suing the Baltic Exchange, the world's top provider of benchmark shipping indices, over losses it said were caused by oil tanker pricing data that did not account for
Commodity trader Mercuria is suing the Baltic Exchange, the world's top provider of benchmark shipping indices, over losses it said were caused by oil tanker pricing data that did not account for the effective closure of the Strait of Hormuz, a court filing showed.
The U.S.-Israeli war with Iran, which began on February 28, has left hundreds of ships and 20,000 seafarers stranded inside the Gulf and unable to sail through the vital chokepoints with only a few ships willing to make the voyages daily.
In a court filing dated April 30 and submitted through England's high court, Swiss-headquartered Mercuria - one of the world's top energy and commodity traders - said the Baltic Exchange continued to publish its benchmark crude tanker index, known as TD3C, despite the effective closure of the strait.
The TD3C route is based on voyages from the Gulf to China.
"The result has been ongoing extreme volatility in the pricing of TD3C, which no longer accurately or reliably represents the underlying market it is intended to measure," Mercuria said. Consequently, that had distorted and disrupted shipping and freight derivatives markets that rely on the index.
Freight forward agreements allow investors to take positions on freight
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