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Energy & Commodities

10 things to know about freight data  

Victor Laurent 23 Jun 2026

Global freight markets move almost everything, from crude oil and refined fuels to LNGmetals, grains, and manufactured goods. But freight data is no longer just operational information for shipping desks. Today, it has become a critical source of market intelligence for traders, risk managers, analysts, and financial institutions. 

As commodity flows become more volatile and geopolitics continue reshaping global trade routes, freight data is increasingly used to identify arbitrage opportunities, monitor supply chain disruptions, and understand where markets may move next.  

In this article, we break down 10 essential things to know about freight data, how freight markets work, and how Parameta Solutions supports firms with forward-looking freight intelligence across global tanker markets. 

What is freight data? 

Freight data refers to pricing, routing, vessel, and market activity information used to track and analyse the transportation of commodities by sea. 

This includes: 

  • Freight rates 
  • Vessel availability 
  • Shipping routes 
  • Forward freight curves 
  • Tanker market pricing 
  • Freight derivatives (FFAs) 
  • Spot and forward market activity 

Freight data is widely used across oil and gas trading, commodities, macro investing, shipping, and risk management.  

Understanding freight markets, tanker pricing and shipping data

1. Freight is a market, not just shipping cost

Freight behaves like a financial market. Rates are continuously driven by supply and demand, vessel availability, commodity flows, and geopolitical events. 

Freight markets are highly volatile, tradable, and increasingly data-driven. That makes freight intelligence valuable not only for logistics teams, but also for commodity traders, hedge funds, and energy market participants.  

Freight costs directly impact commodity pricing, trade economics, and arbitrage opportunities across global energy markets. 

2. Nearly 90% of global trade moves by sea

Shipping underpins the global economy. Commodities are rarely produced and consumed in the same location, creating the need for global transportation networks. 

Oil produced in the Middle East may be refined in Asia. Iron ore mined in Brazil may be consumed in China. LNG cargoes regularly shift destinations based on regional demand and pricing dynamics.  

Freight data helps firms understand how global commodity supply chains operate in real time. 

3. There is no single freight market

Freight markets are highly segmented. Different vessel classes transport different cargoes and operate under distinct market dynamics. 

Main freight market segments

  • Dirty tankers: used primarily for transporting crude oil and fuel oil. 
  • Clean tankers: used for refined products such as gasoline, diesel, and jet fuel. 
  • Dry bulk: used for commodities like coal, grains, and iron ore. 
  • Gas carriers: used for LNG and LPG transportation. 
  • Containers: used for manufactured goods and consumer products.  

4. Freight demand depends on “ton-miles”

One of the most important concepts in freight markets is ton-miles. 

What are ton-miles? 

Ton-miles measure: cargo volume × shipping distance 

This means freight demand is driven not only by how much cargo moves, but also by how far it travels.  

Example: a crude cargo moving from Russia to India creates significantly more freight demand than the same cargo moving from Russia to Europe because vessels remain occupied for longer periods. 

5. Geopolitical disruptions can move freight markets instantly

Freight markets react rapidly to disruptions in key shipping routes. 

Events affecting the Strait of HormuzRed SeaSuez Canal, or Panama Canal can immediately reduce available vessel supply and increase freight rates.  

Why freight volatility matters 

Higher freight costs can directly impact: 

  • Oil prices 
  • Refining economics 
  • Commodity arbitrage 
  • Supply chain costs 
  • Regional energy pricing 

All your OTC data needs in one place

6. Freight markets have their own pricing language

Freight pricing uses several specialised benchmarks and market conventions. 

Common freight market terms 

  • Worldscale (WS): a benchmark pricing methodology widely used in tanker markets. 
  • TCE (Time Charter Equivalent): measures daily vessel earnings. 
  • FFA (Forward Freight Agreement): a financial derivative based on future freight rates. 
  • Spot freight: the current market price for shipping cargo today. 
  • Time charter: a longer-term vessel lease agreement.  

7. Forward freight agreements are critical market indicators

Forward Freight Agreements (FFAs) allow participants to trade future freight rates without owning physical vessels. 

These contracts are widely used by: 

  • Commodity traders 
  • Shipping firms 
  • Financial institutions 
  • Hedge funds 
  • Energy companies 

FFAs help firms hedge freight exposure, speculate on future shipping costs, and analyse forward market expectations.  

8. Freight data helps identify arbitrage opportunities 

Commodity traders constantly assess whether it is profitable to move commodities between regions. Freight costs are central to that calculation. 

If freight rates rise too far, certain trade routes may no longer be economically viable. If rates fall, new arbitrage opportunities can emerge.  

Example: a crude trade between the US Gulf Coast and Asia may only remain open if shipping costs allow the delivered barrel to remain competitive. 

9. Freight markets are deeply physical

Behind every freight price is a real vessel operating under real-world constraints. 

Ships can cost more than $100 million to build, take years to enter service, and remain highly sensitive to: 

  • Weather 
  • Port congestion 
  • Canal disruptions 
  • Vessel positioning 
  • Maintenance 
  • Tank cleaning requirements  

This physical complexity is one of the main reasons freight markets can become extremely volatile. 

10. Freight data is more powerful when combined with commodity pricing data

Freight data becomes significantly more valuable when analysed alongside crude oil, refined products, and broader commodities data. 

Combining freight curves with underlying commodity pricing provides a more complete view of: 

  • Trade economics 
  • Arbitrage windows
  • Supply chain risk 
  • Regional market dislocations 
  • Macro market trends  

For macro investors, freight data can also act as a leading indicator of global economic activity and trade flows. 

Parameta Solutions freight data offering 

Parameta Solutions provides forward-looking freight market data across key global tanker routes. 

Our freight offering includes: 

  • Dirty tanker curves 
  • Clean tanker curves 
  • OTC freight market data
  • Forward freight curves 
  • Real-time freight market intelligence 
  • Multiple pricing methodologies and delivery formats 

The offering covers major global energy hubs across: 

  • US Gulf Coast 
  • Northwest Europe 
  • Mediterranean 
  • West Africa 
  • Middle East 
  • Far East and Asia-Pacific  

Why OTC freight data matters 

Unlike traditional benchmark indices that focus on backward-looking spot assessments, OTC freight data provides a forward-looking market view based on: 

  • Live broker activity 
  • Trades 
  • Bids and offers 
  • Market colour 
  • Forward market positioning  

This helps market participants better understand where freight markets may move next. 

Freight data FAQs

What is freight market data used for?

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Freight market data is used for pricing analysis, risk management, hedging, arbitrage identification, logistics optimisation, and market intelligence across global commodity markets.

What is a Forward Freight Agreement (FFA)?

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An FFA is a financial derivative that allows firms to trade or hedge future freight rates without owning physical vessels.

What is the difference between dirty and clean tankers?

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Dirty tankers transport crude oil and fuel oil, while clean tankers transport refined petroleum products such as gasoline and diesel.

Why are freight rates volatile?

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Freight rates are highly sensitive to vessel availability, commodity demand, geopolitics, weather disruptions, congestion, and trade route changes.

How does freight data affect oil markets?

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Freight costs directly influence the economics of moving crude oil and refined products between regions. Rising freight costs can increase delivered commodity prices and reshape arbitrage flows.

Why freight data matters now?

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As global trade flows evolve and energy markets become more interconnected, freight intelligence is becoming an increasingly important source of market insight.

For firms operating across energy and commodities markets, freight data can provide critical visibility into:

  • Global supply chain dynamics
  • Trade flow changes
  • Arbitrage opportunities
  • Shipping disruptions
  • Forward market expectations

Parameta Solutions combines freight market expertise with forward-looking OTC market intelligence to help clients navigate increasingly complex global commodity markets.

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