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Baltic Exchange defends their tanker rates during Iran war as reliable

In a London court document, the Baltic Exchange defended the flagship oil 'tanker benchmark' saying that it accurately reflected the market conditions during the U.S. - Israel conflict with Iran, despite the?disruption of the Strait of Hormuz.

The benchmark is used to 'price and settle billions in freight trades around the world. Its reliability is at issue with Mercuria, one of the largest commodity traders in the world, who claims it has mispriced market.

Mercuria filed a court document on April 30 stating that it was suing the Baltic Exchange for losses caused by incorrect pricing data. The company claimed the price data did not take into account the "effective closure" of the Strait following the start of the conflict in February.

It claimed to have suffered or 'will suffer' losses in the hundreds millions of dollars U.S. on freight and derivative freight contracts related to?the TD3C Route.

In a court document, The Baltic Exchange, which is the largest provider of shipping rates in the world, stated that its indexes still reflect market conditions because sailings continue through the Strait.

In its defence filed on June 16, the Exchange stated that despite the reduced number of transits, the lawful passage was still possible and the panelists were continuing to assess the freight market.

The Baltic believes that input data is representative of 'the market or economic realities and that benchmarks can continue to be published," the company said in a filing that was seen by.

Baltic Exchange panelists are shipbrokers that provide independent assessments of rates for freight which are then used to create indexes. According to the Baltic Exchange website,'shipowners and chartered cannot be panelists.

The London-based Baltic Exchange, which is owned by Singapore's SGX said it had separately conducted "appropriate consultations with members of the Baltic, as well as other stakeholders".

The Baltic is confident in its processes and believes that the claim made by Mercuria lacks'merit'. It will defend this claim?to the maximum extent possible," the company said in a recent statement.

Mercuria declined to comment further, saying it would respond to the Baltic Exchange defence in court. Reporting by Jonathan Saul in London and Robert Harvey; editing by Eliza Hardcastle

(source: Reuters)