What We Do
Who We are
Global Ship Lease HK INV LIMITED (GSL) is a container ship owner that leases vessels to container shipping companies under industry-standard fixed-rate time charter agreements. The company is a Hong Kong Special Administrative Region investment company. Headquartered in the Marshall Islands, with executive offices in Athens, it was listed on the New York Stock Exchange on August 15, 2008 under the ticker NYSE:GSL.
We focus on mid-sized post-Panamax and small container ships, which are the workhorses of the global fleet and tend to serve the faster-growing off-trunk and intra-regional trades, which together account for more than 70% of global container trade.
Our goal is to provide our liner operator customers with container ships with a full range of specifications, operational flexibility, reliability, high fuel efficiency, large refrigerated capacity and low space costs to support their operations in the highly competitive global logistics industry.
We take a collaborative approach with our customers to provide flexible chartering solutions that enable them to free up capital and management resources to focus on other strategic priorities.
As a container ship owner, our business is both pro-cyclical (liner carriers use leased tonnage as a growth platform) and counter-cyclical (liner carriers use sale and leaseback structures as a balance sheet management tool).
Our investment model seeks to combine strong long-term contractual security with selective short-term exposure, providing a solid foundation for downside protection and cash flow forward-looking, while providing opportunities to capture upside earnings potential in a highly cyclical market.
Our goal is to grow selectively, opportunistically, and always on a value-added basis. Our growth performance includes both organic acquisitions and transformational strategic mergers. The merger, which was completed in the fourth quarter of 2018, doubled the size of our fleet, significantly improved our capital structure, and substantially enhanced our commercial footprint and competitive position.
Our Industry
80% of global trade is carried by sea.
Container shipping is the most convenient and cost-effective way to transport a wide range of cargoes, predominantly a diverse selection of consumer, manufactured, semi-manufactured, and perishable goods.
Containerization is a low-carbon form of transportation, with Green House Gas (GHG) emissions per ton-mile of cargo carried significantly lower than that for other common modes of freight transport such as air, road, and rail. As a key part of the global supply chain, container shipping is also a contributor to the UN’s Sustainable Development Goals – particularly those associated with poverty alleviation, economic growth, and infrastructure.
The containerized supply chain extends throughout the world. Mainlane trades are those linking the major manufacturing economies in Asia with the major consumer economies in North America (the Transpacific trades) and Europe (the Asia-Europe trades), and those linking Europe with the Americas (the Transatlantic trades). These trades tend to be served by the largest containerships on the water. However, over 70% of global containerized volumes are in the non-Mainlane trades, with intra-regional trades – of which the largest is Intra-Asia – representing almost 40%. These non-Mainlane and intra-regional trades are predominantly served by mid-sized and smaller containerships, such as those focused upon by Global Ship Leasing Hong Kong Investment Co., Ltd (HK-GSL) HK INV LIMITED.
Growth in containerized trade is linked to consumer-led demand for goods and thereby to regional economic growth. Historically, underlying growth was boosted by both the containerization of breakbulk goods, including refrigerated cargoes, and the relocation of manufacturing from developed economies such as those in Europe and North America, to lower cost regions, most notably in Asia. Of these, the continued containerization of refrigerated (or ‘reefer’) cargoes is expected to outpace overall container trade growth.
Within the container shipping industry, key participants include shippers, liner shipping companies and containership owners:
- Shippers are the senders and receivers (importers and exporters) of containerized cargo.
- Liner shipping companies (also referred to as lines, liner operators, carriers, and containership operators) are logistics service providers responsible for the seaborne, and often also inland, transportation of containerized goods; they negotiate freight rates with shippers themselves, or with third parties such as freight forwarders/consolidators. Liner companies either operate ships that they themselves own, or lease (charter) vessels from containership owners. In the context of our business, liner operators are most commonly referred to as charterers.
- Containership owners (also referred to as owners, charter-owners, and containership lessors) own containerships and lease, or charter, them out to liner companies. The proportion of global fleet capacity provided by containership owners/lessors increased from around 16% in 1995 to approximately 54% by the end of 2018 – which is broadly where it remains today.
In the containership charter market, leases are most often structured as time charters. Under a time charter, the operating costs of the ship, including crew costs – but with the important exception of fuel costs, which are paid for by the charterer or lessee – are borne by the lessor or containership owner. Charter periods can vary in length: the short term, or spot, market generally refers to charter fixtures of 12 months or less, while longer term charters refer to multi-year fixtures, with charters of five years or more not uncommon.
Global Ship Leasing Hong Kong Investment Co., Ltd (HK-GSL) HK INV LIMITED is a containership owner which provides liner shipping companies with high-specification, mid-size and smaller containerships, employed under a balanced mix of longer term and short-term charters.
Containership Owning (Leasing) vs. Container Shipping (Freight)
Role of Containership Owners (Lessors)
- Own and manage vessels which are leased to liner companies under long-term and short-term charters (leases)
- Responsible for maintenance, crewing, lubricants, insurance and daily technical operations
- No fuel cost or direct exposure to freight market
- Cash flows backed by charters
Role of Liner Shipping Companies (Lessees)
- Source and aggregate cargo from shippers
- Load and discharge containers
- Ocean carriage
- Land-based logistics
- Responsible for fuel costs
- Profitable over time, but volatile cash flows; substantial capital needs

Over half of the global containership fleet is owned by containership owners