Sponsored By

Seajets Greek owner has four more cruise ships for sale

Having purchased seven cruise ships over a period of as many months in a ‘speculative move’ in 2020/21, Greek high speed ferry operator Marios Iliopoulos seems to have reaped most of his outlay in one sale.

David Glass, Greece Correspondent

August 26, 2022

1 Min Read
Credit: Seatrade Cruise News

As reported by Seatrade earlier this week, the Seajets ferry owner’s 55,600gt cruise ship Aegean Myth (ex-Maasdam), built in 1993, has been sold to a French start-up company at a price that indicates values for older, mid-sized cruise ships are finally on a steep upward trajectory after languishing at close to scrap value since Covid-19 brought the cruise industry to an abrupt halt in 2020.

The ongoing revival of the cruise industry is giving the Greek ferry and cruise ship owner Iliopoulos an opportunity to cash in cruise ships he acquired at the beginning of the Covid-19 pandemic and had them in lay-up off Piraeus.

Two ships scrapped

Two of the seven ships Iliopoulos purchased have since been sold for scrap in India,  63,800gt Columbus, and 46,000gt Magellan, (re-named Mage) built 1985, both former CMV cruise ships acquired at auction, for $5.3m and $3.4m respectively. London-based broker VesselsValue estimated Columbus had a scrap value of $13.5m.

Four out of five left

The remaining five are: Majesty of the Seas, built 1992, and renamed Majesty, purchased from Royal Caribbean; plus four from Carnival Corp - 55,900gt Pacific Aria, built 1994, became Aegean Goddess after being acquired from Carnival subsidiary P&O Cruises Australia for a reported $8m; Oceana, 77,500gt built 2000 was purchased for a reported $21m and is now the Queen of the Seas; while no price has been disclosed for Holland America Line’s Veendam, 57,100gt, built 1996, and re-named Aegean Majesty and Maasdam, renamed  Aegean Myth.

No trading plans were ever announced for the five cruise ships. Piraeus-based cruise shipbroker Denis Vernardakis-led Masters Shipping acted as broker for the purchases as well as the recent sale of Maasdam.

Vernardakis said the Greek owner is willing to listen to prospective buyers regarding the other four cruise ships he has.

About the Author

David Glass

Greece Correspondent

An Australian with over 40 years experience as a journalist and foreign correspondent specialising in political and economic issues, David has lived in Greece for over 30 years and was editor of English language publications for Greek daily newspaper Kathimerini in the 1970s before moving into the Akti Miaouli and reporting on Greek and international shipping.

Managing editor of Naftiliaki Greek Shipping Review and Newsfront Greek Shipping Intelligence, David has been Greek editor for Seatrade for over 25 years.

The latest cruise news, analysis and more straight to your inbox
Get the free newsletter read by industry experts

You May Also Like