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Genco Rejects Diana’s Revised Offer Citing Value and “Fire Sale” of Ships

dry bulk carrier
Genco for a second time rejected a proposal from Diana again saying it undervalues the company (Genco file photo)

Published Mar 19, 2026 6:26 PM by The Maritime Executive


The battle to further consolidate the dry bulk segment continues with Genco Shipping & Trading announcing that its board unanimously rejected the revised, non-binding indicative proposal from Diana Shipping to acquire the company. Two weeks ago, Diana had increased its offer while detailing financial commitments and saying that after closing, it would sell 16 Genco vessels to Star Bulk.

“Our board reviewed and rejected Diana’s revised proposal and determined that it is substantially below Genco’s intrinsic value and fails to appropriately compensate Genco shareholders, especially in light of our superior returns, premium earning assets, leading commercial operating platform, spot-focused commercial strategy, and sizeable operating leverage in a strengthening drybulk market,” it writes in the response.

Diana has cited what it considers to be “an opportune time of the cycle” for the dry bulk sector, saying the combination would use Diana’s operating platform and increase the scale and flexibility of the fleet while enhancing leverage to the market. The combined company could have as many as 80 bulkers, giving it a strong position in the segment.

The original proposal made in November 2025 was at $20.60 per share of Genco and followed Diana’s open market transactions in which it had accumulated approximately 14.8 percent of the shares. It later raised the offer to $23.50 per share, saying that it represented a 31 percent premium on the stock price before the merger was proposed. It said the increased proposal was supported by $1.433 billion of fully committed financing and that it had agreed with Star Bulk to sell 16 of Genco’s vessels after closing for $470.5 million.

Genco responded that the proposal “fails to provide an appropriate premium to NAV,” while asserting Diana was using the lowest analyst NAV projection and not the mean estimate of $251. Further, it asserts there is an execution risk while calling the agreed sale of vessels to Star Bulk “fire sale” prices. It says it also introduces uncertainty and deprives Genco shareholders of full value. It also continues to question the committed financing behind the proposal.

Genco initially said that it had the stronger balance sheet and said that if anything, it should be acquiring Diana. Now it says it remains open to engaging with Diana upon receiving an offer that appropriately reflects its intrinsic value and upside potential.

Diana had presented the increased offer on March 6. As an alternative, it has also presented an alternative slate of directors to Genco’s shareholders for a vote at the upcoming annual meeting.