
Being a shipowner is no more a dream, own a ship from as little as $1,000, states the homepage of Geneva Dry sponsor Shipfinex, a ship tokenisation platform aiming to revolutionise ship ownership and investment through fractional ownership and blockchain technology.
While much of the dry bulk industry remains fixated on fuel transitions, Vikas Pandey, Shipfinex’s CEO, is looking at a different kind of friction. For Pandey, a former seafarer, the most transformative technology of 2026 won’t be found in the engine room, but in the digital architecture that governs how capital reaches the hull.
Pandey argues that the coming 12 months will be defined by tools that provide shipowners with flexibility and control over their assets, moving beyond traditional fleet-wide relationships.
Pandey believes the industry is undergoing a fundamental shift in how ships are valued. No longer are vessels viewed merely as cogs in a larger corporate machine; they are increasingly assessed as individual economic units.
“Better visibility on vessel performance, emissions, inspections, and earnings is making it easier for owners and capital providers to understand what a specific ship is worth and how it should be financed,” Pandey explains. This granular transparency is directly impacting refinancing timelines and making retrofit decisions more surgical. By treating each ship as its own profit-and-loss centre, owners gain exit opportunities that were previously obscured by the complexities of fleet-wide financing.
A major bottleneck in maritime finance has long been the sluggish pace of compliance and verification. Pandey notes that deals are often stalled not by a lack of demand, but by the “transactional friction” of reporting and audits.
“Technology that makes governance and reporting clearer and more consistent at the vessel level helps reduce uncertainty and allows capital to move with fewer delays,” he says. By digitising these compliance-heavy processes, Shipfinex sees a future where environmental and regulatory requirements become automated data points rather than deal-breaking hurdles.
The most significant breakthrough Pandey anticipates is the emergence of regulated, compliance-gated digital structures. These frameworks standardise how asset-level ownership and transfers are handled, bridging the gap between blockchain theory and maritime practice.
“When vessels are easier to understand and easier to verify, owners gain more flexibility in how they refinance, reallocate, or transfer assets,” Pandey concludes.
There’s just 68 days to go until the 2026 edition of Geneva Dry with delegate passes selling fast.
Held at the Hotel President Wilson on the shore of Lake Geneva on April 28 and 29, the world’s premier commodities shipping conference is readying for its most high calibre gathering to date with organisers anticipating up to 900 delegate signups.
The two-day event now boasts 50 sponsors, with more than 180 companies confirmed attending.
The full Geneva Dry agenda can be accessed here.
Geneva Dry registration, at just $920, can be accessed here.
Special Geneva Dry hotel room rates can be found here.