Malaysia's Petronas warns of challenging fourth quarter amid volatile oil prices
Malaysian state-owned energy giant Petronas swung to a third-quarter loss on Friday and warned the remainder of the year would remain tough due to prolonged low oil prices and demand hampered by coronavirus restrictions.
The world's fourth-biggest LNG exporter reported a loss of 3.4 billion ringgit ($836 million) for the July to September period, against a profit of 7.4 billion ringgit in the same quarter last year.
"Amid the fluid operating environment brought about by the pandemic as well as prolonged volatility of oil prices, Petronas is adopting a cautious outlook and anticipates that the remainder of 2020 will be challenging," Tengku Muhammad Taufik, president and group chief executive officer said in a statement.
"We expect our performance to be continuously affected by the volatility of oil prices aggravated by the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic," he added.
Petronas, or Petroliam Nasional Berhad, said it would continue to uphold "disciplined capital and operational spending" and preserve liquidity to ensure business sustainability.
The firm's second straight quarterly loss was attributed to a higher impairment charge on assets and higher tax expenses due to de-recognition of deferred tax assets and a lower oil and gas price outlook.
Excluding the impairment loss, Petronas recorded a profit of 2.6 billion ringgit on revenue which fell 25% to 41.1 billion ringgit.
The company said it was on track for commercial operations to begin at its $27 billion Pengerang Integrated Complex in the southern Malaysian state of Johor.
A restart of the refinery and petrochemical plants is planned for the first quarter, the firm said.
The project, in which Saudi Aramco is a partner, suffered a fire in March that killed five people. ($1 = 4.0680 ringgit)
(Reporting by Mei Mei Chu; additional reporting by A. Ananthalakshmi Editing by David Goodman and Elaine Hardcastle)

- U.S. ethane exports to China hit new roadblock with license requirement
- Australia clears Woodside to run North West Shelf LNG plant to 2070
- Egypt agrees to buy up to 160 LNG cargoes through 2026
- Shell to add up to 12 MMt of additional LNG capacity by 2030
- Woodfibre LNG sets new benchmark as world’s first net-zero LNG export facility
Comments