Higher
costs make Petrobras first quarter profit drops 38%
MercoPress
MONTEVIDEO
Petroleumworld.com
05 14 07
Petrobras Brazil`s government owned hydrocarbons company said first-quarter
profit fell 38% as oil prices dropped and costs rose. Net income
dropped to 4.13 billion reais (2.05 billion US dollars), 6.68 billion
reais in the first quarter of 2006, and net sales rose 8.4 % to 38.98
billion reais.
“
Costs are rising and the company doesn`t raise prices to cover them” said
Luiz Otavio Broad, oil and gas analyst with Agora CTVM, Brazil`s
largest stock brokerage.
While Petrobras hasn`t raised Brazilian gasoline and diesel prices
for 20 months, aviation fuel, fuel oil and naphtha fell along with
an 8.3% slide in world oil prices. Meanwhile, the cost of oil platforms,
labor, and steel pipe and other goods and services are soaring with
Petrobras` operational costs climbing 58% in the quarter. Oil prices
averaged 58.23 US dollars p/b in the quarter, compared with 63.48
a year earlier.
Petrobras Chief Financial Officer Almir Guilherme Barbassa said
the board approved a 2-for-1 stock split on the company`s American
depositary receipts. According to a statement sent to U.S. and Brazilian
regulators, after the split, each ADR will represent two Brazilian
shares of Petrobras, down from four currently.
Last April 11, Brazilian president Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva, told
investors they had to accept the government`s plan to use the company
to promote its economic development goals. Lula spoke at an event
where Petrobras signed a contract with a Rio de Janeiro shipyard.
Lula da Silva won election for the first time in October 2002 on
a platform promising to revive Brazil`s ship-building industry. Petrobras
is spending 2.5 billion US dollars to build 26 tankers and support
ships in Brazil.
The Lula da Silva administration government has also moved to have
Petrobras expand its electricity generation capacity and gas-pipeline
system to reduce the chance of energy shortages. The gasoline and
diesel- price freeze has helped control consumer-price inflation,
and laws requiring Petrobras to use alternative fuels -- a quarter
of all gasoline sold in Brazil is made up of ethanol -- have helped
farmers.
Barbassa said the company has no reason to increase prices of its
main products, such as gasoline and diesel fuel, because the trend
for prices doesn`t justify it.
"We don`t change our domestic fuel prices on every fluctuation
in world prices," he said in an interview. "I see no reason
to raise or lower prices right now."
Earnings before
interest, taxes depreciation and amortization, or Ebitda, the most
common measure of the company`s ability to generate
cash from operations, dropped 22% to 11 billion reais from 14.1 billion
reais a year earlier."
However Barbassa said margins may remain lower than in the past
as the company moves to expand abroad. Commercial refining margins
at its Pasadena, California refinery will be lower than in Brazil
as the company does not have its own source of crude oil and will
buy from the market, including Petrobras.
“Investors approve efforts to expand,`` said Paulo Roberto
Costa, head of refining at Petrobras, adding that “margins
on trading are lower but if we want to expand we have to go into
these businesses”.
Petrobras` domestic oil and gas production rose 3% from a year earlier.
The company produced 1.8 million barrels a day compared with 1.75
million last year. Total world output climbed 1% to 2.31 million
barrels a day.
A decline in the value of Brazil`s real against the dollar also
boosted financial costs, reducing the local-currency value of dollar-denominated
oil and fuels exports. Currency exchange- related losses were 736
million reais compared with a gain of 270 million reais in the year-earlier
period.
Brazil`s real averaged 2.11 to the dollar in the first quarter of
2007, which is 3.7% less than the 2.19 to the dollar average a year
earlier.
MercoPress:
May 13, 2007
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