IOC’s Q1 profit doubles on higher refining margin
BY PTI14 Aug 2015 2:23 AM GMT
PTI14 Aug 2015 2:23 AM GMT
Indian Oil Corp, the nation’s biggest oil company, on <g data-gr-id="59">Thursday</g> reported <g data-gr-id="34">2.5-fold</g> jump in its June quarter net profit to Rs 6,436 crore as refining margin rose to 7-year high. It reported <g data-gr-id="33">net</g> profit of Rs 6,435.70 crore, or Rs 26.51 per share, for April-June quarter of the current fiscal, compared with Rs 2,522.94 crore, or Rs 10.39 a share, in the year-ago period.
“Variation in profit is majorly due to higher refinery and petrochemical margins,” IOC Chairman B
Ashok told reporters here. It earned $10.77 on turning every barrel of crude oil into fuel in the first quarter of 2015-16, compared with a gross refining margin (GRM) of $2.25 per barrel.
“GRM <g data-gr-id="44">are</g> the highest since June quarter of 2008-09 fiscal when we clocked $16.81 per barrel margin,” he said. Refinery throughput was 5.5 per cent higher at 13.568 million tonnes. “Our refinery margin in the quarter was Rs 6,521 crore as compared to Rs 705 crore in the corresponding period of last financial year. <g data-gr-id="37">Petochem</g> margin rose to Rs 1,875 crore from Rs 719 crore,” he said. GRM was higher because of inventory gain of $4.78 per barrel, he said. Ashok said GRM were high because of inventory gain as well as better operational performance. There was a total of Rs 3,218 crore of inventory gain, resulting from <g data-gr-id="42">valuation</g> of oil rising between the time it is bought, processed and sold.
“There was an inventory gain of Rs 2,395 crore on crude oil in the first quarter as compared to an inventory loss of Rs 426 crore a year ago. <g data-gr-id="36">Also</g> there was an inventory gain of Rs 823 crore on <g data-gr-id="35">product</g>, up from Rs 589 crore in the first quarter of last fiscal,” he said.
He said IOC got most of the revenue loss on sale of public distribution system kerosene and subsidised cooking gas compensated by the government (Rs 1,732.95 crore) and upstream oil firms such as Oil and Natural gas Corp Ltd (ONGC) (Rs 878.84 crore). Company’s borrowings have come down to Rs 52,519 crore as on June 30 from Rs 55,247 crore as on March 31, he said.
Total income from operations dropped 19.2 <g data-gr-id="38">per cent</g> year-on-year (up over 7 <g data-gr-id="39">per cent</g> sequentially) to Rs 1.01 lakh crore due to fall in crude oil prices. Other income during the June quarter plunged 80 per cent to Rs 362.4 crore while tax expenses shot up 169 per cent to Rs 2,764.2 crore compared to same quarter last year. Finance cost also slipped 35.2 per cent to Rs 592.2 <g data-gr-id="40">cr</g> from Rs 913.9 <g data-gr-id="41">cr</g>.
Govt selects five bankers to manage IOC stake sale
Finance Ministry has shortlisted five merchant bankers, including Citibank and Nomura, for disinvestment of 10 per cent stake in Indian Oil Corporation (IOC), which could fetch the exchequer about Rs 9,500 crore. As many as 10 merchant bankers had made a beeline for managing IOC stake sale and the disinvestment department has shortlisted five from them. Besides Citibank and Nomura, others who have been shortlisted include Deutsche Bank, Kotak Bank and J M Financial, sources said. At present, the government holds 68.57% stake in IOC. At the current market price, <g data-gr-id="77">sale</g> of 24.27 <g data-gr-id="75">cr</g> shares, or 10% stake, would fetch the government around Rs 9,500 crore.
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