Saudi Basic Industries Corp (Sabic), one of the world’s largest petrochemicals groups, reported a 13.2 per cent drop in first-quarter net profit on Monday, extending a profit slump but beating analysts’ forecasts.
Sabic made a net profit of 3.41 billion Saudi riyals in the three months to March 31, down from 3.93bn riyals in the year-earlier period, the company said in a bourse statement.
Five analysts polled by Reuters had on average forecast that Sabic would make a quarterly profit of 2.84bn riyals.
Sabic, which is 70 per cent state-owned, attributed the profit fall to lower average sales prices, noting that the net loss for the metals segment amounted to 725 million riyals. It said the cost of sales dropped during the period.
Lower oil prices have adversely affected Sabic’s earnings, with the company’s profits falling in the six preceding quarters, Reuters data shows.
The company’s results are closely tied to oil prices and global economic growth because its products – plastics, fertilisers and metals – are used extensively in construction, agriculture, industry and the manufacturing of consumer goods.
Saudi’s petrochemical companies, which benefited from subsidised gas feedstock prices versus competitors from non-energy producing countries, have said government changes to energy and gas feedstock prices announced in December will raise their costs.
From the first quarter of 2016, Sabic’s total annual costs before minority interests will rise by around 5 per cent.
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