The National - News

Adnoc Distributi­on fourth-quarter profit rises 6.8% boosted by higher oil prices

- MAHMOUD KASSEM

Adnoc Distributi­on, the UAE’s biggest fuel distributo­r and convenienc­e store operator, recorded a yearon-year 6.8 per cent increase in fourth-quarter profit, boosted by higher oil prices and an increase in fuel sales.

Profit for the three months ending December 31 rose to Dh492.4 million, or Dh0.039 per share, from the end of same period in 2016, the company said in a regulatory filing to Abu Dhabi Securities Exchange, where its shares are traded.

A 16.2 per cent rise in the price of Brent crude in the fourth quarter of last year helped boost income. Full-year 2017 net income climbed 1.3 per cent to Dh1.8 billion from 2016.

“Adnoc Distributi­on had a very successful 2017 with an enhanced level of profitabil­ity and continued healthy margins. Our twin businesses of fuel and non-fuel retail give us ample scope to expand commercial­ly and geographic­ally,” acting chief executive officer Saeed Al Rashdi said.

“With plans to grow market share through strategic expansion into Dubai and Saudi Arabia already advanced, our core UAE market is a testing ground for a number of planned new initiative­s to grow margins and deliver an enhanced customer experience.”

It is the first quarterly results announceme­nt from the Abu Dhabi company since it sold shares to the public in December. Adnoc Distributi­on’s board of directors proposed a dividend of Dh0.058 per share, totalling Dh735m.

The “results and dividend were generally in line with expectatio­ns with no major surprises,” said Hatem Alaa, head of health care and consumer research at the Egyptian investment bank EFG Hermes.

Mr Alaa said he expected Adnoc Distributi­on profit to rise to Dh2.05bn in 2018.

Adnoc Distributi­on, which is valued at Dh31.1bn, sold 10 per cent of the company in the share float, the first listing on the Abu Dhabi index in more than six years.

In January, the company said it will open its first service stations in Dubai and Saudi Arabia this year.

It plans to enter the kingdom, the largest economy in the region, through a franchise model, which will be the first of its kind for the fuel distributo­r.

Expansion into Dubai, the only emirate where the company has no physical presence, is now feasible following changes to how fuel is priced were introduced across the UAE in August 2015, Mr Al Rashdi told

The National last month. Adnoc Distributi­on, which currently operates 360 service stations and 235 Oasis convenienc­e stores in the UAE, said total fuel volumes rose 6.5 per cent in the last three months of 2017 to 2.63bn litres compared to the same quarter of 2016.

The best seller for Adnoc Distributi­on is 95 unleaded petrol of which it sold 1.17bn litres in the last quarter of 2017, compared to 1.16bn in the year-earlier period.

It is the first quarterly results announceme­nt from the company since it sold shares to the public in December

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