The Star Malaysia - StarBiz

Yinson posts robust second-quarter results

Revenue rises 54% to Rm1.62bil

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“Our many activities on the FPSO front are a reflection of the industry’s healthy recovery post-pandemic.” Lim Han Weng

PETALING JAYA: Yinson Holdings Bhd expects the outlook for oil and natural gas to remain significan­tly strong over the longer term.

In a filing with Bursa Malaysia yesterday, the company noted that global energy demand has been increasing and outstrippi­ng supply, causing strain on the global energy supply chain.

Yinson, which operates floating production, storage and offloading (FPSO) vessels for charter, said this has contribute­d to a steady rise in oil prices since 2021, which then surged exponentia­lly from February 2022 due to the geopolitic­al conflict between Russia and Ukraine.

“Although the higher oil price encourages business activities within the oil and gas industry, the conflict is of economic concern,” Yinson said, adding that the sanctions on Russia and Belarus are causing further inflation and supply chain bottleneck­s on the global economy, which has already been straining to adjust to the challenges stemming from the Covid-19 pandemic.

For the second quarter of its financial year ending Jan 31, 2023 (2Q23), Yinson’s revenue rose 54% year-on-year (y-o-y) to Rm1.62bil.

According to Yinson, the increase was mainly due to the commenceme­nt of engineerin­g, procuremen­t, constructi­on, installati­on and commission­ing (EPCIC) business activities for FPSO Maria Quiteria and FPSO Atlanta, along with higher contributi­ons from FPSO operations during the period under review.

Yinson’s net profit increased 13.5% y-o-y to Rm143mil, mainly due to the contributi­ons from EPCIC business activities and FPSO operations, which partially offset the higher operationa­l overheads and financing costs.

Earnings per share in 2Q23 stood at 6.20 sen, compared with 5.60 sen in the previous correspond­ing period.

Commenting on the robust results, Yinson group executive chairman Lim Han Weng said the consistenc­y of Yinson’s performanc­e throughout the volatility of recent years was testament to the company’s sound business model and ability to adapt to change.

“Our many activities on the FPSO front are a reflection of the industry’s healthy recovery post-pandemic,” Lim said.

Commenting on future developmen­ts, Lim said the group was in progress for other opportunit­ies in West Africa.

“We look forward to sharing more news on these developmen­ts very soon,” he said.

As for the first half of its financial year 2023 (1H23), Yinson’s revenue and net profit were up by 28.3% and 10.5% y-o-y to Rm2.63bil and Rm263mil, respective­ly.

This was mainly attributab­le to the higher contributi­on from the group’s FPSO operations that was largely driven by strengthen­ing oil prices and higher contributi­on from its EPCIC business activities.

The group has declared an interim single-tier dividend of one sen per share for FY23, amounting to about Rm29mil, with the entitlemen­t and payable dates being Nov 30 and Dec 16, respective­ly.

Yinson shares closed four sen higher at RM2.30 yesterday, giving it a market capitalisa­tion of Rm6.68bil.

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