Economy
Sabic Slumps to Lowest Quarterly Net in a Decade

(Bloomberg) —Saudi Basic Industries Corp. posted its lowest quarterly profit in at least a decade as the chemical maker took an impairment charge and cheaper oil put pressure on its product prices.
Net income slumped 86% from the previous year to 830 million riyals ($221 million), while sales fell 23% for the same period to 33.7 billion riyals, the company known as Sabic said. Sabic took a 1.5 billion riyal impairment charge on its 25% holding in Swiss chemical manufacturer Clariant AG, it said in a statement.
Read: Saudi Aramco Pushing to Complete IPO in 2019
Saudi Arabia expects chemical makers like Sabic to form the basis for new industries in manufacturing and consumer goods and hopes they will provide jobs and reduce the economy’s reliance on oil exports. State oil giant Saudi Aramco is buying Sabic to become one of the world’s biggest refiners and chemical producers. Oil prices, which dropped about 9% in the quarter, are hindering Saudi growth and the government’s ability to meet spending demands.
Sabic shares declined as much as 2.3% within the first two minutes of trading in Riyadh.
“A challenging environment due to slower global growth coupled with additional new capacities together with a decline in oil prices exerted a downward pressure on petrochemical prices in the third quarter of 2019,” Yousef Al-Benyan, the company’s chief executive officer, said in the statement. “We are confident about the long-term prospects of the industry and remain focused” on new projects.
Lower Growth
With economic growth projected to be lower this year than last, Sabic expects that the challenges to earnings in the third quarter will persist for the rest of the year. The company continued to review the value of all its assets as part of its annual planning.
Read: Saudi Arabia expanding indigenous defence industrial capabilities
“We think the next quarter could be worse,” Pritish Devassy, head of equity research at Al Rajhi Capital, said in an email. “Next quarter could be the bottom for earnings for the petrochemicals sector.”
The attacks on Saudi Aramco’s oil facilities in September will have no significant material financial impact on Sabic and “if there will be an impact it will be felt in the fourth quarter,” al-Benyan told reporters in Riyadh. The attacks are estimated to affect about 400,000 to 500,000 tons of petroleum products, he said.
Sabic’s profit in the second quarter was also at a 10-year low, when the company results missed analysts estimates that net would be at least 1.77 billion riyals.
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