Members Login
Username 
 
Password 
    Remember Me  
Post Info TOPIC: SPC


Veteran

Status: Offline
Posts: 581
Date:
RE: SPC


Singapore Petroleum
First oil production at Oyong field

Story: SPC reported first oil production at its 40%-held Oyong field in
Indonesia.  The field is expected to produce 8,000-10,000 barrels of oil
per day (bpd).

Point: The development is largely within our expectation.  Although SPCs E&P operations will benefit from our higher crude price assumptions, majority of earnings are still dominated by refining. Therefore, SPCs sum-of-parts target price is upgraded just marginally to S$6.70, from S$6.60 previously, as we have upgraded oil price assumptions but maintained refining margin assumptions.

Relevance: SPCs share price rally this year was mainly fuelled by the
strong rise in refining margin.  However, while refining margin has dropped more than 50% from this years peak, SPCs share price fell by only 6%.  As we expect the margin to remain weak during the next few months, we foresee no share price catalyst.  With just 4% upside to our target price, we maintain our Hold rating.


__________________
Fortune favors the Bold


Member

Status: Offline
Posts: 69
Date:

From BT - 25 Sep 2007


SPC expected to quadruple gas, oil output by 2009

It will see total output of 11,000 bpd as Oyong's production stabilises

By RONNIE LIM


WITH first oil starting to flow from its second Indonesian producing oilfield last weekend, Singapore Petroleum Company (SPC) is set to quadruple its oil/gas production to 11,000 barrels per day(bpd) by 2009, CEO Koh Ban Heng told BT.

SPC's latest 'oil strike' comes from the Oyong field, where after the initial ramp-up, oil production is expected to stabilise at between 8,000 and 10,000 bpd. Its 40 per cent share in Oyong will give SPC between 3,200 and 4,000 bpd.

'First oil at Oyong is a significant event for SPC,' an elated Mr Koh said. 'It's the company's second producing asset, and affirms our strategy to develop existing discoveries. With Oyong coming on-stream, our current oil production will be more than doubled and it will contribute positively to the company in the longer term.'

SPC's share of Oyong oil production of 3,200-4,000 bpd will double the 2,800 bpd which it currently gets from its first producing field at Kakap.

In market reaction to the news, SPC's share price shot to an intraday high of $6.50, before finally closing at $6.45, which was 20 cents or 3.2 per cent higher.

'When gas production starts at Oyong in 2009, SPC should get another 4,000 bpd of oil equivalent,' Mr Koh said. This will bring SPC's total oil production by then to around 11,000 bpd, he added.

On gas development there, the company said in a statement yesterday that 'front-end engineering for the development of the gas reserves is currently underway'.

Under a gas sales agreement with PT Indonesia Power, the gas will be transported via a 55km pipeline to an onshore processing facility adjacent to the Grati power station in East Java.

Mr Koh said that the expected gas flow of 60 million standard cubic feet per day (mscfd) will give SPC about 24 mscfd, or another 4,000 bpd of oil equivalent.

The Wortel gas discovery, also located nearby in the same Sampang production sharing contract area as Oyong, 'could potentially be incorporated into the Oyong gas development', SPC said, adding that further appraisal of Wortel has been planned in the first half of next year.

SPC's scaling up of its upstream oil and gas exploration and production (E&P) activities - even as it improves the competitiveness of its Jurong Island refinery - is aimed at making SPC a more integrated oil and gas company.

'We need to grow E&P to balance our reliance on downstream refining which is very volatile,' Mr Koh said in an interview with BT earlier this month.


'By 2010, we are targeting E&P to contribute up to 30 per cent of revenue,' he said.



__________________
ah Kian


Member

Status: Offline
Posts: 69
Date:

SPC, dbs upgraded HOLD from Fully Valued with target price $6 (from $5.20)

-   Story: For 2Q07, Reuters' Singapore Refining Margin (Dubai crack) has been surprisingly strong, underpinning our positive view on the refining industry. Though the margin is expected to soften, we foresee it to remain at healthy levels of US$5-7/bbl in 2H07.


-  Point: Since SPC share price is closely related to refining Story: For 2Q07, Reuters' Singapore Refining Margin (Dubai crack) has been surprisingly strong, underpinning our positive view on the refining industry. Though the margin is expected to soften, we foresee it to remain at healthy levels of US$5-7/bbl in 2H07. margin, we see limited upside for from current level as we expect refining margin to move toward its norm. Nonetheless, SPC's downstream refining and trading business should continue to be a strong cash generator providing investment capex for upstream E&P projects as well as generous dividend for shareholders.


-   Relevance: To reflect the strong refining margin, we have upgraded our FY07-08F net profit by 5% and 10%, respectively, and subsequently upgraded our target price to S$6.0 (sum-ofparts). Although SPC shares are currently trading close to our target price, we upgrade our recommendation from Fully Valued to Hold for its attractive dividend yield of 6.2% and potential upside surprise from the hurricane season in the US in 3Q07, which could drive up refining margin worldwide.


- Stronger-than-expected refining margin in 2Q07. Refining margin in 2Q07 has shown extraordinary strength, as refined product prices were led by gasoline gains, which outpaced crude. Reuters' Singapore refining margin (Dubai crack) - a benchmark for refining margin in the region - averaged US$9.55/bbl in 2Q07, up sharply from US$6.82/bbl in 1Q07 and 7% higher y-o-y. YTD, the benchmark averaged US$8.2/bbl versus US$6.8/bbl for the same period last year.


- Expect softer margin in 2H07. After reaching this year's peak of US$11.5/bbl in mid-May, Reuters' Refining Margin has softened and is hovering at US$8-9/bbl, still much higher than 2005-06 average of US$6.2/bbl. As most global refineries return to full operation from previous scheduled shutdown, we expect refining margin to move toward its norm, to be in the US$5-7/bbl range.


- SPC share price closely related to refining margin, according to historical data. As such, we expect limited upside from current share price as we expect refining margin to soften in 2H07. Historical data during 2004-06 indicate that the strong refining margin exceeding the norm is unlikely to last more than two consecutive quarters. However, upside risk to our assumptions is the potentially active hurricane season in 3Q07 that could cause refining capacity outage in the US Gulf Coast, thereby driving up refining margin across the world.



__________________
ah Kian


Member

Status: Offline
Posts: 69
Date:

From Business Times  - 19 Jun 2007


S'pore Refining Co restarts refinery crude unit


Singapore Refining Co (SRC) said on Tuesday that its 90,000 barrels per day (bpd) crude distillation unit at its 285,000-bpd refinery is operating at full capacity following regular maintenance.

'It's running at full capacity,' said a spokeswoman, adding the unit had started up last week. The unit had been shut for around 4 weeks from mid-May.


The company is a joint venture between Singapore Petroleum Co (SPC) and US major Chevron Corp. SRC last had a major shutdown in September 2006, when the 60,000-bpd No 3 CDU was closed for upgrading works in the related residual fluid catalytic cracker (RFCC).


Including the SRC turnaround, Asia-Pacific oil refiners took 1.15 million bpd of crude capacity offline in the second quarter, or about 4.7 per cent of their total, according to Reuters data based on known maintenance works.

That was 1.3 percentage points more than last year, which was already deeper than usual as refiners retooled after maximising runs in the aftermath of hurricanes in the US Gulf Coast.



__________________
ah Kian


Member

Status: Offline
Posts: 69
Date:

Extracted from Reuters news 6 jun 2007 By Richard Valdmanis

Oil companies are reluctant to spend money to boost North American fuel production capacity, fearful that demand could slump under the weight of record gasoline prices, executives and analysts said at the Reuters Energy Summit in New York and Washington this week.


The situation, along with growing fears that fuel producers are unable to smoothly run their plants due to tougher environmental standards, signals that the continent may have to get used to high pump prices and rely increasingly on fuel shipments from abroad.

"We're not building refineries in the U.S. for economic reasons," said Jeff Morris, CEO of independent refiner Alon USA Energy Inc. 

"What's wrong with having the 500,000 barrel per day export refinery in Saudi Arabia selling gasoline to the United States? The only thing I see fundamentally wrong is the security issue. That is beyond the scope of a refiner," he said.

Experts said federal regulations requiring low sulfur fuels have made refineries increasingly complex, meaning small operating glitches could take out larger swaths of production.



__________________
ah Kian


Member

Status: Offline
Posts: 69
Date:

Business Times - 04 Jun 2007


SPC eyes upstream buys


SINGAPORE - Singapore Petroleum Co Ltd (SPC) is looking for acquisitions to boost its limited oil and gas assets, with a target to lift production to 150,000 barrels per day (bpd) to feed its refinery.

SPC could pay up to $1 billion (US$654 million) for a company with 'good oil reserves' given its healthy cashflow, with the aim of increasing SPC's output from current levels of 2,600 bpd, said chairman Choo Chiau Beng. He did not give a timeframe for the target.

'Our top preference is acquisitions. You pay and you know the risks. When you explore, the risks are higher,' Mr Choo said in an interview in the Reuters Energy Summit.

'But these days, you have to pay top dollar for upstream assets.'

He said SPC was looking at fellow countries in the Association of South East Asian Nations (Asean), as well as further afield in Australia, India and the Middle East, but declined to name any potential targets.

'There are many areas underexplored in the Asean region. Even Indonesia is not fully explored, as well as Myanmar and Cambodia. There is a lot of sense for Asean neighbours to work closely together to grow business and production,' he added.

SPC has to date six exploration and production assets in Asia Pacific, including T06-3 in the Bass Basin in Australia, Block 101-100/04 Song Hong Basin in offshore Vietnam, Block B in offshore Cambodia, the Sampang PSC offshore East Java and the Kakap PSC in West Natuna Sea, Indonesia.

SPC's current gearing ratio is near zero, having fetched a net profit of $112 million in the first quarter. Its shares rose 5 cents to $5.40 in afternoon trade.

But the company seemed less aggressive in growing its 285,000-bpd Singapore Refining Co (SRC), a joint-venture between SPC and US major Chevron Corp, even though refining margins have held strong in the face of an expanding Asian sector.


'There are already a lot of refinery projects around the world and tightness in engineering contracts has caused projects to be delayed. And some projects may not even fly,' Mr Choo said.

'Downstream is more politically sensitive than upstream as it affects the consumers' pockets.'



__________________
ah Kian


Member

Status: Offline
Posts: 69
Date:

From Business Times - 15 May 2007


SRC to start plant revamp


 

US oil giant Chevron and home-grown Singapore Petroleum Company (SPC) are going ahead with building their clean fuels project, starting with a US$81 million revamp of the hydro-sulphuriser plant at their joint venture Singapore Refining Company complex to produce ultra-low sulphur diesel (ULSD) of Euro-IV specification.


BT understands that this represents just the first phase of their planned SRC upgrading project - also intended to produce ultra-low sulphur gasoline (ULSG) - which Chevron's head of global refining Jeet Bindra earlier said could cost as much as US$400 million to build.

Listed SPC said in a statement to SGX after market close yesterday that SRC has awarded an engineering, procurement and construction contract worth about US$81 million to JGC Corporation for the revamp of the hydro-desulphuriser.

'Upon completion, SRC would be able to produce diesel that meets Euro-IV specifications. It will enhance SRC's diesel clean fuels capability and enable the company to meet stricter diesel specifications when these are implemented.'

Work will start this quarter and is expected to be completed in early-2009. There will be minimal disruptions to the 285,000 barrels SRC refinery at Jurong Island during construction, the company said.

SPC shares rose 30 cents, or over six per cent, to S$5.10 yesterday even as crude oil rallied to above US$67 a barrel.

As part of the clean fuels project, the SRC partners had earlier considered various options, including desulphurisation units, splitters, catalytic reformers and cokers, and sources had signalled to BT that more clean plant investments are in the pipeline.

Apart from ULSD, the project will eventually enable SRC to produce greater volumes of ULSG with lower benzene content as well for 'green' markets like Australia, the US and Europe.

In Singapore, use of ULSD became mandatory since December 2005, although there is no legislated deadline yet for ULSG use here.

Some of the neighbouring markets in Asia like Indonesia, Malaysia and Vietnam are also increasingly looking at the use of such clean fuels.

Just last week, Chevron officials, including vice-chairman Peter Robertson, who met Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong during his visit to the US, signalled that the company was planning to expand its operations in Singapore.


Goldman Sachs last week started coverage on SPC with a 'buy' rating and a 12-month target price of S$6.10, saying that the market has under-appreciated the oil-and-gas refining firm's value. 'We expect the stock to rebound on the back of current strong refining margins and a robust refining outlook estimated for 2007-2008,' it said.

'Further, we expect the rising upstream contribution to result in a less cyclical and more diversified earnings profile,' Goldman Sachs added, especially as SPC's Oyong field in Indonesia is expected to start producing next month.



__________________
ah Kian


Member

Status: Offline
Posts: 69
Date:

Submitted to sgx
Choo Chiau Beng bought  100,000 shares from open market at  $4.72 on 9May 2007.

__________________
ah Kian
KK


Guru

Status: Offline
Posts: 1236
Date:
SPC - BT


28-Apr-07

SPC's share of Oyong oil, gas output rises 10%


SINGAPORE Petroleum Company's share of oil and gas from the Oyong field in Indonesia - which is scheduled to start producing in June - has now increased by another 10 per cent to about 6,575 barrels daily of crude oil alone, from just below 6,000 bpd expected earlier.

This follows a decision by the Indonesian government nominee not to take up a 10 per cent stake in the Sampang production sharing contract (PSC) area in which the Oyong field is situated. No reasons were given for this.

Oyong will be listed SPC's second producing field after Kakap in Indonesia, which currently gives it 2,540 bpd of oil equivalent.

SPC yesterday said that nominee company PT Petrogas Oyong Jatim - a subsidiary of PT Petrogas Wira Jatim, a limited liability company set up by the Provincial Government of East Java - has decided not to take up the 10 per cent Indonesian Participation interest.

Under the terms of the Sampang PSC (as with other Indonesian production sharing contracts) the Indonesian government has the right to nominate an Indonesian entity to participate in the interest.
As a result, SPC's interest in Sampang PSC remains at 40 per cent, instead of being reduced to 36 per cent.

SPC earlier said in its latest annual report that 'an interim analysis from the operator of the Oyong field suggests that the mid-range recoverable oil and gas volumes for the field are six million barrels and 97 billion standard cubic feet respectively'.

This means that for oil alone, SPC's 40 per cent share will give it about 6,575 bpd instead of the earlier expected 5,917 bpd.

Phase 2 gas development of Oyong, expected to start next year, will include construction of a 60 km pipeline from the field to a power plant at Grati owned by PT Indonesia Power.
The Oyong partners expect to sell between 40 and 60 billion British thermal units per day under this deal.


__________________


Member

Status: Offline
Posts: 69
Date:
RE: SPC


Q1 2007 Results

Profit up 65%, earned a net profit of $112.1mil.

EPS for Q1'07   21.71c (1Q'06: 11.61c) (whole '06: 55.23c)
NAV / share      $3.26   (   '06 : $3.06)


The SPC Group recorded a sales turnover of $1.9 billion and a net profit after tax and minority interests (PATMI) of $112.1 million for 1Q 2007.Crude prices remained firm due to the unresolved Iran nuclear issue. Product prices were stronger as well due to the strong demand and the relatively low global inventories.The Group handled a total sales volume of 20.5 million barrels during the quarter. This was 4.6% lower than the 21.5 million barrels handled for 1Q 2006 due to lower crude and products trading volume. Average realisation for the period of US$61.13 per barrel was lower than the average realisation of US$63.49 per barrel for 1Q 2006.As a result of the lower volume and realisation, the revenue of $1.9 billion for 1Q 2007 was 12.6% lower than the corresponding period for 2006.Refining margins for the quarter improved considerably due to the firm demand for products. The Group was able to achieve an average refining margin of about US$7.00 per barrel for the quarter.[TC : Q2'06 $8 ; Q3'06 $4; first half '06 $6; second half '06 $3] The share of results from joint ventures improved due to the better performance of the joint ventures and the write-back of deferred tax for a Singapore incorporated joint venture.With respect to segment performance, downstream activities contributed $1,914.5 million in turnover and an operating profit of $106.9 million, while exploration and production activities contributed $9.5 million in turnover and $5.1 million in operating profits for 1Q 2007.The Groups profit before income tax of $117.9 million for the current quarter was 50.5% higher than the corresponding quarter of 2006. Group income tax expenses for 1Q 2007 included a write-back of $10.5 millionon deferred tax liability due to the recent lowering of the Singapore corporate tax rate to 18%.The Groups PATMI of $112.1 million for 1Q 2007 was 65.1% higher than the corresponding PATMI for 1Q 2006.


PROSPECTSWe expect that the Group will continue to perform well.The 90,000 barrels per day Crude Distillation Unit No 1 complex at the Singapore Refining Company will be shut down for 25 days from May to June as part of the Groups scheduled maintenance programme. Despite the reduction of throughput by about nine per cent for the second quarter, this turnaround activity is not expected to negatively impact the Groups marketing and trading activities. The Group will have sufficient inventory during thisperiod.Oil production from the Oyong field is targeted to commence in June and this will contribute to the Groups performance for the rest of the year.The Group has announced in March that it has entered into a Share Sale Agreement for its 40.16% equity interest in Tiger Oil Corporation in Korea. This sale would be completed in the second quarter of 2007.


__________________
ah Kian


Veteran

Status: Offline
Posts: 581
Date:

Extracted from www.macquarie.com/sg/dailytrader

Spike In Oil Prices: SPC Call, SIA Put
 
Overnight, WTI crude oil futures surged 3.0% day-on-day on the New York Mercantile Exchange. Bloomberg reported that rising demand and refinery breakdowns were the main reasons for the surge in oil prices. The International Energy Agency said stock piles in industrial states are headed for their biggest first-quarter decline in 11 years.

SPC: The counter has remained flat at $4.82 for the last 2 trading sessions, falling 0.4% week-on-week but rising 7.6% month-on-month, in line with the 8.4% month-on-month increase in WTI crude oil futures.

SIA: In its 3QFY07 results released on the SGX, SIA's fuel cost was 37% of its total operating expenditures. The stock closed at $17.70 yesterday, falling 1.1% day-on-day, climbing 1.7% week-on-week and rising 5.4% month-on-month.

Warrant Action: Investors seeking a leveraged exposure to SPC and SIA may consider Macquarie's warrants:

SPC:
1)
SPC MBL eCW071109 with a strike price of $5.00.*
2)
SPC MBL eCW070711 with a strike price of $4.40.*

SIA:
1)
SIA MBLePW070806 with a strike price of $17.00.*



__________________
Fortune favors the Bold
KK


Guru

Status: Offline
Posts: 1236
Date:
SPC - BT


Published April 12, 2007

SPC's Indon field to start production soon


SINGAPORE Petroleum Company expects oil from its Indonesian Oyong field to start flowing this quarter, with its share amounting to about 6,000 barrels per day (bpd).
This will add to its current output of 2,540 bpd of oil equivalent from its only producing field so far at Kakap. More significantly, SPC is gearing up to be a bigger gas player, its just-released 2006 annual report shows.

'An interim analysis from the operator of the Oyong field suggests that the mid-range recoverable oil and gas volumes for the field are six million barrels and 97 billion standard cubic feet respectively,' the report says.
This means that for oil alone, SPC's 36 per cent stake in the Oyong production sharing contract will give it 5,917 bpd - at the higher end of its earlier expectation of 3,600-7,200 bpd.

Phase 2 gas development at Oyong, which sources say should start next year, will include construction of a 60 km pipeline from the field to a power plant at Grati, east Java, owned by PT Indonesia Power.
The Oyong partners expect to sell between 40 and 60 billion British thermal units per day under this deal.

At the Kakap oil/gas field, SPC says production has increased 10 per cent after additional work last year and is expected to be boosted further by a gas discovery at the Lukah-1X well.

'Lukah-1X well successfully tested natural gas and condensate over two sand intervals. The intervals flowed at a rate of approximately 19.7 million standard cu ft per day of natural gas and 2.8 barrels of condensate per day,' SPC's report said. Following this, pipeline construction is expected to start in the second half to tie the recent gas discovery at Lukah to the production platform.

Onshore, SPC says it is focusing on clean-fuel upgrading projects at its joint venture 285,000 bpd Singapore Refining Company refinery, but gave no details.
SPC's annual report also shows that chief executive Koh Ban Heng got a pay rise last year. His remuneration was in the $2.25 million-$2.5 million band, up from $1.75 million-$2 million in 2005.


__________________
KK


Guru

Status: Offline
Posts: 1236
Date:
SPC - OCBC


3-Apr-2007

Losing momentum momentarily

- SPC staged a strong rally from its low of S$4.04 in early Jan 07, breaking above the 50, 100 and 200-day moving averages over the last 3 months.

- But the bearish candlestick formation yesterday, coupled with the stochastic indicator cutting downwards after rising into overbought regions, indicate a possible reversal in trend in the next few days.

- We also observed a significant drop in trading volume over the last 3 trading days after forming a peak at S$4.92 on 29th Mar 07. This signals the uptrend has weakened at this juncture and we expect a pull back in the near-term towards its support levels.

- We have positioned the 1st support level at the 200-day moving average which sits at S$4.64 and the 2nd support level at S$4.50. 1st resistance maintained at S$5.00 and subsequent resistance set at S$5.35.



__________________
KK


Guru

Status: Offline
Posts: 1236
Date:
SPC


BT, Published March 30, 2007

Betting on upstream set to pay off for SPC 


KEPPEL Corp has been nibbling at Singapore Petroleum Company's shares in the open market over the last six months - picking up over five million shares and raising its stake in the associate company from 44.08 per cent to 45.02 per cent.
This is a complete turnaround from just a few years back when Keppel was looking at divesting out of SPC - then mainly a downstream oil refiner and marketeer - altogether.

So what's behind the buying?

Apart from being a confidence-booster by an insider party, it also appears a no-brainer price-wise. Keppel in just the last couple of months alone bought 1.2 million shares at prices ranging from $4.32 to $4.64. This works out to a 23-28 per cent discount from SPC's 52-week high of $6.05. There is little downside, on the other hand, to the stock's year-low of $4.04, given today's high oil prices.

Oil prices, from all accounts, seem set to rise again this year, especially in the second half. In that respect, SPC's increasing forays into upstream exploration and production (E&P) should help it offset refining's ups and downs - for example, in FY2006, net earnings fell almost 30 per cent due to a demand slowdown and lower H2 refining margins. Companies with producing oilfields invariably benefit when oil prices are high.

Because of the latest geopolitical tensions over Iran's nuclear programme - heightened by its capture of British navy personnel - oil markets have again become jittery over possible disruption to Iranian exports of some 2.2 million barrels per day.

Price surge

That saw a knee-jerk reaction late Tuesday when oil prices spiked by US$5 to US$68 over rumours of some sort of conflict over Iran, before prices stabilised at around US$64 - which is still high - in the last few days.

Despite it being just a minor league E&P player at this stage with one producing Indonesian field, SPC shares rose on the news, and closed at $4.84 - up 14 cents or 3 per cent - on Wednesday.
Yesterday, the stock closed a further two cents up at $4.86.

Keppel's management, especially senior executive director Choo Chiau Beng who is also SPC chairman, has increasingly been steering SPC upstream to make it a more integrated, international oil company. This makes sense, as Keppel, the leading rig-maker worldwide, surely has its ears tuned to E&P prospects.Just around the corner, the Oyong field in Indonesia - in which SPC has a 36 per cent stake - is set to start producing oil in Q2, according to the field's Australian operator Santos. This will be SPC's second producing field after Kakap in West Natuna, which is currently giving it 2,540 barrels of oil daily. Oyong should easily triple SPC's current crude production. The field's initial production target is 10,000-20,000 bpd, which puts SPC's share at 3,600-7,200 bpd. Additionally, there will be a second phase at Oyong involving production of 24 million cubic feet of natural gas daily.Additionally, SPC - which cut its E&P teeth in neighbouring projects in Indonesia, Vietnam and Cambodia - seems to have also gained the confidence to spread its wings beyond Southeast Asia to booming, offshore Australia. Last month, it acquired a 4.7 per cent stake, worth over A$10.7 million (S$13.1 million), in Tap Oil, shortly after entering into an E&P joint venture with Tap and Jubilant Energy to explore for oil and gas in the Bass Basin off south-east Australia.  SPC chief executive Koh Ban Heng all but hinted of more such ventures further afield when he said 'this is our first JV in oil and gas exploration in an Australian Basin, a strategic move towards expanding our E&P footprint outside of South-east Asia'.

Risky business

Would it also partner the bigger boys, like, say, Indonesia's Pertamina or Malaysia's Petronas, for other ventures beyond Australasia? Time will tell. Sure, E&P is a risky business. But then again, no risk, no gain.  Jeruk, an Indonesian oilfield which SPC earlier considered its hottest prospect, was a costly lesson when it proved less than prospective. As Merrill Lynch put it at that time - SPC was rolling the dice on E&P to become more integrated, in the belief that upstream oil production will lower the extreme volatility in refining. Still, starting with the upcoming Oyong field, SPC may be just about ready to cash in some chips.


-- Edited by KK at 01:20, 2007-03-31

__________________
KK


Guru

Status: Offline
Posts: 1236
Date:
Singapore's External Trade - February 2007


Extracts fm IE

Oil Domestic Exports

9. Oil domestic exports worsened to contract by 29 per cent in February 2007 after expanding by 5.5 per cent in January 2007. The decline in oil domestic exports was due to a drop in oil exports to Hong Kong (-45 per cent), Malaysia (-38 per cent), Australia (-31 per cent) and Philippines (-86 per cent) in the month. In volume terms, oil domestic exports also declined by 25 per cent in February 2007, reversing the previous month’s  17 per cent growth.


__________________


Member

Status: Offline
Posts: 69
Date:
RE: SPC


OPEC Report :

http://www.opec.org/home/Monthly%20Oil%20Market%20Reports/2007/pdf/mr022007.pdf

Some points :

1.  Refinery Margins

Continued warm weather across the board during a large part of
January, coupled with gasoline stock-builds over the last few weeks, capped the crack spread
level of the top and middle of the barrel complex from the previous month.
Despite these bearish developments, refinery margins for different benchmark crudes
improved across the globe, attributed mainly to lower crude oil prices.

As Graph 6 shows, refinery
margins for benchmark WTI in the US Gulf Coast rose to $4.52/b in January from $3.91/b in the previous month. In Europe, refinery margins were lifted sharply to record $2.80/b from minus 21¢/b in December. Lower Dubai crude oil prices from December, along with the improved performance of the middle and bottom of the barrel cut, also contributed to the surge in the benchmark Dubai margin in the Singapore market to reach $4.47/b from $2.67/b in the last month of 2006.

2. Refinery Utilisation

Refiners usually maximize their throughput levels during January every
year, but this time due to factors such as the warm weather, lower seasonal
demand for heating oil and comfortable stock levels of different products, they
have not followed the traditional policy and kept their throughput levels lower
than last year. In some areas, refiners even reduced their utilization rate
compared to December 2006.
As Graph 7 indicates, Japanese refiners cut throughput levels slightly compared
to December, with utilization rates dropping to 90.1% from 90.3% in the
previous month. European refiners also reduced utilization rates very marginally compared to
December, recording 85.5% from 86% in the previous month. US refiners cut throughput levels more than in the other areas as utilization rates fell to 85.6% in January from 89.4% in December.
With the start of seasonal maintenance, the utilization rate in the USA may be trimmed further in the coming months.

3. World oil demand forcast

    2006 - 84.13mb/d
    2007 - 85.37mb/d
    Q1 '07 - 85.72mb/d
    Q2 '07 - 83.97mb/d
    Q3 '07 - 85.26mb/d
    Q4 '07 - 86.53mb/d

Developing Countries (DCs) are expected to maintain strong oil demand. DCs will account for
92% of the world oil demand growth in the first quarter. Economic growth of 7.8% in India is
expected to yield moderate growth of 2.6% for oil demand. Expected strong new car sales along
with booming industrial and agricultural activities are expected to be the main drivers for oil
demand growth.
Strong economic activities, including massive growth of petrochemical plants in the Middle East,
are expected to increase demand for oil in 2007. The oil demand for the Middle East is
expected to average 6.47 mb/d, representing y-o-y growth of 0.3 mb/d.

In 2007, China is expected to see strong oil demand growth at 6.25%. Expected strong economic activities are the impulse behind the strong demand for energy. However, low oil imports in January caused the apparent demand to be lower than expected; hence, China’s first-quarter y-o-y oil demand growth was revised down by 0.06 mb/d to 0.3 mb/d. On a different note, the long-awaited Chinese oil strategic storage is finally in operation. The Zhenhai strategic storage currently has 25 million barrels of oil or almost 75% of total designed capacity. The other 25% is estimated to be filled by May 2007. According to Chinese officials, there are three more strategic oil storages with a capacity of 69.2 mb that are under construction and the commissioning will take place in 2007 and 2008. Encouraged by both the cut in import tariffs and the cold weather, China’s diesel imports surged in January. As for gasoline, the newly discounted price should have a positive effect on gasoline demand in the short term.


4. Balance of supply and demand
    Pg 44




__________________
ah Kian


Member

Status: Offline
Posts: 69
Date:

From Today 27 Feb 2007

SPC buys stake in Australia’s Tap

SINGAPORE Petroleum Co (SPC), the
only oil refiner traded on the Singapore
Exchange, bought a 4.7 per cent stake in
Australia’s Tap Oil Ltd for about A$10.7
million ($12.9 million).
Tap reportedly will seek talks with
SPC, which held about 7.3 million shares
as of Feb 21, to ascertain its intentions.
SPC said it bought the shares at an average
price of A$1.47 each for “investment
purposes.”
The two companies are partners in
a venture announced last week to explore
for oil and gas off southeastern
Australia. Singapore Petroleum said then
the venture, the company’s first in Australia,
was a strategic move to expand
exploration beyond Southeast Asia. Tap
owns 12.2 per cent of the Apache Corpled
Harriet venture in Western Australia.
SPC acquired the shares “over a period
of time from 2006,” the company said
in a statement released yesterday. Its
shares rose to $4.58, up by 2 cents or 0.4
per cent, yesterday. — BLOOMBERG

__________________
ah Kian
KK


Guru

Status: Offline
Posts: 1236
Date:
Singapore's External Trade - January 2007


Extracts fm IE

Oil Domestic Exports

9.
Oil domestic exports improved to grow by 5.5 per cent in January 2007 after declining by 16 per cent in December 2006. The growth in oil domestic exports was led by increased oil sales to Indonesia (+64 per cent), Australia (+25 per cent) and China (+41 per cent) in the month. In volume terms, oil domestic exports also recovered to rise by a strong 18 per cent in January 2007 following a 15 per cent drop in December 2006.


-- Edited by KK at 23:24, 2007-02-16

__________________


Member

Status: Offline
Posts: 69
Date:
RE: SPC


Announcement from sgx page

1.Date of change of Deemed Interest 08-02-2007     2.The change in the percentage level From 45.02 % To 44.85 %   3.Circumstance(s) giving rise to the interest or change in interest # Others    # Please specify details 1. Between 12.12.2006 and 11.1.2007, there were a series of sales of shares in Singapore Petroleum Company Limited ("SPC") by the DBS Group Holdings Ltd ("DBS") group of companies. As Temasek directly and indirectly owns approximately 28% of DBS, Temasek is deemed to have an interest in any SPC shares held by the DBS group of companies.

2. Between 8.12.2006 and 8.2.207, the total issued SPC shares (excluding shares held in treasury) increased from 515,093,357 to 515,823,357 as a result of the issuance of new shares by SPC and the transfer of shares held in treasury to SPC employees pursuant to the SPC Restricted Share Plan and SPC Performance Share Plan.     4.A statement of whether the change in the percentage level is the result of a transaction or a series of transactions:


The change in the percentage level is the result of a series of transactions.  Footnotes The above percentages are computed based on 515,093,357 issued shares (excluding 550,000 treasury shares) as at 8 December 2006 and 515,823,357 issued shares (excluding 186,000 treasury shares) as at 8 February 2007 respectively.    

__________________
ah Kian
KK


Guru

Status: Offline
Posts: 1236
Date:

BT, Published February 10, 2007

SRC set to start work on clean motor fuels plant

Upgrading will raise capacity for output of 'green' gasoline, diesel

SINGAPORE Refining Company - a joint venture oil refinery equally owned by Singapore Petroleum Company and Caltex - looks set to finally start construction of its clean motor fuels plant soon, sources said.
Earlier estimated to cost between US$100 million and US$400 million, the investment could now be at the higher end of this range given rising materials and engineering costs.

The upgrading project will enable SRC's 285,000 barrels per day refinery to produce greater volumes of ultra low-sulphur gasoline (ULSG) with lower benzene content, and ultra low-sulphur diesel (ULSD) of Euro IV specification for 'green' or environment-conscious markets.

BT understands that the basic engineering design for the plant is practically completed. Once the two SRC partners give their final go-ahead on the plant choice - which sources said is expected in the next few months - the company will proceed with the EPC contract for detailed engineering design, procurement of materials and construction proper of the plant.
It could include combinations of units like desulphurisation units, splitters, catalytic reformers or cokers, which are the usual plants associated with clean fuels production.

SPC officials said in January last year that both partners had given the go-ahead to proceed with the project, which would be fast-tracked to enable SRC to stay ahead of the curve as countries go 'green'. But there have been subsequent delays over the choice of the plant to build.
Typically, such clean fuels plants take up to three years to build, Chevron's head of global refining, Jeet Bindra, earlier said.

Still, with one year of basic design work already covered, it means that if the construction go-ahead is given shortly, the clean fuels plant could be completed by 2009.
In Singapore, use of ULSD became mandatory in December 2005, with legislated use of ULSG coming up next, possibly in 2008-2009 according to earlier indications.

But the SRC upgrading isn't intended just for the local market, which is considered small. In SPC's case, CEO Koh Ban Heng earlier said it intends to supply clean fuels from the project to markets like Australia, Europe and the US.


__________________
KK


Guru

Status: Offline
Posts: 1236
Date:

BT, Published February 2, 2007

SPC set to enjoy output from Oyong oil field

THE Oyong oil and gas field in Indonesia is set to start producing soon, says operator Santos Ltd - which is good news for
Singapore Petroleum Company. SPC has a 36 per cent stake in Oyong, which will be its second producing field and should easily triple its crude production of 2,540 barrels per day (bpd).

Santos, Australia's third-biggest oil and gas producer, has a 40.5 per cent stake in Oyong and in its just-released Q4 2006 report said that the development phase at Oyong was 95 per cent complete at the end of Q4. All development drilling has been completed and a floating storage and off-take vessel is on location at the field, it said. 'Following a re-tendering exercise, a contract for the leasing of a production barge has been awarded. Modifications are underway and the vessel is expected to be in position to meet the first oil date of Q2.'

This means the final hurdle for Oyong has been cleared, with production having been delayed almost a year-and-a-half due to problems the operator had in mobilising a barge amid the tight oil rig market.

SPC's only producing field right now is Kakap at West Natuna, which is giving it 2,540 bpd of crude.

Oyong's production target in the first oil phase was earlier reported at 10,000-20,000 bpd, which means SPC's share will work out to 3,600-7,200 bpd.

Keppel Corp, which has just reported its FY2006 results, said it is expanding its upstream activities through SPC by growing exploration and production acreage in Indonesia, Vietnam and Cambodia, and by unlocking value with its first development project - referring to Oyong.

Apart from oil, there will be a second gas phase at Oyong involving production of 24 million cu ft daily. On this, Santos said: 'Phase 2 gas production continues to be expected in H2. Front-end engineering design (FEED) work on onshore facilities is 80 per cent completed and FEED work on the pipeline continues.'

The gas will be piped onshore for customers.



__________________
KK


Guru

Status: Offline
Posts: 1236
Date:

BT, Published January 25, 2007

SPC's profit down 29.5% on lower refining margins

SINGAPORE Petroleum Company yesterday said its full-year net earnings for 2006 fell 29.5 per cent to $284.6 million due to lower refining margins. The earnings per share of 55.33 cents were below analysts' consensus of 62.7 cents for the year.The bottom line declined despite a 14.7 per cent rise in revenues to a record $8.57 billion. 'High inventories of crudes and products and a slowdown in demand growth in the second half resulted in lower refining margins in the second half year,' said its chairman Choo Chiau Beng. 'This, coupled with the highly volatile operating environment, resulted in a lower profitability for 2006.' The group's gross profit margin is compressed to 6 per cent from 7.6 per cent the year before. Meanwhile, its expenses were also up significantly. Operations expenses climbed 25 per cent to $66.7 million, while general and administrative expenses increased by a similar quantum to $117.3 million.

Still, the net profit of $284.6 million for 2006 represents a healthy return on average equity of 19 per cent, said Mr Choo.
As a reward to shareholders, the refiner said it has recommended a payout of a final dividend of 35 cents per share, consisting of an ordinary dividend of 20 cents and a special dividend of 15 cents. Based on SPC's last traded price of $4.36, the dividend yield works out to a high 8 per cent. That would mean a total payout of some $180 million - about half the net cash of $374.8 million generated by its operating activities.

Mr Choo said the group continued to operate all its plants, retail stations and other facilities including the Singapore Refining Company refinery safely, at the same time maintaining a high standard of environmental awareness.

For the current year, he said prospects continue to be positive in light of the International Monetary Fund's global economic growth forecast of 5 per cent for 2007.

Prior to yesterday's results, analysts were expecting SPC to rake in earnings per share of 64 cents this year. That would mean that it is currently trading at 6.8 times its forecast earnings. According to Reuters, among SPC's Asian peers, Thai Oil PCL trades at about 6.8 times earnings and Shell Refining, the Malaysian refining unit of Royal Dutch Shell, trades at 9.7 times.

Yesterday, SPC shares climbed 12 cents or 2.8 per cent to end at $4.36.


__________________
KK


Guru

Status: Offline
Posts: 1236
Date:

KK wrote:

I'm expecting an EPS of 10cts-15cts for Q4 barring (1) and (2). This equates to a full year EPS of 55cts to 60cts. This equates to a PE of 7-8 at $4.10 share price and a possible div of at least 20cts (I hope), which matches the div for FY04 when EPS was aro' that level.

 



Bingo! Results are out. Full Year EPS 55.33cts and div = 35cts (Final 20cts + Special 15cts). At the lower end of my expectations and didn't expect them to pay a special div after the write-down in Q3. The forward statement sound positive, so I'm expecting the worst is over for the time being for SPC :D


__________________
KK


Guru

Status: Offline
Posts: 1236
Date:

Rogers Says Crude Oil Will Rise Above $100 After `Correction'

Jan. 18 (Bloomberg) -- Jim Rogers, the author of ``Hot Commodities'' who predicted the start of the rally in 1999, said the recent slide in oil is a ``correction'' before prices resume their march toward $100 a barrel. ``I'm just not smart enough to know how far down it will go and how long it will stay, but I do know that within the context of the bull market, oil will go over $100,'' Rogers said in an interview. ``It will go over $150. Whether that is in 2009 or 2013, I don't have a clue, but I know it's going to happen.''

Crude oil in New York has fallen 33 percent to a 19-month low since rising to a record $78.40 a barrel in July. Rogers has said oil is set to carry on rising because there hasn't been a major discovery for 30 years and economic growth in China and across Asia is driving demand higher.

Rogers, 64, who created a series of commodities indexes and has advocated a long-term bull market, said that he hadn't changed his positive view on oil, metals and grains as investments. The Goldman Sachs Commodity Index has fallen 9 percent this year.

``When you have big bull markets, 50 percent corrections, or retractions, are normal,'' he said in Tokyo yesterday. ``It has often happened throughout history in a bull market.'' Rogers, in Tokyo to speak about commodities at an event organized by commodity futures trader Yutaka Shoji Co., said some corrections could last as long as two years, as happened to gold after a run-up in prices in the 1970s.

`Turn Around'

``Corrections go down long enough to scare everybody out and make sure they give up, and then they turn around,'' he said. ``We are in a secular bull market for commodities which has another decade or two to go.'' .

Rogers said corn, wheat, and nickel had performed strongly even as the weighting given to oil has dragged down the overall Rogers International Commodity Index, which has fallen 7 percent on a total return basis this year.

Rogers doesn't buy individual commodities on the advice of his lawyers. He said he recently bought the Rogers Agriculture Index to benefit from surging grain demand. The index has fallen 0.5 percent this year on a total return basis.

He said he favored investment in non-U.S. dollar currencies, and had bought airline shares. `The only airline where I'm losing money in the last year is Japan Airlines,'' he said.



__________________
KK


Guru

Status: Offline
Posts: 1236
Date:

Some scary extracts fm Dec NODX figures,


Non-oil Domestic Exports (NODX)
6. NODX declined by 14 per cent in December 2006 compared to the 8.0 per cent increase in November 2006. The drop in NODX can be attributed to a decline in electronic and non-electronic NODX. The decline was partly due to base effect as the NODX level in December 2005 was exceptionally high.

7. Electronic products. Domestic exports of electronic goods contracted further by 19 per cent in December 2006, worsening from the 8.4 per cent decline in November 2006. This lackluster performance was contributed by declines in domestic exports of parts of PCs, disk drives, consumer electronics, ICs, and telecommunications equipment.

8. Non-electronic products. Non-electronic NODX reversed last month's robust 25 per cent expansion to decline by 9.7 per cent in December 2006. The decline of non-electronic NODX in the month was largely due to decreased domestic exports of pharmaceuticals, civil engineering equipment parts and electrical machinery.

Oil Domestic Exports
9. Oil domestic exports continued to fall by 16 per cent in December 2006 as compared to the 11 per cent drop in November 2006. The drop in oil domestic exports was due to lower oil domestic exports to Australia (-47 per cent), Vietnam (-46 per cent) and Malaysia (-23 per cent) in the month. In volume terms, oil domestic exports also contracted by 16 per cent in December 2006, compared to the 9.1 per cent decline in the preceding month.


The outlook for 2007 is more optimistic,


(f) Oil prices will remain moderately high

After reaching a record high of nearly US$80 per barrel in August 2006 due to tight capacity, strong fuel demand and security concerns, crude oil prices have fallen below US$60 in the last few months. This softening in oil prices can be attributed to some easing of geopolitical uncertainties and better than expected weather during the hurricane season. Oil prices have rebounded to levels above US$60 in December 2006 on expected increases in petroleum demand during the winter season and coordinated production cuts by OPEC.

Going into 2007, oil prices are expected to remain elevated and volatile because of limited spare capacity and continued growth in petroleum consumption resulting from healthy global economic growth. As oil prices are projected to stay fairly high this year but at levels close to the average oil price of 2006, growth of Singapore 's oil trade is likely to be more muted in 2007. While risks of oil prices reaching new highs again in 2007 appear to be low at the moment, fresh geopolitical tensions could still result in renewed hikes in oil prices. Even though the global economy has proved to be quite resilient to oil price increases and inflationary pressures have remained well contained thus far, a sharp oil shock in 2007 amid slowing growth across the world could have a larger harmful effect.


Link here



__________________
KK


Guru

Status: Offline
Posts: 1236
Date:

Extracts fm the previous Q3 (Sep-06) results,

"Refining margins were weaker in the third quarter. The Group achieved an average refining margin of approximately US$4.00 per barrel for the quarter compared to above US$8.00 per barrel in the previous quarter. The scheduled turnaround of the RCC (Residue Catalytic Cracker) at SRC in part adversely affected the overall refining margin. As a result of the turnaround, crude volume processed also fell by about six per cent with a consequential accumulation in inventories. This turnaround that commenced on 9 September was completed by 16 October.

The benchmark WTI crude peaked at US$78.40 per barrel in July. By the end of the third quarter, crude and product prices had dropped by about US$20.00 per barrel. As a result of the steep drop in prices, the Group made a provision of $71.0 million for the write-down in inventories to net realisable value as at 20 October 2006. Against this write-down in inventories, the Group recorded a mark-to-market gain of $39.1 million as at September month-end from its crude oil and product hedging activities.

Hence, gross profit for the third quarter was lower compared to the corresponding period of 2005 due to the lower refining margins and the mark-down in inventories."

If we offset the $71Mil write-down vs the gain fm hedging of $39.1Mil, the bal of $32Mil would hv contibuted to Q3 operating income. This work out to be aro' 5cts of EPS or aro' 10cts for Q3.

If we further assume that Q4 will not be worse off than Q3, we shld see an EPS of aro' 10cts. As the WTI crude price was used as their benchmark for write-off, let's look at WTI prices for Q4. With reference to their 20-Oct-06 WTI price used for write-down, which is US$56.83, I see the subsequent prices to be mostly higher at US$60+, so I don't expect any further write-down for Q4. In fact, the profit margin may be slightly higher.

As for another factor which contributed to the lower margin, which is the plant shut-down, it also spilled 16 days into Oct but this is still shorter than the 21 days in Sep for Q3. So, the impact on Q4 earnings shldn't be worse off than Q3.

So, what other factors are there that may affect SPC Q4 results?
1) The winter was warmer last year and the demand for oil may hv been lower
2) Higher competition fm other refineries resulting in SPC having lower mkt share n thus lower revenue

Anyway, let's see. I'm expecting an EPS of 10cts-15cts for Q4 barring (1) and (2). This equates to a full year EPS of 55cts to 60cts. This equates to a PE of 7-8 at $4.10 share price and a possible div of at least 20cts (I hope), which matches the div for FY04 when EPS was aro' that level.

But, going fwd, we r seeing current WTI crude at low US$50s, which may translate into further earnings erosion for FY07. But, oil consumption will unlikely go down in the future as emerging economies like China and India continues to indutrialise and grow at a rapid pace. The ever present threat of war in the Middle East will recur again, it's only a matter of when. Another possible positive for oil is that 2007 is a La Nino year and the expected global warming may lead to higher oil demands in the summer as everyone turns on the aircon (but will be lower in winter due to warmer winter). 


So, unless there're any alternative energy source, SPC will remain relevant for many more years and it's more a matter of what constitutes a good price to buy SPC shares. But, SPC may continue to drop to $3 or $2 if the mkt is bearish on oil, going fm the observation of other cyclical stks like shipping where many stks r going at very low PEs.



__________________
Page 1 of 1  sorted by
 
Quick Reply

Please log in to post quick replies.

Tweet this page Post to Digg Post to Del.icio.us


Create your own FREE Forum
Report Abuse
Powered by ActiveBoard