Saturday, July 01, 2006

PETRONAS Chalks up RECORD Net Profit: RM43.6 B up 22.6% BUT Net CASH SURPLUS down: RM3.6B (2005) to RM1.8B. Where have ALL the MONEY Gone?


President and Chief Executive Officier of Petronas
Tan Sri Mohd Hassan Marican

Petronas a most profitable company posted a net profit of RM43..6B for the year ended March 31st. It net profit rose 22.6%.. Petronas said it expected the oil prices to remain firm to given the volatile and uncertain global oil and gas industry in rising exploration and development costs. said Petronas would spend RM27.7B to March 2007 after which RM19.2B would be for domestic investment for the focus of oil exploration and logistic.

"This year's strong financial and operational achievements bear testimony to the group's determination and focus on its overall strategy to integrate, add value and globalize its operations," he said at a media conference in Kuala Lumpur.



One quater of the revenue is derived from the domestic market

As a major oil exporter worth RM180 B, less than ¼ of Petronas revenue is derived from the domestic Malaysian market. Operating cash flow rose to RM16.2B in 2006 from RM12.4B a year earlier while net cash surplus was RM1.8B down from RM3.6B in 2005. It aims to be a global player and allocate RM27.7B in capital expenditure in the coming year from up 18.5% a year earlier. Petronas is the only national company to be listed in the Fortunes Global 500 companies as the world’s biggest firm.

Yes indeed "Where the entire nation's oil money has gone.”? Read the
Aliran's analysis at the end. If ONLY we could use the PETRONAS DOLLARS and follow Venezuela's example we could uplift the people here in Malaysia instead of abusing and squandered them away by the few.

The NST’s report Dipping into the Petronas till an ill-conceived idea; 30 Jun 2006

KUALA LUMPUR: National oil corporation Petronas will face negative investor perception if the Government dips into its till for funding, president and chief executive Tan Sri Mohd Hassan Marican said.

"It has never been done before, not even during the 1997-1998 financial
crisis," he told New Straits Times and Berita Harian reporters yesterday. He also said it was highly unlikely that the Government would do so now.
Former prime minister Tun Dr Mahathir Mohamad, a Petronas adviser, has said the Government could use money from the oil company to fund development projects.
He said this to rebut the Government's assertion that Malaysia needed to conserve spending and re-look projects planned earlier.

In fact, concerns about the Government tapping Petronas' coffers were raised by foreign investors as early as 1993 when Petronas first went to the global debt market to raise funds. Hassan said the company assured potential investors that the Malaysian Government was a responsible Government and that it would not think of taking from Petronas' coffers.

"Over the years we have gone to the market (to raise funds) several times. The market has seen accountability on the part of the Malaysian government," he said.

As an endorsement of that track record, Petronas' debt papers have never
dipped below investment grade before. Hassan said the Government could source funds from Petronas if it wanted to as the oil corporation was 100 per cent state-owned, but the implications would be negative.

Petronas was a company, incorporated under the Companies Act, and the
Government had to take into account that it was a global company subjected to ratings by international credit rating firms, he said. Clearly, international credit rating agencies would not like state interference in the oil company's finances.
The ratings Petronas received had a direct relation to the quality of its bonds and, thus, its capability to raise funds at reasonable interest rates
in the international market, Hassan added.Lower ratings meant it would be more expensive for the company to raise bonds .

As a group, Petronas made a profit before tax of RM70.2 billion in its
financial year ended March. Since its incorporation, it has returned to the Government RM287 billion.

"We have to strike a balance between the need for Petronas to re-invest and to fulfil its obligation to its shareholder," Hassan said.


Funding for the development of Putrajaya had never come directly from Petronas, he added, and explained that the concession holder for its development, Putrajaya Holdings Bhd (PJH), had borrowed a lot of money. It now had some RM7 billion worth of outstanding bonds, mostly Islamic bonds.

Hassan said Petronas' money made up 40 per cent of the RM2.2 billion initial paid-up capital in PJH. Petronas raised its stake in PJH to 64.4 per cent when it exchanged its equity interest in Proton Holdings with Khazanah Nasional Bhd's interest in PJH. Khazanah's stake in PJH is now 15.6 per cent. The remaining 20 per cent is held by Tabung Amanah Negara.


Here is Aliran’s biting report Petronas' oil profits slip away; Wednesday, 21 June 2006


Let us not allow future generations to blame us for frittering away the
nation's rich oil resources, says Anil Netto. In the wake of the recent oil price hikes, Petronas has come under increasing public scrutiny. Many uncomfortable questions have been asked as to where all the nation's oil money has gone.
Petronas, wholly owned by the government, is supposed to manage Malaysia's oil wealth in trust for all Malaysians. Some analysts believe Petronas, the only Malaysian firm in Fortune magazine's ranking of the world's 500 largest companies, is among the best-managed corporations in Malaysia. This may be true when one considers profits and financial figures.


Soaring profits for Petronas

Globally, oil firms are raking in profits as oil prices soar. Petronas is no
different. For the financial year ended 31 March 2005, its net profit soared by 50.3 per cent to reach RM35.6 billion. Shareholders' funds (share capital plus accumulated profits) stood at RM129 billion. Petronas is tipped to make even higher profits for the current financial year ended 31 March 2006, the results of which will probably be announced at the end of June 2006. Last November, it was reported that Petronas posted a net profit of RM20.7 billion for the first half (ended 30 September 2005) of the current financial year, up 22.5 per cent from the RM16.9 billion in the corresponding period a year earlier.
The profits were boosted by higher oil prices (though production showed a
slight decline). Indeed, prices peaked at US$71 per barrel on 29 August 2005, when Hurricane Katrina slammed into the Central Gulf Coast of the United States. Although current oil prices (US$60-63 per barrel at the time of writing in March 2006) are double what they were two years ago, they are now lower than the peak in August 2005. So, why the domestic price hike in February 2006?

Lack of transparency

Petronas may be making huge profits but its lack of transparency is
worrying. How do we explain the fact that Petronas finished bottom of a list of 15 oil corporations rated for their sustainability and ethical practices, according to a study by the Madrid ethics rating firm Management & Excellence (M&E). When a company is making record profits, it tends to mask wastage, lack of management oversight and slow technology transfer.

It is also disturbing that Petronas does business with a host of countries with deplorable human rights records such as Sudan, Chad and Burma.
What irks many Malaysians is that the accounts for Petronas are not transparent. Few Malaysians have access to its detailed accounts. Thus, Members of Parliament are unable to scrutinise them. Neither is there any meaningful debate on Petronas' performance and how our oil wealth is being spent. This lack of transparency and ethics is breathtaking when one considers that Petronas actually funds the operating expenses of Transparency International Malaysia, an organisation set up to promote transparency in this country.

Public fumes at wastage

The 30-sen hike in local fuel prices has focused public attention on the
wastage of Petronas funds in the past. So much money has been wasted on trophy projects with questionable economic benefit for he people.

Under former premier Dr Mahathir Mohamad, Petronas profits were often used to fund mega projects. These include the extravagant new administrative capital at Putrajaya, sponsorship of a Formula One motor-racing team for eleven years, and the building of the Twin Towers, which for a few years were the tallest buildings in the world. To what end?
Under Mahathir, Petronas was also used to bail out politically connected or government-owned firms.

Bank Bumiputra was repeatedly bailed out in the 1980s following financial scandals and bad loans. Controversy erupted in 1998 when Petronas, through its shipping carrier Malaysian International Shipping Corp Berhad (MISC), acquired a debt-laden shipping concern, Konsortium Perkapalan Bhd (KPB). Some analysts felt the deal amounted to a bailout of Mahathir's son, Mirzan, whose KPB was then floundering under debts estimated at about RM1.7 billion.


Cheap gas for the boys

While the subsidy on petrol has been removed, there has been little news
about the subsidised processed gas that Petronas supplies to the country's independent power producers (IPPs). It was during Mahathir's time that Petronas was required to provide generous subsidies for new independent power producers (IPPs) to ensure that their venture into building gas-fuelled electricity generating plants in the 1990s was successful. Petronas has supplied heavily subsidised processed gas to these IPPs and to the national electricity corporation, Tenaga Nasional Bhd. Since 1997, these subsidies have added up to RM25 billion (of which the IPPs accounted for RM14 billion) and for the year ended 31 March 2005 alone, the subsidy amounted to RM6.2 billion.

This generous arrangements enriched a small coterie of well connected
tycoons and their firms. Last year, business media group The Edge identified the IPP beneficiaries as Genting Sanyen Power, YTL Power, Malakoff Bhd and Tanjong Plc/Powertek Bhd.

"These companies are controlled by the families of Tan Sri Lim Goh Tong, Tan Sri Yeoh Tiong Lay, Tan Sri Syed Mokhtar Al-Bukhary and Ananda Krishnan, four of the richest families and individuals in the country," The Edge pointed out.


It is still unclear whether the subsidies on processed gas supplied by
Petronas to the IPPs will be affected by recent price hikes. The IPPs are private firms selling electricity at favourable rates to Tenaga, which is forced to buy from them. So there is no reason for Petronas to sell processed gas to the IPPs at subsidised prices at the Malaysian consumers' expense.

And it is at the consumers' expense as all indications are that Malaysian consumers will have to pay more for petrol, gas, health care, and water - not to mention the inflationary effect these tariff hikes would have on other basic essentials.


Learn from Venezuela

How Petronas profits are managed from now on will be crucial - for after
all, Petronas contributes 30 per cent of the federal government's revenues via taxes, dividends and royalties. Now the oil is running out. Total domestic crude and oil-condensate reserves are officially estimated at about 4.8 billion barrels - a reserve life of 19 years. For natural gas, which makes up some 75 per cent of Malaysia's total reserves, the reserve life is about 33 years. At current rates of production, though, Malaysia will swing from being a net exporter to a net importer of oil by the end of the decade.

The nation's oil wealth has not been evenly distributed either. Strangely
enough, the states with the most offshore oil reserves in Malaysia such as Terengganu are among the poorest in Malaysia. We could learn a lot by taking a look at how the Venezuela government is spending its oil profits on the people. There, the Chavez administration is using petrodollars to finance far-reaching social programmes known as Misiones (or Missions). These comprehensive programmes cover health care, education, food, housing, land reform, job training, and micro-credit.

An amazing social transformation has been taking place in that country -
and, what's more, it has boosted electoral support for Chavez. BN strategists, take note.

A time of reckoning
We can do the same in Malaysia too. After all, Prime Minister Abdullah
Badawi says we have to invest more in our human capital. Can we not use our oil money to boost government spending on our public health care system, on water utilities and catchment areas, on low-cost housing and schools? So much has already been wasted.

Let us use our remaining oil wealth and channel it into socially beneficial projects that are economically and
environmentally sustainable. It is great that the government is setting aside the savings in subsidies to a special fund to improve public transport. More can be done to use Petronas' profits for the people's benefit.

In its People's Proposal, the Coalition Against Health Care
Privatisation recommended that the government set aside RM5 billion annually from Petronas' profits to improve our hospitals and clinics and to pay our overworked specialists, doctors and nurses more - instead of asking Malaysians to pay more for health care.

Petronas money can also be used to provide low-income financing to improve the infrastructure of state-runwater utilities - instead of privatising them.
Such massive spending on projects that would benefit the public would have the added advantage of spurring the economy at a time when foreign direct investment has declined. Let us not allow future generations of Malaysians to blame us for frittering away the rich oil resources that we were once blessed with.

For a more detailed Q and A with the CEO Hassan, check out Todays's STAR Business on
Hassan on gas subsidies
See the latest post:
Is Jasin's MP Datuk Mohd Said CLOWNING? Under INVESTIGATION, making EXPOSE to cover his BUTT

2 Comments:

Blogger CS LEE said...

Where have ALL the MONEY Gone?

answer: our leaders' pockets!

will gov catch us if we set up a online grave yard for them?

11:25 AM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

Dude, you just break one of google rules. Never ask your visitor to click your ads. I'd put down the image if I were you, less it get reported and your account banned.

2:22 PM  

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