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Sabic Profit Sinks to Lowest in 10 Years on Chemicals Slump

Sabic Profit Plunges to Lowest in 10 Years on Chemicals Slump

(Bloomberg) -- Saudi Basic Industries Corp.’s second-quarter profit plunged to the lowest level since 2009 as demand for chemicals and plastics declined. The shares fell.

Net income dropped to 2.12 billion riyals ($565 million) from 6.7 billion riyals a year ago, the biggest petrochemicals maker in the Middle East said in a statement. The average estimate of five analysts was for a profit of 3.37 billion riyals.

A downturn in the global economy, including the car industry, has dented demand for plastics and chemicals, leading to a spate of profit warnings at companies such as BASF SE.

Sabic Profit Sinks to Lowest in 10 Years on Chemicals Slump

“Though lower petrochemical prices have negatively affected Sabic’ second-quarter results, our operational performance remains robust," Chief Executive Officer Yousef Abdullah Al Benyan said. "Sabic remains optimistic on industry fundamentals over the long term and we continue to invest for growth."

  • 2Q sales 35.87 billion riyals vs 43.28 billion
    • Estimate 36.77 billion (range 35.07 billion to 38 billion) (BD)
  • 2Q operating profit 4.83 billion riyals vs 10.83 billion

"The new capacities in key products lines that pressured Sabic’s product prices and margins in the first half of 2019 are expected to continue to impact the company’s earnings in the second half of 2019," the company said. Sabic said there is no change to its previous outlook.

The petrochemicals maker said last week it suspended talks with Clariant AG on their high-performance plastics venture a day after the Swiss company’s CEO Ernesto Occhiello unexpectedly quit. Sabic cited "current unfavorable market conditions" for halting talks and said it’s looking forward to continuing the discussions once conditions improve.

Saudi Aramco, the world’s biggest oil producer, is in the process of buying a majority stake in Sabic from the kingdom’s sovereign wealth fund for $69.1 billion. The Middle East’s biggest-ever deal had been first mooted last year after the initial public offering of Aramco was postponed.

Sabic shares dropped as much as 3.8% in Riyadh.

--With assistance from Abeer Abu Omar.

To contact the reporter on this story: Shaji Mathew in Dubai at shajimathew@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Claudia Maedler at cmaedler@bloomberg.net, Stefania Bianchi

©2019 Bloomberg L.P.