logo
Adnoc Gas announces Q1 net income of $1.27 billion

Adnoc Gas announces Q1 net income of $1.27 billion

Khaleej Times20-05-2025

ADNOC Gas on Monday announced net income of $1.27 billion and EBITDA of $2.16 billion for the first quarter of 2025, exceeding the equivalent quarter in 2024 by 7% and 4% respectively.
The performance was driven firstly by continued demand for domestic gas - up on the equivalent quarter last year - as a result of strong economic growth in the UAE, which lifted the total sales volume. Secondly, through efficient management of the planned shut-down programme to boost processing capacity, a reduction in the number of days the Company's plants were offline led to a rise in processed volumes.
Fatema Al Nuaimi, Chief Executive Officer of ADNOC Gas, said, 'This has been another outstanding quarterly performance by ADNOC Gas, supported by our resilient business model in a lower oil price market, which significantly exceeded market expectations. These results come on the back of successful supply agreements and the optimisation of our ongoing shut-down programme designed to power our continued growth. Looking ahead, we will use the strength of our balance sheet to invest through the cycle as we seek to realize EBITDA* growth of over 40% between 2023 and 2029.'
ADNOC Gas signed a series of mid to long term LNG supply agreements valued at circa $9 billion with the Indian Oil Corporation and JERA Global Markets of Japan during Q1, reinforcing its role as a leading supplier of lower-carbon fuel. The agreements support the growth of the Company's international customer base as well as the transformation of global energy systems.
Q1 also saw a year-on-year uplift in CAPEX of 43% as ADNOC Gas continues to make the necessary investments through the cycle to grow the business and achieve its longer-term EBITDA targets. Project implementation remains on track, with the Company expecting to take a Final Investment Decision on its Rich Gas Development project in 2025.
As a result of the recently completed marketed offering of 3.1 billion shares in ADNOC Gas in which the free float increased by 4% to 9%, the Company is eligible for potential inclusion in the MSCI and FTSE indices as early as June and September respectively.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

UAE-Japan Women's Friendship Committee celebrates 10 years of promoting female empowerment in energy sector
UAE-Japan Women's Friendship Committee celebrates 10 years of promoting female empowerment in energy sector

Al Etihad

time6 days ago

  • Al Etihad

UAE-Japan Women's Friendship Committee celebrates 10 years of promoting female empowerment in energy sector

4 June 2025 17:46 TOKYO (WAM) The UAE-Japan Friendship Committee for Women Career Development (FCW) has celebrated 10 years of promoting female empowerment in the energy the directives of Her Highness Sheikha Fatima bint Mubarak, the Mother of the Nation', Chairwoman of the General Women's Union (GWU), President of the Supreme Council for Motherhood and Childhood (SCMC), and Supreme Chairwoman of the Family Development Foundation (FDF), FCW convened in Tokyo for the 20th forum since its establishment in 20th forum was held under the theme 'My leadership journey for a sustainable society and energy industry'.This year's participation in Japan included an exclusive presence for the committee at Expo 2025 in Osaka, with a dedicated workshop at the UAE by Her Highness' leadership, the UAE-Japan Friendship Committee for Women's Career Development brought outstanding female talent from the UAE and Japan together to exchange experiences and insights, and advanced initiatives that drive female progress in both countries, strengthening career paths and fostering inclusivity and more than 4,500 females from UAE, Japan, Malaysia and Indonesia and other GCC countries, FCW has played an important role over the past decade in empowering women in the energy transformation at the FCW event included Dr. Maitha bint Salem Al Shamsi, Minister of State and FCW Chairwoman; Haruhiko Ando, CEO of the Japan Cooperation Centre for Petroleum (JCCP), Fatema Al Nuaimi, CEO of ADNOC Gas, Marwan Alnaqbi, Head of Mission for the UAE in Tokyo; and committee members of the FCW UAE her keynote address, Dr. Al Shamsi conveyed the greetings of Her Highness Sheikha Fatima bint Mubarak, expressing her continued support for the forums. She emphasised that FCW forums strengthen UAE-Japan bilateral relations, advance female engagement in energy, and support women's career Ando said, 'The world's intelligence and capabilities should be shared equally between men and women. It can be said that FCW's stimulating and pioneering activities over the past 10 years have become a powerful driving force for promoting women's empowerment and have established advanced examples in the oil-related industry.'Fatema Al Nuaimi said: 'Over the past 10 years, the UAE-Japan Friendship Committee for Women Career Development has served as an important platform to drive female empowerment in the energy sector. This edition has provided actionable steps to enable female future leaders to better contribute to advancing the energy industry, and ADNOC looks forward to building on these steps as we continue to empower our female talent to build successful careers.' ADNOC and the JCCP have held FCW forums in the UAE and Japan since 2015, highlighting the importance of females' contributions across the energy industry.

Trump's deals don't help the US, but you can profit anyway
Trump's deals don't help the US, but you can profit anyway

The National

time03-06-2025

  • The National

Trump's deals don't help the US, but you can profit anyway

Since my previous column detailing US President Donald Trump's tariff illogic, two US trade 'deals' plus talks have materialised. Many pundits point to these as 'proof' that Mr Trump's tariff chaos is solely leverage for deal making and freer trade ahead. Slow down. While no one can read Mr Trump's mind, don't overstate his talk or actions' positive impacts. Endless tariff flip-flopping chiefly fans rising uncertainty, which stocks always hate – hurting America worst. Let me show you – and where to uncover opportunities. First, you may not believe it, but stocks are intermediate and longer-term truthtellers, particularly big moves and spreads. Through May 23, non-US stocks returned 13.7 per cent this year in USD. China's gained 16.3 per cent, Europe 19.6 per cent and Mexico 29.1 per cent! Booming! And the US's S&P 500? Down 1 per cent. Striking lag! Seen differently: Of the 47 MSCI All-Country World Index (ACWI) countries, America's return fell from first over 2023-2024 to 43rd this year. A stunning shift. What happened? Mr Trump's on, off, back and forth whipsawing vacillations made funds flee America. Tariffs always hammer the imposing country most. Stocks know attempts to reduce trade deficits are senseless. A trade deficit means a capital account surplus by definition – that capital is foreign investment into America. Why is reversing that desirable? Why is the government intervening on prior successes – versus letting free markets sort out the most efficient use of capital – positive? How is policy that changes on a whim good? Stocks know it is bad. Stocks' truth-telling shows you exactly that. Markets weigh reality, not efforts aimed at discerning Mr Trump's 'true' goals. What 'deals' have emerged since April 9? Looking past Mr Trump's boastful bluster, only two materialised – Britain and China. Both are fluff. Britain's is a one-year, non-binding, cancellable agreement to mitigate a few tariffs until a full trade deal can happen – maybe. A deal to make a deal! It affects only a handful of industries. Crucially, Mr Trump's 10 per cent tariff remains on most UK goods. The China deal impresses, but only because expectations were incredibly low. Yes, it cuts 145 per cent tariffs on Chinese goods to 30 per cent, while China dropped retaliatory levies from 125 per cent to 10 per cent. Yet it lasts only 90 days – buying time – another deal to make a deal! Plus, tariffs on China remain 30 percentage points higher than in January. Both countries remain impaired, especially the US. Then, on May 16, Mr Trump boasted 150 nations now sought 'deals'. Flip-flopping again, he says there isn't time to negotiate them. His 'solution?' Simply telling nations 'soon' what rates they must pay – and perhaps offering chances to appeal. Didn't he already do just that on April 2's 'Liberation Day?' How did that work? Badly! How will this work? Will rates be higher or lower than after April 2? He hasn't said, further fanning uncertainty. Days later, he threatened the EU with new 50 per cent tariffs – and 25 per cent on Apple products – only to flip again days later, postponing EU tariffs through July 9 after plans to fast-track trade talks emerged. Does this show Mr Trump's talk and actions are somehow clever? That he plays 4D chess while we all play checkers? No! No one wins from crazy vacillations or the higher tariff 'deals' so far delivered. Meanwhile, legal challenges to Mr Trump's tariffs progress maybe killing some of this. And maybe real deals come, actually lowering trade barriers and uncertainty – a huge potential upside. Maybe not. But as my last column said, even if all tariffs return, the pain will be less than feared – bullish. Importers can readily skirt America's understaffed, overwhelmed tariff-collecting Customs and Border Protection staff through illegal and legal means. The latter include 'tariff splitting' – stripping out services-related costs like marketing to reduce goods' values – or storing imports in bonded warehouses. Or shipping in values under $800, skipping tariffs. And myriad illegal ways like misclassifying and undervaluing goods. Exporters can 'tranship' or re-export through lower tariff nations. Hence, China's April exports grew despite shipments to America tumbling 21 per cent. South-east Asia absorbed the difference – shipping them on. This drove surges in April re-exports to America – like Singapore's 113 per cent year-on-year spike! Vietnam and Taiwan enjoy similar surges. Manufacturers can even reship through Canada or Mexico, gaming the United States–Mexico–Canada Agreement tariff exemption. Chinese middlemen advertise such services on TikTok! Hence, while Uncle Sam's April total tariff collections rose, they missed administration forecasts by 75 per cent. That will persist. The good news? Tariff fear exceeds reality, especially outside America. That is bull market fuel – helping non-US stocks maintain their leadership, particularly in Canadian, Chinese and Mexican markets – and in Europe, as I predicted on February 3.

ADNOC Gas joins MSCI Emerging Market Index
ADNOC Gas joins MSCI Emerging Market Index

Zawya

time02-06-2025

  • Zawya

ADNOC Gas joins MSCI Emerging Market Index

ADNOC Gas has been added to the MSCI Emerging Markets Index, becoming the third ADNOC stock to join the global benchmark that includes the most prominent publicly listed companies from 24 emerging market countries. ADNOC Gas will be the largest addition to the Index by market capitalisation and joins ADNOC Distribution and ADNOC Drilling which were added to the benchmark in 2021 and 2024, respectively. The company's inclusion follows its successful $2.84 billion (AED10.3 billion) marketed offering of 3.1 billion shares in February, which increased the number of shares available to the public by 80% and helped the stock successfully meet key eligibility criteria for entry into the Index. This marks a significant milestone in the ADNOC Gas's ongoing efforts to enhance its global investment profile, attract a broader and more diversified investor base and improve liquidity of its shares. Through their inclusion in the MSCI Index, the three ADNOC Group companies collectively raise both ADNOC's and the Abu Dhabi Securities Exchange's (ADX) global investment profile, while enhancing liquidity in the UAE market and further cementing the UAE's position as an attractive destination for foreign investment. As with ADNOC Distribution and ADNOC Drilling's addition to the Index, ADNOC Gas experienced a surge in trading on the final day before its index inclusion, attracting $469 million (AED1.7 billion) in capital inflows. The inclusion of ADNOC Gas in the Index also marks another milestone in ADNOC's efforts to foster growth of the UAE's capital market, which began in 2017 with the public listing of ADNOC Distribution on the ADX. Since then, ADNOC has brought another five of its subsidiaries to the public market, with a current combined market cap of around $140 billion (AED508 billion). ADNOC's growing listed company portfolio is providing attractive opportunities for global investment into the UAE, further integrating the UAE's capital markets into the global financial ecosystem.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store