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S-Oil reports refining and petchem losses, expects US tariffs will affect margins in Q2

S-Oil reports refining and petchem losses, expects US tariffs will affect margins in Q2

S-Oil, a South Korean company majority-owned by Saudi Aramco and with refining and chemical units, suffered losses in the first-quarter. It expects that margins will be affected by U.S. trade negotiations and volatility on the market during the second-quarter.

S-Oil announced a loss of 14.5 billion won (14.93 millions) for the first quarter of 2025 compared to a profit of 454.1 million won a year ago, in a Monday statement.

The first-quarter revenue of the company fell by 3.4% on an annual basis to 8.99 trillion won.

S-Oil reported that its refining division had an operating loss in the quarter under review of 56.8 trillion won, compared to 250.4 billion won profit a year earlier, due to low demand in an uncertain economic environment and delays in maintenance.

The company said that losses in its petrochemicals division have more than doubled from the previous quarter to 74.5 billion won.

S-Oil's 669,000 barrels-per-day oil refinery, located in the city of Ulsan, southeast of Seoul was operating at 94% capacity compared to 93% for full-year 2024.

S-Oil anticipates that the second-quarter refinery margins will be affected by the outcome of U.S. Tariff Negotiations, as well as increased global market volatility.

S-Oil stated in a presentation that "ongoing U.S. Tariff tensions could weigh on oil demand predictions."

The progress of trade negotiations is expected to reduce global uncertainty.

S-Oil is also scheduled to perform maintenance on its residue fluid catalytic cracked (RFCC), unit in the fourth quarter.

Separately the company targets mechanical completion of the Shaheen Project during the first half 2026.

The $7 billion project will produce up to 3.2 millions metric tons of petrochemicals from crude oil each year. (1 dollar = 1,439.7000 won). (Reporting and editing by Heekyong Yak and Michele Pek, Florence Tan, and Rashmi Anich.

(source: Reuters)