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Mexico's Pemex swings to benefit, but supplier debt strikes record

Mexico's Pemex reversed losses in the last 3 months of 2023 however its total financial obligation concern remained the greatest of any oil business on the planet, with billions of dollars due to bond holders and service providers.

The state-run business published an earnings of 106.9 billion pesos in the fourth quarter of in 2015, a filing with the stock exchange showed on Tuesday, as both expenses and tax commitments decreased.

Chief Executive Officer Octavio Romero stated during the earnings call that the outcomes revealed crucial improvements in the debt profile, and swore to pay companies this year.

Pemex's total monetary debt stood at $106.1 billion at completion of last year. Debt to service providers surpassed 359 billion pesos, up 27.5% from completion of the previous year and the highest ever taped, even after the company paid 413.9 billion pesos to suppliers throughout 2023.

Pemex received 127.7 billion pesos in financial backing from the federal government, and 25 billion pesos of that went toward the Dos Bocas refinery. Much of the rest was used to pay for debt.

In 2015 marked the 5th under President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador, who has actually made domestic refining a leading concern.

Romero said the new refinery, which is running behind schedule and over budget plan, was set to begin operations in the coming weeks.

The good results pave the way for a beneficial outlook for Pemex, Romero stated, reiterating that the business had complete assistance from the federal government and that management disagreed with a. current scores cut by Moody's Investors Service.

Pemex posted profits of 425.5 billion pesos in the. October-to-December duration, the filing revealed.

Crude oil and condensate production reached 1.86 million. barrels per day

(source: Reuters)