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Mexico's Pemex swings to $14 bln quarterly loss on lower sales, currency losses

Mexico's stateowned oil business Pemex swung to a 256 billion peso ($ 14 billion). secondquarter bottom line on Friday, red ink the energy giant. chalked up to lower sales, a greater expense of sales and large. currency exchange losses.

The quarterly loss compared to a net revenue of more than. $ 25.4 billion in the same period of in 2015.

Pemex stated the loss would have been even higher if not for a. lower tax expense and a slower rate of wear and tear of fixed. possessions, according to a filing with the Mexican stock market.

Revenue for among the nation's biggest companies throughout. the April-to-June duration totaled 409.5 billion pesos, down 1%. from a year earlier

Falling sales were driven by a lower volume of crude. exports, the filing revealed, with sales from the deliveries down. 16% from the year-ago duration.

Currency losses throughout the quarter totaled about 160 billion. pesos compared to gains of more than 105 billion pesos in the. 2nd quarter of 2023, as the peso deteriorated about 10% against. the U.S. dollar.

Crude and condensate liquids production stood at 1.784. million barrels each day (bpd), down about 6% from a year. earlier, while Pemex refineries processed 886,000 bpd, a rise of. more than 7%.

Pemex, one of the world's most indebted energy business,. reported a tick up in overall monetary debt to $99.4 billion as. of the end of June, up about 2% from completion of in 2015.

At the instructions of outbound President Andres Manuel Lopez. Obrador, Pemex has sought to enhance domestic refining - which has. been its biggest source of losses for several years - while weaning. itself off foreign gasoline and diesel imports.

The leftist leader, along with similar follower. President-elect Claudia Sheinbaum, who takes office in October,. has argued that Mexico needs to be self-dependent in motor fuels. Both have consistently couched the goal as a matter of energy. sovereignty.

However as Pemex directs more of its crude production to. expanding its domestic refining volumes, a looming fall in oil. output over the next couple of years will likely require the Mexican. energy giant to swap its longstanding dependency on fuel imports. for a new reliance on crude imports, reported earlier. this week.

(source: Reuters)