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Trafigura Puma Energy's net profit and EBITDA will be higher in 2024, but lower.

Trafigura Puma Energy's net profit and EBITDA will be higher in 2024, but lower.

Puma Energy, a Trafigura-owned refinery products company, reported a 5% increase in net profit for 2024 in financial results published on Thursday. This is the third consecutive year that the business, which was once in a state of struggle has made a profit.

Trafigura, a global commodity trading company, bought Sonangol’s stake in Puma Energy (then a loss-making company) in 2021. It took full control of the company and integrated it to its company as a way to increase its downstream market share.

The company announced that its net profit was $39million. The company will not be paying a dividend. As a result, the equity value of its shares reached $476 millions, its highest since 2018.

It said that stable performance in core segments helped offset lower demand for bitumen (used to pave roads) and weaker refinement margins during the past year.

Carlos Pons, Puma’s chief financial officer, said that "our presence across multiple segments, regions, and products have proven to be key strengths."

Puma's fuel retail network increased by 6% to 2,106 locations last year, with 62% located in Latin America.

In addition to the weaker bitumen market, deconsolidation of its Tanzania operations, and downsizing its Papua New Guinea businesses caused earnings before interest taxes, depreciation, and amortization (EBITDA), to fall by 16 percent on the year, to $338 millions.

The firm reported that its operating cash flow fell by 64% to $139 millions in the past year due to an outflow of $38 million from the sale of its UK fuels division in July, and $90 in unpaid cargo payments for 2023, which were rolled over to January 2024.

Trafigura announced this month that Puma’s chief executive Hadi Halouche would step down by the end of the June. He will be replaced Mark Russell, Trafigura’s current head of energy in the MENA Region.

Trafigura restructured its organisational structures last year with the creation a division for operational assets, which brought its portfolio of multi-commodity assets under a separate pillar led by Jiri Zust.

Zrust became chairman of Puma's board as part of this drive. (Reporting and editing by Alex Lawler, Joe Bavier, and Robert Harvey)

(source: Reuters)