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Phillips 66 beats quarterly profit estimates on strong refining margins

The refiner Phillips 66 exceeded Wall Street expectations for its third-quarter profits on Wednesday. This was due to higher fuel margins and record volume in its pipeline business.

The shares of the company increased 1% in premarket trading.

The U.S. refinery margins are recovering from a multi-year slump. Profits were down from their post-pandemic peak and supply shocks caused by Russia's invasion in Ukraine 2022 have faded.

Quarterly U.S. Refinery margins On average, the price of a car has risen by 25% since its multi-year lows.

The recovery has helped top refiners including Valero Energy post stronger-than-expected quarterly results.

Phillips 66 realized margin increased to $12.15 a barrel during the third quarter. This is an increase of 46% compared to a year ago. The refining division reported earnings of $430 millions, compared to a loss $67 million a decade earlier.

The midstream segment of the refiner, which transports gasoline, diesel, and natural gas liquids via its pipelines, posted adjusted earnings at $697 million. This is an increase of about 4% compared to a year ago.

The company's refining segment income was offset in part by higher environmental costs, primarily due to the planned idle of the Los Angeles Refinery.

Phillips 66 announced that it has ceased to process crude oil at its Los Angeles Refinery as of October 16. The remaining units are expected to be idled before the end of the year.

Turnaround expenses dropped by 74%, to about $36 million, compared to 94% a year ago.

According to data compiled and analyzed by LSEG, it reported an adjusted profit per share of $2.52 for the three-month period ended September 30. This compares with analysts' estimates of $2.17. Reporting by Tanay in Bengaluru, Editing by Devika S.

(source: Reuters)