Forte Oil Plc yesterday announced its
audited results for the year ended December 31, 2016, showing a revenue
of N148.6 billion, up by 19.3 per cent from N124.6 billion in 2015.
However, profit before tax fell by 24 per cent to N5.3 billion, from
N7.0 billion, while profit after tax declined by 50 per cent to N2.9
billion, compared with N5.8 billion recorded in 2015.
Group Chief Executive Officer of Forte Oil Plc, Mr Akin Akinfemiwa |
An analysis of the results showed that
cost of sale rose by 20.5 per cent from N106 billion in 2015 to N128
billion in 2016, while operating expenses declined by 2.9 per cent to
N13.3 billion compared with N13.7 billion in 2015. Other income fell by
42 per cent from N4.1 billion to N2.3 billion. But net finance cost
soared by 154.9 per cent from N1.7 billion to N4.3 billion, a
development that affected the bottom-line. Based on the weak results,
the directors did not recommend any dividend for the shareholders
compared with N4. 5 billion dividend paid the previous year.
Forte Oil Plc had last year raised N9
billion bond under its N50 billion bond issuance programme, to refinance
existing short term commercial bank loan obligations and to finance its
retail outlet expansion.
The Group Chief Executive Officer, Forte
Oil, Mr. Akin Akinfemiwa had said: “With the raising of this initial
capital which has been fully underwritten shows the confidence the
investing public has in Forte Oil Plc as an investment of choice. This
bond programme being the first in the downstream sector is testament to
Forte’s position within the downstream sector and allows the company to
actualise the vision of the Board to continue to provide value to its
shareholders regardless of the economic climate.”
Similarly, the Group Executive Director,
Finance and Risk Management, Forte Mr. Julius Omodayo-Owotuga said:
“This series provides us with the necessary liquidity to actualise our
growth strategies and positions the company for the years ahead. The
pricing of this debt instrument demonstrates the markets’ belief in us
and the pricing would help reduce our borrowing cost and increase
profitability in the short and long term.”
Meanwhile, trading at the stock market
ended the first month of the year on a bearish note as the Nigerian
Stock Exchange (NSE) All-Share Index fell by 0.69 per cent to close at
26,036.24, while market capitalisation ended at N8.97 trillion.
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