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Sukuk buy helps Dana Gas offset low oil price blow

Sharjah-based private gas producer records flat Q2 2016 net profit at $7mn, while H1 2016 net profit stands at $13mn

The UAE-based privately-owned natural gas producing company Dana Gas has reported flat second-quarter profit, as low oil and gas prices were partly offset by a gain on the buy-back of a sukuk or an Islamic bond.

Dana Gas made a net profit of $7mn in the three months to June 30, the same as a year earlier. The company had reported falling profits or a loss in five of the previous six quarters.

Second-quarter revenue was $96mn, down from $116mn a year ago.

In a statement, Dana Gas said the fall in oil and gas prices was offset by reversals in provisions and the $6mn gain on the sukuk.

The Sharjah-based company said it received $49mn for sales from Egypt in the first half of this year, bringing the total it is still owed from Cairo to $230mn.

Egypt delayed paying oil and gas firms as its economy deteriorated in the political turmoil that followed the fall of Hosni Mubarak in 2011.

Dana also collected $42mn from the Kurdistan Region of Iraq during the first half, bringing the total it is owed there to $726mn.

In 2007, Kurdistan awarded Dana and the UAE’s Crescent Petroleum a 25-year deal to develop the Khor Mor and Chemchamal gas fields. But the project became entangled in allegations that the consortium was underpaid for condensate and liquefied petroleum gas products supplied from Khor Mor.

Dana said on Thursday the London Court of Arbitration would hear remaining contractual issues related to Kurdistan and further damage claims from the consortium and counter-claims by the Kurdistan Regional Government in two hearings.

The first two-week hearing is set for September 5 and the other is expected to be in the fourth quarter or the first quarter of next year, Dana said.

The company is also seeking damages from the National Iranian Oil Co (NIOC) for alleged non-performance of a contract.
Dana Gas chief executive officer Patrick Allman-Ward told a media conference call a final hearing to determine damage claims against NIOC had been fixed by an arbitration tribunal in The Hague for October 28.

Dana’s capital spending, which was $80mn in the first half of 2016, will be cut in the second half, Allman-Ward was quoted in a press release received by arabianoilandgas.com.

The company has two Islamic bonds worth $700mn maturing in October 2017.

With only $344mn in cash at the end of June 2016, Dana is considering options to refinance them, chief financial officer Chris Hearne has said without elaborating.

Staff Writer

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