Danessa
Rivera (The Philippine Star) - June 1, 2020 - 12:00am
MANILA,
Philippines — Phoenix Petroleum Philippines Inc. is slashing its 2020 capital
expenditure (capex) by half as part of rationalizing its spending amid the
coronavirus disease 2019 or COVID-19 pandemic.
“We
are cutting capex to P1.5 billion and focusing on projects that are immediately
revenue generating,” Phoenix Petroleum CFO Concepcion de Claro said during the
company’s virtual stockholders’ meeting last week.
The
revenue-generating investment would zoom in on retail and liquefied petroleum
gas (LPG) related projects, de Claro said.
Originally,
the capex for this year was set at P3 billion, Phoenix Petroleum company vice
president for external affairs Raymond Zorrilla said in a text
message.
Phoenix
Petroleum’s retail and LPG businesses were the major revenue drivers in the
first five months.
Phoenix
Petroleum COO Henry Albert Fadullon said the oil firm still managed to grow its
retail and LPG sales volume despite the negative factors in the first quarter,
such as the price volatility caused by the trade tension between the US and
China, and the geopolitical tensions between the US and Iran, as well as the
Taal Volcano eruption which threatened its storage facilities in the south and
disrupted fuel transport and retail service operations.
“Against
this backdrop, we were able to sustain volume growth in key segment,
particularly in retail and LPG,” he said.
Meanwhile,
Phoenix Petroleum registered record sales in the LPG business segment during
the quarter, and sales growth continued well into the enhanced community
quarantine period.
“Ninety
five percent of our retail sites and LPG stores are open. LPG and domestic
cylinder sales are at an all-time high of 39 percent growth versus same period
last year,” Fadullon said.
“April,
the first full month on lockdown, was brutal with sales hovering around 50 to
60 percent from pre-lockdown levels except LPG, which continued to post strong
growth, the one bright spot in the portfolio during the crisis,” he said.
Apart
from reducing capex, the oil firm has also taken other cost-reducing measures
to preserve its resources and mitigate losses amid the pandemic.
“We’re
taking about P800 million in savings mostly sourced from marketing, advertising
and travel as we shift resources from traditional channels to digital. These
cost actions will help keep our capex in line with the expected weaknesses in
demand this year,” de Claro said.
The
oil firm also immediately delayed imports for finished products to lower
inventory levels.
“As a
result, our inventory levels are only 50 percent of terminal capacity,”
Fadullon said.
Moving
forward, the company sees demand picking up, especially once the quarantine
measures are relaxed.
“Despite
the near term pressures and uncertainties today, we are confident that the
business plan we have, which is investing more on higher margin and higher
growth businesses such as retail and LPG, and the financial discipline will not
only preserve resources but also ensure that we will remain well positioned and
will thrive when the industry recovers,” de Claro said.
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