logo
ADNOC L&S announces revenue of $3,549 million in 2024

ADNOC L&S announces revenue of $3,549 million in 2024

Emirates 24/712-02-2025
ADNOC Logistics and Services plc today announced its fourth quarter (Q4) and full-year 2024 financial results, reporting revenue of $3,549 million (AED13,035 million) for the year, up 29 percent compared to 2023.
EBITDA rose by 31 percent to $1,149 million (AED4,219 million) in the same period, driven by robust performance across all business segments, sustaining EBITDA margins at 32 percent.
Net profit for the year was $756 million (AED2,777 million), equating to $0.10 (AED0.38) per share, an increase of 22 percent compared to the previous year.
The Company's Q4 revenue increased by 6 percent year-on-year (y-o-y) to $881 million (AED3,237 million), with EBITDA up by 17 percent y-o-y to $282 million (AED1,035 million). Net profit for Q4 grew 9 percent y-o-y to $180 million (AED660 million).
Captain Abdulkareem Al Masabi, CEO of ADNOC L&S, said, "We have delivered strong growth in financial returns to shareholders once again in 2024, driven by robust performance across all business segments. This year has been characterised by investing in the internationalisation of our business platform, the addition of new vessel types focused on transition fuels, and the growth of our large integrated logistics business.
"Today ADNOC L&S is a larger, stronger, more international business and one of the leading energy maritime logistics companies in the world. Our growth story continues into 2025 and beyond with more than $6 billion highly value-accretive growth opportunities committed since IPO, mostly against long-term contracts."
Revenues from the Integrated Logistics segment increased to $2,281 million (AED8,377 million), up 40 percent in FY 2023.
The increase was driven by volume growth in the Integrated Logistics Services Platform (ILSP) and strong growth in third-party offshore logistics services; major progression of Engineering, Procurement and Construction (EPC) projects in particular the contribution of the G-Island project; accelerated Hail & Ghasha project delivery; the improved utilisation of, and rates earned for Jack-Up Barges (JUBs), coupled with fleet growth strengthening the GCC expansion.
Integrated Logistics' EBITDA rose by 30 percent to $687 million (AED2,522 million) for the full year 2024 against 2023.
Revenues from the Shipping segment increased 14 percent to $956 million (AED3,511 million), driven by strong charter rates for Dry Bulk and Tankers in H1 2024, coupled with additional revenue from the four new Very Large Crude Carriers (VLCCs) acquired in 2023; and the LNG vessel "Shahamah" contracted at a higher rate for 2024 compared to 2023; partially offset by a smaller charter-in fleet.
Shipping EBITDA increased 24 percent to $396 million (AED1,456 million) for FY 2024, contributing to a three-percentage point expansion in EBITDA margin to 41 percent.
Revenues from the Services segment increased 10 percent to $312 million (AED1,147 million) compared to FY 2023. This segment generated an EBITDA of $56 million (AED206 million), up 26 percent y-o-y, mainly powered by increased volumes in petroleum ports and onshore terminal operations.
Follow Emirates 24|7 on Google News.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Global PMI indicates modest expansion
Global PMI indicates modest expansion

Al Etihad

time10 hours ago

  • Al Etihad

Global PMI indicates modest expansion

6 July 2025 21:43 A. SREENIVASA REDDY (ABU DHABI)The global economy expanded modestly in June 2025, with key indicators showing slight improvements in output, new business, and employment, according to the latest J.P. Morgan Global Composite PMI survey compiled by S&P Global in partnership with ISM and Composite Output Index rose to a three-month high of 51.7 in June, up from 51.2 in May. While this reflects continued expansion—any figure above 50 indicates growth—the pace remains below long-run averages and is the weakest quarterly performance since the fourth quarter of led the global upturn in June, followed by the United States. Modest growth was also recorded in Japan, the UK, Australia, mainland China, and the euro output contracted in Germany, Russia, and Brazil. The euro area, in particular, continued to services sector maintained its lead over manufacturing, with the Global Services Business Activity Index at 51.9, compared to 51.3 for manufacturing output. Financial services drove the expansion in services, reaching a six-month high, while growth in business services rose globally for the second consecutive month, with the strongest job gains in the service sector. However, manufacturing saw job losses for the eleventh month in a row. Notably, China, Germany, the UK, France, and Russia all reported employment optimism weakened further, with sentiment dropping to one of its lowest levels since mid-2020. The US and China both registered declines in confidence, while Japan, Australia, and the euro area (on average) recorded marginal pressures also moderated. Input cost and output price inflation both eased in June after picking up in May. Inflation was more pronounced in developed markets such as the US, the euro area, and Japan, while China recorded declines in both input and output the softer overall sentiment, the survey signalled some resilience heading into the second half of 2025. 'The global all-industry output PMI recovered another 0.5-pt to 51.7 in June, rising to a level consistent with above-trend 2.6% annualised global GDP growth,' said Maia Crook, Global Economist at J.P. Morgan. 'However, we continue to expect a material slowdown in the coming months as the front-loaded boost to production earlier this year unwinds and drags from US tariffs and related policy uncertainties begin to bite' Source: Aletihad - Abu Dhabi

Global stocks dip as Trump's tariff deals deadline looms
Global stocks dip as Trump's tariff deals deadline looms

The National

time2 days ago

  • The National

Global stocks dip as Trump's tariff deals deadline looms

Global stocks mostly retreated on Friday as countries pushed to secure trade deals with the Trump administration ahead of a July 9 deadline for US tariffs to take effect. Markets also weighed the possible impact of US President Donald Trump's sweeping spending bill set to add an estimated $3.4 trillion to the national debt. He signed the bill into law on Friday. Uncertainty around US tariffs will probably 'remain severe' until late 2025, irrespective of what happens on July 9 when the Trump administration's 90-day pause on 'reciprocal' tariffs comes to an end, S&P Global Market Intelligence said in a report on Friday. 'Within the likely scenarios, the most plausible outcome is a pragmatic mix of tariff pauses for countries that are undertaking positively viewed negotiations, alongside tariff increases for those countries where the administration believes trade negotiations have stalled,' the report said. While Mr Trump has warned new tariffs are likely, S&P said it expects 'some form of negotiation-based pause for most trade partners, based on prior policy backtrack'. Although the US has reached tariff deals with the UK, mainland China and Vietnam, other pending arrangements, including those with the EU, Japan and India, 'remain complicated' by country-specific political issues, it added. Mr Trump on Friday said he had signed 12 trade letters to be sent out next week ahead of the impending July 9 deadline for his tariffs to be implemented. Europe's Stoxx 600 closed 0.48 per cent lower on Friday, London's FTSE 100 ended flat as tariff worries kept trading enthusiasm to a minimum. The index lost just 0.29 points at 8,822.91. In Paris, the CAC 40 ended down 0.8 per cent, while Frankfurt's DAX fell 0.6 per cent. Asian markets closed out the week mixed. Hong Kong's Hang Seng index was down 0.64 per cent, while the Shanghai composite was up 0.32 per cent and Japan's Nikkei inched 0.06 per cent higher. Wall Street was closed on Friday for the US Independence Day holiday. Gold rose 0.3 per cent as investors sought safe havens and the dollar dipped. Brent, the benchmark for two-thirds of the world's oil, fell 0.73 per cent to $68.3 a barrel at close of market on Friday, while West Texas Intermediate, the gauge that tracks US crude, dropped 0.75 per cent to $66.5 a barrel. Brent settled about 0.8 per cent higher than last Friday's close and WTI was about 1.5 per cent higher.

Stocks, dollar dip as Trump passes spending bill, deal deadline looms
Stocks, dollar dip as Trump passes spending bill, deal deadline looms

Gulf Today

time2 days ago

  • Gulf Today

Stocks, dollar dip as Trump passes spending bill, deal deadline looms

Stocks slipped on Friday as US President Donald Trump got his signature tax cut bill over the line and attention turned to his July 9 deadline for countries to secure trade deals with the world's biggest economy. The dollar also fell against major currencies, with US markets already shut for the holiday-shortened week, as traders considered the impact of Trump's sweeping spending bill that is expected to add an estimated $3.4 trillion to the national debt. The pan-European STOXX 600 index fell 0.5%, with banks, mining-related stocks and retailers among the top laggards. US S&P 500 futures edged down 0.6%, following a 0.8% overnight advance for the cash index to an all-time closing peak. Wall Street was closed on Friday for the Independence Day holiday. Trump said Washington would start sending letters to countries on Friday specifying what tariff rates they would face on exports to the United States, a clear shift from earlier pledges to strike scores of individual deals before a July 9 deadline when tariffs could rise sharply. Investors are "now just waiting for July 9", said Tony Sycamore, an analyst at IG, with the market's lack of optimism for trade deals responsible for some of the equity weakness in export-reliant Asia, particularly Japan and South Korea. At the same time, investors cheered a surprisingly robust US jobs report on Thursday, sending all three of the main US equity indexes climbing in a shortened session. "The US economy is holding together better than most people expected, which suggests to me that markets can easily continue to do better (from here)," Sycamore said. Following Thursday's close, the House narrowly approved Trump's signature, 869-page bill, which averts the near-term prospect of a US government default but adds trillions to the national debt to fuel spending on border security and the military. Trump said he expected "a couple" more trade agreements, after announcing a deal with Vietnam on Wednesday to add to framework agreements with China and Britain as the only successes so far. US Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said earlier this week that a deal with India was close. However, progress on agreements with Japan and South Korea, once touted by the White House as likely to be among the earliest to be announced, appears to have broken down. The US dollar index had its worst first half since 1973 as Trump's chaotic roll-out of sweeping tariffs heightened concerns about the US economy and the safety of Treasuries, but had rallied 0.4% on Thursday before retracing some of those gains on Friday. As of 1430 GMT it was down 0.1% at 96.94. The euro added 0.2% to $1.1778, while sterling held steady at $1.3662 as British assets steadied following investor fright over the last two days at a tearful appearance by Finance Minister Rachel Reeves in parliament on Wednesday. The US Treasury bond market was closed on Friday for the holiday, but 10-year yields rose 4.7 basis points (bps) to 4.34%, while the 2-year yield jumped 9.3 bps to 3.882%. Gold firmed 0.4% to $3,336 per ounce, on track for a weekly gain as investors again sought refuge in safe-haven assets due to concerns over the U.S.'s fiscal position and tariffs. Brent crude futures fell 57 cents to $68.23 a barrel, while US West Texas Intermediate crude dropped 66 cents to $66.34, as Iran reaffirmed its commitment to nuclear non-proliferation. Copper prices retreated on Friday as focus switched to US President Donald Trump's July 9 deadline when sweeping tariffs take effect on countries that have not yet secured trade agreements. Benchmark copper on the London Metal Exchange (LME) was down 0.8% at $9,880 a metric tone in official open-outcry trading, having hit a three-month high of $10,020.5 a tone earlier this week. Volumes were subdued due to the July 4 Independence Day holiday in the United States, traders said. Trump said his administration will begin sending letters later on Friday to 10 to 12 countries informing them of the tariff rate their products will face in the US Caution due to several large trading partners, including the European Union, Japan and India, still trying to negotiate a deal with the US had triggered profit-taking on long positions or bets on higher prices, traders said. On the technical front, first support for copper, used in power and construction, comes in at the 21-day moving average around $9,762. Elsewhere, worries about aluminium supplies on the LME created by large holdings of warrants and nearby contracts receded due to slowing outflows and deliveries to the LME-registered warehouses. Aluminium stocks in LME warehouses have climbed 27,025 tonnes to 363,925 tonnes since June 25. Cancelled warrants or metal earmarked for delivery at 2% indicate only small amounts are due to be delivered out. Overall, a softer dollar was providing some support for industrial metals on Friday. But traders said growing prospects of the Federal Reserve holding interest rates steady after Thursday's strong jobs report could boost the US currency and weigh on metals demand. Aluminium was down 0.6% at $2,590.5 a tone in official activity, zinc fell 0.5% to $2,736, lead eased 0.1% to $2,062, tin retreated 0.3% to $33,750 and nickel slipped 0.9% to $15,315. Agencies

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store