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NZOG $2.9m loss despite improved Kupe, Maari performance

NZOG posts $2.9m loss despite improved Kupe, Maari performance

By Gavin Evans

Aug. 27 (BusinessDesk) - New Zealand Oil & Gas has reported a $2.9 million full-year loss with improved production from its Kupe and Maari interests insufficient to offset exploration losses in the first half.

The firm, currently under a takeover offer from its major shareholder, reported a $4.8 million profit a year ago. Excluding the minority holdings in its Cue Energy Resources subsidiary, this year’s loss to NZOG shareholders was $7.5 million.

NZOG reported a 21 percent increase in group revenue to $43.3 million in the year to June 30. That was mostly driven by higher sales from its 4 percent stake in the Kupe gas field.

Operating earnings roughly doubled to $15.9 million, buoyed by higher oil prices, $1.1 million in insurance proceeds for repairs to the Maari platform, lower costs and higher second-half production at the Maari oil field.

NZOG said earnings from Kupe climbed to $10.3 million, from $5.6 million a year earlier. Earnings from Melbourne-based Cue, which owns 5 percent of Maari, jumped to $13.2 million from $5.2 million the year before. That included reimbursement of almost $1 million of costs from the Ironbark venture off Western Australia and lower production costs from Cue’s Sampang project in Indonesia.

In February, NZOG reported a $4.8 million first-half loss after spending $4.6 million on the unsuccessful onshore Kohatukai well in Taranaki and writing $7.2 million off the value of its Kisaran interests in Indonesia.

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NZOG shares last traded at 61.5 cents, having fallen as low as 47 cents earlier this year.

Last month, NZOG’s independent directors recommended a scheme of arrangement in which 70 percent shareholder OG Oil & Gas offered to buy out the other shareholders at 62 cents a share. That was a 25 percent premium at the time. Investors are awaiting an independent appraisal expected from Northington Partners in late September.

NZOG is not paying a dividend and said its cash balance at June 30 was $105.6 million, up from $98 million a year earlier.

It noted that about $23.5 million of that is committed for its share of the Ironbark well, due to be drilled by partner BP in the gas-rich Carnarvon Basin in late 2020. NZOG has a direct 15 percent stake in venture, with Cue holding a 21.5 percent interest.

(BusinessDesk)


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