Marco Polo Marine H2 profit jumps over 4 times to S.9 million on impairment reversals

Marco Polo Marine H2 profit jumps over 4 times to S$47.9 million on impairment reversals


This is attributed to a combination of stronger underlying performance and several extraordinary gains

[SINGAPORE] Marco Polo Marine posted on Saturday (Nov 29) a more than four times, or 348 per cent increase, in net profit to S$47.9 million for its second half ended Sep 30, 2025, from S$10.7 million in the previous corresponding period.

For the full year, net profit also surged 169.7 per cent to S$58.5 million, from S$21.7 million the year before. 

This was attributed to a combination of stronger underlying performance and several extraordinary gains, including a S$22.4 million reversal of impairment loss on certain vessels and a S$5.9 million reversal of impairment loss on an amount due from a joint venture.

Excluding the extraordinary gains, net foreign exchange effects and other non-core operational gains or losses, the adjusted net profit for FY2025 stood at S$25.2 million.

Earnings per share for H2 stood at S$0.0046, up from S$0.0028 in the previous corresponding period.

Revenue for the second half rose about 13 per cent to S$70.1 million, from S$62 million a year earlier. This was driven by a 24 per cent increase in revenue from ship chartering operations to S$48.2 million, following the expansion of the group’s offshore vessel fleet.

SEE ALSO

Shares of the shipyard, offshore energy and marine transportation company have risen 3.7% or S$0.004 to S$0.112 on Monday as at 9.15 am.

On a full year basis, the revenue decreased to S$122.8 million in FY2025 from S$123.5 million in FY2024. This decline was mainly due to a 17.4 per cent decline in shipyard revenue.

A final dividend of S$0.0015 per share was declared for the full year, up from S$0.001 the year before. The date payable will be announced later.

Shares of Marco Polo Marine closed at S$0.117 on Friday, S$0.002 or 1.7 per cent lower.

Decoding Asia newsletter: your guide to navigating Asia in a new global order. Sign up here to get Decoding Asia newsletter. Delivered to your inbox. Free.



Source link

Posted in

Liam Redmond

Leave a Comment