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						Another quarter of weak 
						results looms for U.S. refiners 
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		 [October 19, 2016] 
		By Jarrett Renshaw and Devika Krishna Kumar 
 NEW 
		YORK (Reuters) - U.S. independent refiners such as PBF Energy <PBF.N> 
		and Phillips 66 are expected to report another quarter of disappointing 
		profits in coming weeks, as hopes that a record summer driving season 
		would turn the industry's fortunes around do not appear to have 
		materialized.
 
 U.S. refiners are in the midst of their worst year since the shale boom 
		began in 2011. High fuel inventories have punished margins this year, 
		forcing some refiners to voluntarily cut production, delay capital work, 
		lay off workers and slash employee benefits.
 
 With margins expected to remain under pressure, relief is not coming 
		anytime soon, analysts say. Overall supply levels are still elevated, 
		and the cost to meet U.S. renewable fuel standards will drag on profits 
		for the remainder of the year.
 
 Earnings expectations have been falling over the last month for an index 
		of nine independent refiners that are part of the S&P 500. Over the last 
		30 days, the forecast for the third quarter has dropped by 3.8 percent 
		on average, according to StarMine, a unit of Thomson Reuters.
 
 "2016 is probably a lost year for the U.S. refining industry," Barclays 
		analyst Paul Cheng said.
 
		
		 
		The benchmark U.S. crack spread <CL321-1=R, a key measure of margins, 
		steadied in the third quarter, falling about 2 percent after crashing 
		more than 22 percent in the second quarter.
 Motorists hit U.S. roads in record numbers over the summer, but the 
		demand was not enough to deplete the massive buildup in gasoline 
		inventories that existed heading into the summer driving season. Those 
		inventories - the result of overproduction last winter - hurt margins.
 
 Heading into the winter, distillate stocks are at their highest 
		seasonally since 2010. Refiners built up distillate stocks over the 
		summer as they pushed their plants to pump out gasoline.
 
 The U.S. refining industry has widely blamed its economic misfortunes on 
		the country's renewable fuel program, which forces refiners to either 
		blend biofuels like ethanol into their fuel pool or buy renewable fuel 
		credits. The fuel credits, known as renewable identification numbers, or 
		RINs, have jumped in price this year.
 
 Delta Air Lines <DAL.N> opened the earnings season last week, reporting 
		a $45 million loss at its Monroe Energy refinery for the third quarter, 
		versus a $106 million profit a year ago. The company is expecting the 
		refinery to lose more than $100 million this year, versus more than $300 
		million in profits last year.
 
			
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			Storage tanks at a key gasoline-making unit at a PBF Energy Inc 
			refinery in Delaware City, Delaware August 21, 2015. REUTERS/Charles 
			Mostoller 
            
			 
Delta, 
which does not have a blending operation and must buy credits for the fuel it 
produces, said it spent $48 million in the third quarter on RINs, nearly triple 
what it paid last year.
 Another local refinery, Philadelphia Energy Solutions, blamed the rising cost of 
RINs for its decision to lay off up to 100 non-union employees and slash 
benefits. [nL1N1CG0U7]
 
In 
May, Marathon Petroleum <MPC.N> laid off 46 employees at its Galveston Bay 
refinery in Texas. [nL2N18L1V4]
 Standalone refineries like PES and Monroe will continue to struggle in the 
Northeast because they have little advantage over international rivals and face 
tougher environmental obligations at home, Sandy Fielden, director of research, 
commodities and energy at Morningstar in Austin, Texas, said in a report due 
Wednesday.
 
 "U.S. refiner margins as a whole are lower in 2016 versus 2015 and Q4 is not 
likely to be different with higher crude prices and soft product prices due to 
higher inventories," he said.
 
 The U.S. Energy Information Administration expects this winter to be about 18 
percent colder than last year's historically mild season.
 
 (Reporting by Jarrett Renshaw and Devika Krishna Kumar in New York; Editing by 
Leslie Adler)
 
				 
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