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Petroreconcavo's September Dip, And The Bet Behind It
(MENAFN- The Rio Times) PetroReconcavo's production slipped in September as the company chose reservoir health over headline volume. Output averaged 25.9 thousand barrels of oil equivalent per day, down 1.8% from August, with deliveries of 755.8 thousand boe, a 2.1% decline.
The picture varied by region. In Potiguar (Rio Grande do Norte), production held steady at 12.9 kboe/d, with a small uptick in oil offset by slightly lower gas.
In Bahia, volumes eased to 13.1 kboe/d, 3.6% below August, after oil fell 6.8% as the Tiê field entered re-pressurization. Think of it like re-inflating a tire: you lose some speed now to keep the ride going longer.
The goal is to support steadier output and ultimate recovery over the life of the field. Behind the scenes, the company has been hardening the plumbing that gets barrels to market.
A 13-year storage and handling deal at the Pecém terminal in Ceará secures 40,000 cubic meters a month-about 250,000 barrels-creating an extra route designed to cut bottlenecks and narrow pricing discounts.
And on September 30, PetroReconcavo closed the purchase of 50% of Brava Energia's midstream gas assets in Rio Grande do Norte for R$168.8 million ($31.85 million), a move intended to make gas processing and offtake more reliable.
PetroReconcavo's Dividend Strength Holds
For investors, the dividend story remains central. The company operates with low cash break-evens near $30 per barrel and has roughly half of its output hedged around the mid-$60s through 2026.
It targets conservative leverage near 1.1 times net debt to EBITDA by end-2025-factors that local analysts say can support average dividend yields near 12% between 2025 and 2027, even when monthly volumes wobble.
Why this matters: This is a small Latin American producer making a deliberate trade-off-accept near-term softness to protect the reservoir-while building the logistics to keep cash generation resilient.
For readers outside Brazil, watch three signals next: how quickly Tiê rebounds, whether deliveries track production more closely, and how the new export and gas routes lift realized prices and cash flow.
All figures here are drawn from PetroReconcavo's September operational update and related Brazilian market disclosures; nothing has been invented or embellished.
The picture varied by region. In Potiguar (Rio Grande do Norte), production held steady at 12.9 kboe/d, with a small uptick in oil offset by slightly lower gas.
In Bahia, volumes eased to 13.1 kboe/d, 3.6% below August, after oil fell 6.8% as the Tiê field entered re-pressurization. Think of it like re-inflating a tire: you lose some speed now to keep the ride going longer.
The goal is to support steadier output and ultimate recovery over the life of the field. Behind the scenes, the company has been hardening the plumbing that gets barrels to market.
A 13-year storage and handling deal at the Pecém terminal in Ceará secures 40,000 cubic meters a month-about 250,000 barrels-creating an extra route designed to cut bottlenecks and narrow pricing discounts.
And on September 30, PetroReconcavo closed the purchase of 50% of Brava Energia's midstream gas assets in Rio Grande do Norte for R$168.8 million ($31.85 million), a move intended to make gas processing and offtake more reliable.
PetroReconcavo's Dividend Strength Holds
For investors, the dividend story remains central. The company operates with low cash break-evens near $30 per barrel and has roughly half of its output hedged around the mid-$60s through 2026.
It targets conservative leverage near 1.1 times net debt to EBITDA by end-2025-factors that local analysts say can support average dividend yields near 12% between 2025 and 2027, even when monthly volumes wobble.
Why this matters: This is a small Latin American producer making a deliberate trade-off-accept near-term softness to protect the reservoir-while building the logistics to keep cash generation resilient.
For readers outside Brazil, watch three signals next: how quickly Tiê rebounds, whether deliveries track production more closely, and how the new export and gas routes lift realized prices and cash flow.
All figures here are drawn from PetroReconcavo's September operational update and related Brazilian market disclosures; nothing has been invented or embellished.

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