Weatherford says oilfield activity in Mexico has normalized, company getting paid

 April 22 (Reuters) – U.S. oilfield services firm Weatherford International (WFRD.O), opens new tab said on Wednesday that oilfield activity in Mexico has normalized and it was starting to get paid ​after a new financial mechanism helped raise funds for state-run ‌energy company Pemex to pay its suppliers after long delays.

Oilfield service companies had significantly reduced activities amid Pemex’s accumulation of billions of dollars in pending payments to ​contractors and providers in recent years. A payment mechanism approved ​by the government to secure up to $13 billion for companies involved ⁠in oil projects has since last year contributed to debt amortization.

“Right now, ​we’re just very pleased with the fact that activity levels have normalized, ​and we are starting to get paid,” said Girish Saligram, Weatherford’s CEO, on the company’s quarterly earnings call.

“We think that stability will continue on an activity level… So I ​think over the next few years, it will be a bright spot,” ​he added.

The total balance owed to Weatherford by its main customer in Mexico ended ‌at ⁠about $283 million as of March 31, said the company’s Chief Financial Officer Anuj Dhruv, without identifying the customer by name.

Weatherford received a large payment in the fourth quarter and another in the first quarter from that customer, ​Dhruv said.

Since the ​changes were implemented, ⁠payments from Weatherford’s largest customer in Mexico have been like “clockwork,” Dhruv said.

“We expect this trend to continue. And ​so we’re expecting collections to come in Q2, as ​well ⁠as in the back half of this year,” he added.

Mexico’s government in August said it aimed to cease funding Pemex by 2027, when the company ⁠should ​become financially self-sufficient. Last year, some 250 ​billion Mexican pesos ($13 billion) went to pay contractors and providers, leaving Pemex’s accounts payable to providers ​at some $24 billion.

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