This document provides an overview of Sunoco's investor meeting held on December 12, 2007 in Philadelphia, PA. It includes:
1) A safe harbor statement noting that some statements in the presentation involve risks and uncertainties.
2) An agenda outlining the topics to be covered including market outlook, refinery operations, capital program, other businesses, and financial overview.
3) A market outlook presentation noting factors like expected supply growth, crude availability, and Sunoco's commercial initiatives to optimize its assets.
4) Details on Sunoco's refining operations excellence initiatives and capital spending plans for projects to upgrade products and improve capabilities over the next few years.
5) An overview of Sun
Conference Call/Webcast
October 29th, 2012
» QUARTER HIGHLIGHTS
» Net Income of R$5,567 million and EBITDA of R$14,375 million
» Oil production in Brazil of 1,904 kboed (-3% vs. 2Q12) and natural gas of 377 kboed (+4% vs. 2Q12)
» Start up of FPSO Cidade de Anchieta in September 10th
» Current production: 42 kbpd with 3 wells
» Production peak (100 kbpd): March/2013
» Discoveries: Grana Padano (Espirito Santo), Pecém (Ceará), Barra and Moita Bonita (Sergipe Alagoas)
» Record refinery output (2,026 kbpd in 3Q12 vs. 1,886 kbpd in 3Q11)
» Start up of REPAR’s Coking unit
» 7th consecutive year in the Dow Jones Sustainability Index
CEO David Demers' presentation at the 2011 Westport Innovations Inc. Annual General Meeting for the fiscal year ending December 31, 2011. See the interactive video/presentation at http://www.zentation.com/viewer/index.php?passcode=QzGZbfEfP6
Conference Call/Webcast
October 29th, 2012
» QUARTER HIGHLIGHTS
» Net Income of R$5,567 million and EBITDA of R$14,375 million
» Oil production in Brazil of 1,904 kboed (-3% vs. 2Q12) and natural gas of 377 kboed (+4% vs. 2Q12)
» Start up of FPSO Cidade de Anchieta in September 10th
» Current production: 42 kbpd with 3 wells
» Production peak (100 kbpd): March/2013
» Discoveries: Grana Padano (Espirito Santo), Pecém (Ceará), Barra and Moita Bonita (Sergipe Alagoas)
» Record refinery output (2,026 kbpd in 3Q12 vs. 1,886 kbpd in 3Q11)
» Start up of REPAR’s Coking unit
» 7th consecutive year in the Dow Jones Sustainability Index
CEO David Demers' presentation at the 2011 Westport Innovations Inc. Annual General Meeting for the fiscal year ending December 31, 2011. See the interactive video/presentation at http://www.zentation.com/viewer/index.php?passcode=QzGZbfEfP6
Cuba Oil Markets, 2011SummaryThis profile is the essential source for top-level energy industry data and information. The report provides an overview of each of the key sub-segments of the energy industry in Cuba. It details the market structure, regulatory environment, infrastructure and provides historical and forecasted statistics relating to the supply/demand balance for each of the key sub-segments. It also provides information relating to the crude oil assets (oil fields, refineries and pipelines) in Cuba. The report compares the investment environment in Cuba with other countries in the region. The profiles of the major companies operating in the crude oil sector in Cuba together with the latest news and deals are also included in the report.Scope- Historic and forecast data relating to production, consumption, imports, exports and reserves are provided for each industry sub-segment for the period 2000-2020.- Historical and forecast data and information for all the major oil fields, refineries and pipelines in Cuba for the period 2000-2015.- Operator and equity details for major crude oil assets in Cuba.- Key information relating to market regulations, key energy assets and the key companies operating in the Cuba's energy industry.- Information on the top companies in the Cuba including business description, strategic analysis, and financial information.- Product and brand updates, strategy changes, R&D projects, corporate expansions and contractions and regulatory changes.- Key mergers and acquisitions, partnerships, private equity and venture capital investments, and IPOs.Reasons to buy- Gain a strong understanding of the country's energy market.- Facilitate market analysis and forecasting of future industry trends.- Facilitate decision making on the basis of strong historic and forecast production, reserves and capacity data.- Assess your competitor's major crude oil assets and their performance.- Analyze the latest news and financial deals in the oil sector of each country.- Develop strategies based on the latest operational, financial, and regulatory events. - Do deals with an understanding of how competitors are financed, and the mergers and partnerships that have shaped the market.- Identify and analyze the strengths and weaknesses of the leading companies in the country.
Turin Startup Ecosystem 2024 - Ricerca sulle Startup e il Sistema dell'Innov...Quotidiano Piemontese
Turin Startup Ecosystem 2024
Una ricerca de il Club degli Investitori, in collaborazione con ToTeM Torino Tech Map e con il supporto della ESCP Business School e di Growth Capital
Introduction to Indian Financial System ()Avanish Goel
The financial system of a country is an important tool for economic development of the country, as it helps in creation of wealth by linking savings with investments.
It facilitates the flow of funds form the households (savers) to business firms (investors) to aid in wealth creation and development of both the parties
The Evolution of Non-Banking Financial Companies (NBFCs) in India: Challenges...beulahfernandes8
Role in Financial System
NBFCs are critical in bridging the financial inclusion gap.
They provide specialized financial services that cater to segments often neglected by traditional banks.
Economic Impact
NBFCs contribute significantly to India's GDP.
They support sectors like micro, small, and medium enterprises (MSMEs), housing finance, and personal loans.
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Poonawalla Fincorp and IndusInd Bank Introduce New Co-Branded Credit Cardnickysharmasucks
The unveiling of the IndusInd Bank Poonawalla Fincorp eLITE RuPay Platinum Credit Card marks a notable milestone in the Indian financial landscape, showcasing a successful partnership between two leading institutions, Poonawalla Fincorp and IndusInd Bank. This co-branded credit card not only offers users a plethora of benefits but also reflects a commitment to innovation and adaptation. With a focus on providing value-driven and customer-centric solutions, this launch represents more than just a new product—it signifies a step towards redefining the banking experience for millions. Promising convenience, rewards, and a touch of luxury in everyday financial transactions, this collaboration aims to cater to the evolving needs of customers and set new standards in the industry.
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Financial Assets: Debit vs Equity Securities.pptxWrito-Finance
financial assets represent claim for future benefit or cash. Financial assets are formed by establishing contracts between participants. These financial assets are used for collection of huge amounts of money for business purposes.
Two major Types: Debt Securities and Equity Securities.
Debt Securities are Also known as fixed-income securities or instruments. The type of assets is formed by establishing contracts between investor and issuer of the asset.
• The first type of Debit securities is BONDS. Bonds are issued by corporations and government (both local and national government).
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Following are the risk attached with debt securities: Credit risk, interest rate risk and currency risk
There are no fixed maturity dates in such securities, and asset’s value is determined by company’s performance. There are two major types of equity securities: common stock and preferred stock.
Common Stock: These are simple equity securities and bear no complexities which the preferred stock bears. Holders of such securities or instrument have the voting rights when it comes to select the company’s board of director or the business decisions to be made.
Preferred Stock: Preferred stocks are sometime referred to as hybrid securities, because it contains elements of both debit security and equity security. Preferred stock confers ownership rights to security holder that is why it is equity instrument
<a href="https://www.writofinance.com/equity-securities-features-types-risk/" >Equity securities </a> as a whole is used for capital funding for companies. Companies have multiple expenses to cover. Potential growth of company is required in competitive market. So, these securities are used for capital generation, and then uses it for company’s growth.
Concluding remarks
Both are employed in business. Businesses are often established through debit securities, then what is the need for equity securities. Companies have to cover multiple expenses and expansion of business. They can also use equity instruments for repayment of debits. So, there are multiple uses for securities. As an investor, you need tools for analysis. Investment decisions are made by carefully analyzing the market. For better analysis of the stock market, investors often employ financial analysis of companies.
Falcon stands out as a top-tier P2P Invoice Discounting platform in India, bridging esteemed blue-chip companies and eager investors. Our goal is to transform the investment landscape in India by establishing a comprehensive destination for borrowers and investors with diverse profiles and needs, all while minimizing risk. What sets Falcon apart is the elimination of intermediaries such as commercial banks and depository institutions, allowing investors to enjoy higher yields.
The European Unemployment Puzzle: implications from population agingGRAPE
We study the link between the evolving age structure of the working population and unemployment. We build a large new Keynesian OLG model with a realistic age structure, labor market frictions, sticky prices, and aggregate shocks. Once calibrated to the European economy, we quantify the extent to which demographic changes over the last three decades have contributed to the decline of the unemployment rate. Our findings yield important implications for the future evolution of unemployment given the anticipated further aging of the working population in Europe. We also quantify the implications for optimal monetary policy: lowering inflation volatility becomes less costly in terms of GDP and unemployment volatility, which hints that optimal monetary policy may be more hawkish in an aging society. Finally, our results also propose a partial reversal of the European-US unemployment puzzle due to the fact that the share of young workers is expected to remain robust in the US.
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How to get verified on Coinbase Account?_.docxBuy bitget
t's important to note that buying verified Coinbase accounts is not recommended and may violate Coinbase's terms of service. Instead of searching to "buy verified Coinbase accounts," follow the proper steps to verify your own account to ensure compliance and security.
Empowering the Unbanked: The Vital Role of NBFCs in Promoting Financial Inclu...Vighnesh Shashtri
In India, financial inclusion remains a critical challenge, with a significant portion of the population still unbanked. Non-Banking Financial Companies (NBFCs) have emerged as key players in bridging this gap by providing financial services to those often overlooked by traditional banking institutions. This article delves into how NBFCs are fostering financial inclusion and empowering the unbanked.
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2. Safe Harbor Statement
Statements in this presentation that are not historical facts are forward-looking statements intended
to be covered by the safe harbor provisions of Section 27A of the Securities Act of 1933 and Section
21E of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934. These forward-looking statements are based upon
assumptions by Sunoco concerning future conditions, any or all of which ultimately may prove to be
inaccurate, and upon the current knowledge, beliefs and expectations of Sunoco management. These
forward-looking statements are not guarantees of future performance.
Forward-looking statements are inherently uncertain and involve significant risks and uncertainties
that could cause actual results to differ materially from those described during this
presentation. Such risks and uncertainties include economic, business, competitive and/or
regulatory factors affecting Sunoco's business, as well as uncertainties related to the outcomes of
pending or future litigation. In accordance with the safe harbor provisions of the Private Securities
Litigation Reform Act of 1995, Sunoco has included in its Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year
ended December 31, 2006, and in its subsequent Form 10-Q and Form 8-K filings, cautionary
language identifying important factors (though not necessarily all such factors) that could cause
future outcomes to differ materially from those set forth in the forward-looking statements. For more
information concerning these factors, see Sunoco's Securities and Exchange Commission filings,
available on Sunoco's website at www.SunocoInc.com. Sunoco expressly disclaims any obligation
to update or alter its forward-looking statements, whether as a result of new information, future
events or otherwise.
This presentation includes certain non-GAAP financial measures intended to supplement, not
substitute for, comparable GAAP measures. Reconciliations of non-GAAP financial measures to
GAAP financial measures are provided in the Appendix at the end of the presentation. Investors are
urged to consider carefully the comparable GAAP measures and the reconciliations to those
measures provided in the Appendix, or on our website at www.SunocoInc.com.
2
3. Agenda
Opening Comments
g
Jack Drosdick
Market Outlook
g
Mike Hennigan
Refinery Operations and Capital Program
g
Vince Kelley
Other Businesses and Financial Overview
g
Tom Hofmann
3
6. Market Outlook
■ Market for refined products should remain relatively
constructive over next few years
■ Considerable supply growth expected for sweet
crudes that can be run in Sunoco’s system
■ Ongoing commercial initiatives to optimize crude
source flexibility and value added products
6
7. World Economic Growth
6.0%
5.0%
4.0%
3.0%
2.0%
1.0%
0.0%
2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007E 2008E
GDP growth is a significant
driver of oil demand
Source: PIRA Energy 7
8. 2008 Oil Demand Growth Estimates, MMB/D
OECD * Non-OECD World
IEA 0.6 1.4 2.0
U.S. EIA 0.2 1.3 1.5
PIRA 0.4 1.2 1.6
Developing countries are
the main driver of world
oil demand growth
Source: November 2007 reports (International Energy Agency, U.S. Energy
Information Administration, and PIRA Energy)
* Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development
8
9. Days Supply Inventory – Major OECD
Crude Total Products
Days
Days (End of October) (End of October)
38
25
37
24
36
23
35
22
34
21
2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007
2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007
Lower days-supply inventory
levels approaching 2008
9
Source: PIRA Energy – 3 Major OECD Markets (U.S., Europe, Japan)
10. Global Refining Capacity Increases, MMB/D
3.5
Capacity Growth Demand Growth
3.0
2.5
2.0
MMB/D
1.5
1.0
0.5
0.0
2008 2009 2010
Capacity increases not expected
to exceed demand until 2010
Source: PIRA Energy 10
11. Impact of Unknowns
Weather: “normal” weather demand is significant
g
0 2006/07 oil demand was ~80-140 MMB less due to
warmer-than-normal winters in the three major
OECD markets
$90/B oil
g
0 Elasticity debate reaches another level
Ethanol
g
0 Attractive pricing currently for refiners
0 Pace of infrastructure growth and probable
increased mandate need to be watched
Refinery utilization rates
g
0 More complexity… new specs in U.S. / Europe
0 Level of planned and unplanned downtime
11
12. Sunoco Commercial Activities
Products: Optimizing the assets and capturing
g
market opportunities
Crude: Increase crude source diversification and
g
flexibility
0 Have increased use of high-acid and higher-resid
crudes
0 Considerable supply growth (OPEC and non-
OPEC) expected for sweet crudes that can be
run in Sunoco’s system
12
13. Current Sweet* Crude Availability to Sunoco
Western Canadian Caspian
North Sea
Sweet 0.8 MMB/D
3.5 MMB/D
1.0 MMB/D
Eastern
Canada
0.4 MMB/D
U.S.
0.7 MMB/D North Africa
2.8 MMB/D
West Africa
5.0 MMB/D
South
America
0.5 MMB/D
Columbia / Venezuela
* <0.5% sulfur
13
Source: Sunoco estimates
16. Refining & Supply Strategy
■ Continued focus on extracting full value of existing
assets through Operations Excellence
■ Capital spending program focuses on high-value
product upgrading rather than high-cost expansions
0Particular focus on upgrading residual fuel and
continuing to improve ultra-low-sulfur diesel
capability
■ Maintain spending discipline and keep projects in
manageable scope
16
18. Refining Capital Update
2007 Project Review:
g
0 Philadelphia Refinery FCC Expansion / Resid
Processing project performance
0 Toledo Refinery Crude Unit Debottleneck project
performance
2008-2009 Capital Program… Overview of Major Projects:
g
0 Philadelphia Refinery Hydrocracker Conversion for
Ultra-Low-Sulfur Diesel
0 Toledo Refinery Hydrocracker Conversion
0 Toledo Refinery Environmental New Source Review
0 Tulsa Refinery Distillate Hydrotreater
18
19. Phila. FCC Expansion / Resid Processing
Expand Fluid Catalytic Cracking Unit to increase capacity to upgrade
g
residual fuel and add crude slate flexibility…
Total cost: $525MM, including required environmental upgrades
Expected: - Throughput increase from 70 to 85 MB/D
g
- Upgrade up to 25 MB/D residual fuel to light products
(from prior 5-10 MB/D)
Results: - Completed project in April 2007
g
- 3Q07 average throughput of 84 MB/D with residual fuel
input of 23 MB/D
- Proven unit rate of more than 90 MB/D and residual fuels
inputs as high as 30 MB/D in different operating modes
- Increased flexibility to process lower-cost crudes
In 2008: Capture full-year benefit of $85MM net income*
Continue to optimize operations and crude flexibility
19
* Assumes $25/B upgrade from residual fuel to gasoline/distillate.
20. Toledo Refinery Crude Unit Debottleneck
Project to expand refining capacity and increase jet fuel production
g
Total Cost: $50MM
Expected: - Increase crude capacity by 20 MB/D (from 160 MB/D)
g
- Incremental 15 MB/D production (primarily jet fuel)
Results: - Completed project in July 2007
g
- Record level of jet production in 3Q07
- Installed equipment working as designed… but
limited by crude unit fouling and downstream
process unit limitations
- CURRENT: Production increase of 10 MB/D yields
annualized net income contribution of approximately
$30MM*
In 2008: Resolve fouling issues to reach capacity of 175 MB/D
Pursue downstream limitations
20
* Assumes average light product margins of $15/B over crude.
21. Philadelphia Hydrocracker Conversion
Convert idle hydrocracker into hydrotreater for ULSD
g
production
Enable 45 MB/D upgrade of heating oil to ULSD (15 ppm)
g
0 Replace approximately 35 MB/D of LSD currently sold into
fuels market under Temporary Compliance Order (500 ppm
sulfur)
0 Add new incremental ULSD capacity
Estimated Capital: $285MM with completion expected in 2009
g
Full-year benefit of $55MM net income from upgrading 45 MB/D
g
of heating oil to ULSD (25% IRR)*
Significant increase in capability to make
ULSD and optimize versus heating oil market
* Assumes $6.50/B uplift from heating oil to ULSD.
21
22. Toledo Hydrocracker Conversion
Dec 2006: Considered project to convert and
g
expand Toledo hydrocracker (estimated $10-
20MM cost for 5-10 MB/D expansion)
2007: Re-evaluated project scope
g
0Hydraulic Debottleneck to deliver 3-5 MB/D
expansion for about $1MM cost
0Expected completion in 2008
Majority of value with much less investment
22
23. Toledo Environmental New Source Review
Environmental project to comply with New Source
g
Review and enable potential future refinery
expansion
0FCC Flue Gas Treating Unit
0Sulfur Recovery Unit Complex
Estimated Capital: $450MM with completion by
g
mid-2009
Continue to evaluate other Toledo expansion
opportunities for 2010-2012 timeframe
23
24. Tulsa Distillate Hydrotreater
Clean Fuels project in early stages of engineering
g
to convert high-sulfur distillate into ULSD
Install new 24 MB/D hydrotreating unit
g
0Scope also includes new Sulfur Recovery Unit
and Tail Gas Treater
Estimated Capital: approximately $400MM with
g
mid-2010 completion
Continue to pursue other options
g
Add ULSD capability and increase crude flexibility
24
25. Refining & Supply Capital Program, MM$
Est. Total
2007 2008 2009 2007-2009
Base Infrastructure 195 202 216 613
Turnarounds 100 151 161 412
Sub-Total Sustaining 295 353 377 1,025
Major Projects 405 546 500 1,451
Total 700 899 877 2,476
December 2006* 792 805
* Estimates presented at December 2006 Analyst Meeting.
25
26. Refining & Supply Capital Summary
Capture full-year benefit of Philadelphia FCC and
g
Toledo debottleneck projects
Future spending on projects in development will enable
g
future expansions and upgrades to high-valued
transportation fuels
Additional projects under development include:
g
0Toledo refinery expansion
0Yield improvement project at Eagle Point FCC
0Increase residual fuel cracking at Marcus Hook FCC
26
28. Meaningful Leverage to Refining Margins
$1.75
180
35% reduction in outstanding 1.70
shares since January 2000
$1.50
160
151
EPS Leverage, $/B
Shares O/S, MM
$1.25
140 1.06
$1.00
0.89
118
120
91% increase in per share leverage to $0.75
a $1.00/B change in refining margins
100 $0.50
1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 9/30/07
(year-end)
28
29. Non-Refining Earnings
$400
EPS impact of $200MM of
$350 earnings on current shares
outstanding is $1.70/share
$300
233
$250
213 205
194
$200
160
$150
$100
$50
$0
2003 2004 2005 2006 9M07
* Includes operating income (after-tax) from Retail Marketing, Chemicals, Logistics and Coke business units.
29
For detail and reconciliation to Net Income, see slide A4.
30. Retail Marketing
2003 2004 2005 2006 9M07
Net Income, MM$ 91 68 30 76 68
Retail Gasoline Margin, cpg 10.3 9.8 8.1 9.9 9.9
Acquisition Capital, MM$ 162 181 - - -
Divestment Proceeds, MM$ 74 193 50 46 46
Avg. Capital Employed, MM$ 565 574 569 554 560
ROCE, % 16% 12% 5% 14% 12%
Integrated with Sunoco’s refinery gasoline production
g
Continue to structure retail portfolio for optimum return
g
30
31. Chemicals
2003 2004 2005 2006 9M07
Net Income, MM$ 53 94 94 43 28
Avg. Chemicals Margin, cpp 9.5 11.0 12.1 9.9 10.1
Acquisition Capital, MM$ 198 40 - - -
Divestment Proceeds, MM$ - 105 - - -
Avg. Capital Employed, MM$ 934 1,012 1,029 1,043 1,061
ROCE, % 6% 9% 9% 4% 3%
Integrated with Sunoco’s refining petrochemical production
g
Improved operations and competitive assets
g
Rising feedstock costs have squeezed margins
g
Pursuing strategic opportunities
g
31
32. Sunoco Logistics Partners L.P.
SXL Market Capitalization
MM$
(LP Interest Only)
1,800
1,600
1,442 1,399
1,400
1,200
1,032 1,000
1,000
840
800
546 Value to Sunoco, Inc.
600 461 Current LP Distribution: $3.40/unit annualized
g
Sunoco LP Ownership: 12.1 MM units
400
Current GP Distribution: $6MM per quarter
g
Sunoco 100% owner of GP
200
0
2/8/02 12/31/02 12/31/03 12/31/04 12/31/05 12/31/06 12/10/07
(IPO)
32
33. Logistics
2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 9M07
Net Income, $MM 33 26 31 22 36 33
Cash to Sunoco, MM$
Sale of LP Units 96 - 83 99 - -
LP Distributions 20 34 36 34 36 30
GP Distributions 1 1 3 5 14 16
SXL currently distributes approximately $65MM of annualized
g
cash flow to Sunoco
Implied value of Sunoco’s SXL General and Limited Partner
g
interests of approximately $1.0-$1.2 billion
Expectations for continued growth
g
33
34. Coke Growth
Investm ent Capacity
MM$ Mtons In Service
Jew ell N/A 700 1979
Indiana Harbor 195 1,300 1998
Haverhill I 150 550 2005
41 *
Vitória, Brazil 1,700 2007
2008
Haverhill II 250 550
Total 4,800
* Represents equity ownership interests.
34
35. Coke
2003 2004 2005 2006 9M07
Net Income, MM$ 43 40 48 50 31
2008 net income expected to be $80-$85MM
g
(EBITDA of $125-$130MM*)
- End-of-2008 net income run rate of $95-$100MM
(EBITDA of $150-$155MM*)
Haverhill II coke plant (including 46 MW power generation) will
g
start up in 2H08
- Expected annualized net income of approximately $25MM
Further domestic and international growth opportunities
g
Structure to provide best value to Sunoco shareholders
g
35
* See reconciliation on Slide A17.
36. Capital Program by Business Unit, MM$
Est. Total
2006 2007 2008 2009 2007-2009
Refining & Supply 712 700 899 877 2,476
Retail Marketing 112 118 157 154 429
Chemicals 62 68 64 79 211
Logistics 119 114 27* 29* 170
186 102 20 308
Coke** 14
Total 1,019 1,186 1,249 1,159 3,594
* Excludes Sunoco Logistics growth investments
** Includes Haverhill II investment in 2007 and 2008
36
37. Capital Program by Category, MM$
Est. Total
2006 2007 2008 2009 2007-2009
Base Maintenance /
350 512 595 622 1,729
Turnaround
Regulatory / Required 282 183 275 109 567
632 695 870 731 2,296
Income Improvement* 387 491 379 428 1,298
Total 1,019 1,186 1,249 1,159 3,594
* Excludes Sunoco Logistics growth investments in 2008 and 2009
Includes Haverhill II investment in 2007 and 2008
37
38. Key Takeaways
Refining market outlook constructive but volatile
g
Disciplined capital program focused on upgrading
g
products and expanding feedstock flexibility
Non-refining businesses provide significant value
g
and opportunity
Financial capacity to execute capital program,
g
opportunistically acquire assets and reduce shares
outstanding
Portfolio of assets will be structured to maximize
g
shareholder value
38
40. Sunoco, Inc.
Capital Employed, MM$ Founded in 1886
g
9/30/07
NYSE: SUN
g
2006 Revenue = $39 billion
g
Corp.
As of 9/30/07:
g
330
Coke
0$12 billion in assets
320
0$8.3 billion in market cap
0117.6 MM shares outstanding
0About 14,000 employees
Logistics
515
Refining & Supply
Five Business Lines
g
1,790
0340 MMB / yr. refining prod.
Chemicals
05 billion gal. / yr. retail fuel sales
1,060
05 billion lbs / yr. chemical
merchant sales
Retail
Marketing
0Logistics MLP (NYSE:SXL)
580
owned 43% by Sunoco, Inc.
04.3 MM tons / yr. coke prod.
Total = $4.6 billion A1
41. Sunoco Operations
Toledo
Frankford
Eagle Point
Indiana
Philadelphia
Harbor Haverhill
Marcus Hook
Neal
Epsilon
Vansant
Tulsa
Refineries
Chemical Plants
Coke Plants
Terminal
Retail Marketing
Western Pipeline System
La Porte
Bayport Eastern Pipeline System
Nederland
A2
42. Summary of Results
2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 9M07
Income (Loss) before Special Items, MM$ * 380 (25) 335 629 1,012 979 810
Income (Loss) before Special Items, $/share * 2.32 (0.16) 2.16 4.20 7.36 7.59 6.71
ROCE, % ** 14.8 1.6 13.2 21.7 32.4 28.3 19.9
Debt / Capital, % (GAAP Basis) 47 51 51 48 41 49 44
Debt / Capital, % (Revolver Basis)*** 49 45 42 37 17 40 38
Share Repurchase, MM$ 393 -- 136 568 435 871 300
Shares O/S @ Period-end, MM 151.1 152.9 150.8 138.7 133.1 121.3 117.6
Share Price @ Period-end, $/share 18.67 16.59 25.58 40.86 78.38 62.36 70.78
* Reconciliation of Income (Loss) before Special Items to Net Income (Loss) provided on Slide A4.
** Calculated using Income (Loss) before Special Items.
*** Revolver covenant calculation. See reconciliation on Slide A5.
A3
43. Earnings Profile
2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 9M07
Net Income (Loss) (MM$ after tax):
Refining & Supply 290 (31) 261 541 947 881 729
Retail Marketing 87 20 91 68 30 76 68
Chemicals 6 28 53 94 94 43 28
Logistics 42 33 26 31 22 36 33
Coke 61 42 43 40 48 50 31
Corporate Expenses (24) (26) (40) (67) (84) (58) (44)
Net Financing Expenses & Other (82) (91) (99) (78) (45) (49) (35)
Income (Loss) Before Special Items 380 (25) 335 629 1,012 979 810
Special Items 18 (22) (23) (24) (38) - 90
Total Net Income (Loss) 398 (47) 312 605 974 979 900
EPS (Diluted):
Income (Loss) before Special Items 2.32 (0.16) 2.16 4.20 7.36 7.59 6.71
Special Items 0.11 (0.15) (0.15) (0.16) (0.28) - 0.75
Net Income (Loss) 2.43 (0.31) 2.01 4.04 7.08 7.59 7.46
A4
44. Financial Ratios
Year-End
2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 9/30/07
Total Debt (GAAP Basis) 1,444 1,455 1,601 1,482 1,411 1,987 2,039
Plus: Debt Guarantees 165 168 12 11 7 5 3
Less: Cash (42) (390) (431) (405) (919) (263) (263)
Net Debt (Revolver Covenant Basis) 1,567 1,233 1,182 1,088 499 1,729 1,779
Shareholders’ Equity (GAAP Basis) 1,642 1,394 1,556 1,607 2,051 2,075 2,566
SXL * Minority Interest - 100 104 232 397 503 353
Equity (Revolver Covenant Basis) 1,642 1,494 1,660 1,839 2,448 2,578 2,919
Debt / Capital (GAAP Basis) 47% 51% 51% 48% 41% 49% 44%
Net Debt / Capital **
49% 45% 42% 37% 17% 40% 38%
(Revolver Covenant Basis)
* Sunoco Logistics Partners L.P. (NYSE: SXL).
** The Net Debt / Capital ratio is used by Sunoco management in its internal financial analysis and
by investors and creditors in the assessment of Sunoco’s financial position.
A5
45. Share Repurchase
Shares Total Average
Repurchased Cost Price
(MM) (MM$) ($/share)
2000 10.4 144 13.87
2001 21.4 393 18.32
2002 -- -- --
2003 5.8 136 23.36
2004 15.9 568 35.68
2005 6.7 435 64.57
2006 12.2 871 71.13
9M07 4.0 300 75.35
Total 76.4 2,847 37.20
Net Share Reduction since Jan 2000 = 35%
Shares O/S at 9/30/07 = 117.6MM
Remaining Authorization at 9/30/07 = $649MM
A6
46. 2008 Cash Flow Model
Assumptions:
Based on assets currently owned
g
First Call consensus earnings estimate . . .
g
not guidance by Sunoco
Estimated cash tax rate of 30%
g
No change in working capital
g
Required debt payments are refinanced
g
Voluntary pension contribution of $100MM
g
No share repurchase / option exercises
g
A7
47. 2008 Cash Flow Model, MM$
Income before Special Items 950*
Non-Cash / Deferred / Other 705**
Capital Expenditures (1,249)
Cash Dividend (129)
Free Cash Flow 277
Divestment Proceeds 30
Pension Contribution (100)
Net Cash Flow 207
* First Call consensus as of December 10, 2007
** See reconciliation to GAAP amounts in Appendix A9 and A10 A8
48. Reconciliation of Non-GAAP Cash Flow, MM$
2008
Model
Miscellaneous GAAP Cash Flow Items:
Depreciation, depletion and amortization 490
Deferred income tax expense 170
Payments less than (in excess of) expense for retirement plans * 55
Other operating items 70
Cash distributions to investors in cokemaking and logistics operations (80)
Non-Cash/Deferred/Other (refer to Slides A7 and A8) 705
* Excludes voluntary pension contribution of $100MM.
A9
49. Cash Flow Statement (GAAP Basis), MM$
2008
Model *
Cash Flow from Operating Activities
Net Income 950
Adjustments to reconcile net income to net cash
provided by operating activities:
Depreciation, depletion and amortization 490
Deferred income tax expense 170
Payments less than (in excess of) expense for retirement plans (45)
Other 70
Net cash provided by operating activities 1,635
Cash Flows from Investing Activities
Capital expenditures and acquisitions (1,249)
Proceeds from divestments 30
Net cash used in investing activities (1,219)
Cash Flows from Financing Activities
Cash distributions to investors in cokemaking and logistics operations (80)
Cash dividend payments (129)
Net cash used in financing activities (209)
Net increase in cash and cash equivalents 207
* See 2008 cash flow model assumptions on slide A7.
A10
53. Chemicals
North America
Capital Employed: $1.1 Billion Effective Annual Industry Capacity, billion lbs
(as of 9/30/07) Phenol
Polypropylene
Basell 3.5 Sunoco 2.1*
Ineos 2.8 Shell 1.3
ExxonMobil 2.7 Ineos 1.3
Sunoco 2.5 Mount Vernon 0.7
Total 2.4 (Sabic/Citgo/JLM)
Polypropylene Phenol
Formosa 1.8 Dow/Carbide 0.6
Dow 1.6 Georgia Gulf 0.5
Flint Hills 1.1 Others 0.3
Others 3.2 Total 6.8
Total 21.6
Source: 2007 Chemical Data
* Includes 0.3 billion lbs mothballed Haverhill line
A14
54. Sunoco Logistics (SXL) Distributions
LP/GP
Distribution
Split (%)
(per unit)
$3.60 50 / 50
$3.40
th
$3.20
ro w
on G
$3.00 ti
tribu 75 / 25
$2.80 Dis
89%
$2.60
$2.40
$2.20 85 / 15
$2.00
$1.80
98 / 2
$1.60
1Q02
2Q02
3Q02
4Q02
1Q03
2Q03
3Q03
4Q03
1Q04
2Q04
3Q04
4Q04
1Q05
2Q05
3Q05
4Q05
1Q06
2Q06
3Q06
4Q06
1Q07
2Q07
3Q07
Current annual distribution of $3.40/unit (approximate 7% yield)
g
and approximately $65MM of LP/GP distributions to Sunoco
A15
55. Logistics
Sunoco, Inc. Public
43%* 57%
Sunoco Logistics
Partners L.P.
Eastern Pipeline Terminal Western Pipeline
System Facilities System
* Including the 2% General Partner interest A16
56. Expected Coke Earnings
Reconciliation of EBITDA to Net Income, MM$
2008 End of 2008
Projection Run Rate
EBITDA 125 - 130 150 - 155
Less: Depreciation 23 27
Income tax 22 28
Net Income 80 - 85 95 - 100
A17
57. Haverhill II Coke Project
Additional 100 ovens (550 Mtons/year) at Haverhill
g
coke plant site with net 46 megawatts per year of
power production
Construction began in 1Q07 and is expected to be
g
operational in the second half of 2008
Total cost estimated at approximately $250MM
g
Expected annualized net income of approximately
g
$25MM
Long-term contracts for coke sales executed with
g
customers . . . structured to provide steady income
and attractive returns
A18
58. For More Information
Media releases and SEC filings are available
on our website at www.SunocoInc.com
Contact for more information:
Tom Harr 1-215-977-6764
Investor Relations
A19