Venture Global LNG Reports $4.85 Billion in 2023 Profits Amid IPO Buzz

(Reuters) — Venture Global LNG, which has rocketed into the top ranks of U.S. natural gas exporters, earned $4.85 billion in its second year of operations, according to financial documents prepared for its initial public offering of shares.

Founded 11 years ago by an energy lawyer and investment banker, the company has quickly become a major exporter of liquefied natural gas, competing against larger rivals Cheniere Energy, Freeport LNG and Sempra.

Venture Global LNG is expected to announce on Friday its plans for a stock market listing in New York, according to a source familiar with the matter.

A spokesperson for the Arlington, Virginia-based firm did not have immediate comment.

The documents show Venture Global had an operating income of $4.85 billion on revenue of $7.9 billion last year. This compares with operating profits of $3.56 billion on sales of $6.45 billion in 2022.

Estimated costs for building three new liquefied natural gas (LNG) export facilities in the United States were revealed for the first time to top $100 billion, the documents show.

Venture Global LNG has one operating plant in Louisiana, and another expected to soon start producing LNG. The projected volumes from the two plants could next year rank it as the second largest U.S. exporter of the superchilled gas.

The company, which has a controversial history with four contract arbitration cases with customers, has on the drawing board enough future volumes that if completed it could make it one of the three largest LNG producers in the world by 2030.

The Venture Global share offering could find significant interest from institutional investors, said analysts. The Virginia based company will become one of just a handful of options in the U.S. to invest in a pure LNG play.

A big draw for investors could be the "strategic advantages the sector may experience with the incoming Trump administration," said Alex Munton director of global gas and LNG research at consulting firm Rapidan Energy Group.

But the company is embroiled in contract disputes including BP, Shell, Edison and Orlen that could cost it hundreds of millions of dollars. If it loses the cases, the "amounts required to pay may be substantial ... and lead to the acceleration of all our debt for the relevant project," Venture Global warned.

Investors will weigh the potential losses because they could be significant, said Jason Feer, Poten and Partners Global head of business intelligence.

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