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Revenue Up 53%,
Operating Profit Doubled:
Regency Petroleum’s
Yaad Man Bet Pays First Dividends
Regency Petroleum Company Limited opens 2026 with its strongest quarterly revenue on record — J$662.78 million — as the mid-February acquisition of Yaad Man Haulage’s LPG operations immediately reshapes the business. But a 144% spike in finance costs, a one-time CIBC commitment fee, and the Crawford filling plant still dark from Hurricane Melissa are the three forces suppressing what would otherwise be an even more compelling net profit story.
A Quarter That Changes the Company’s Scale
Regency Petroleum Company Limited (RPL) entered 2026 as a materially different business from the one that closed 2025. The mid-February acquisition of Yaad Man Haulage (JA) Limited’s LPG operations — completed for a total consideration that generated J$171.08 million in goodwill above net asset value — effectively quadrupled the company’s gas cylinder base from approximately 20,000 to more than 70,000 units. With it came the Malvern, St. Elizabeth filling plant, the existing Western Jamaica distribution network, and several key supporting assets.
The numbers that came with it in Q1 are striking. Revenue for the three months ended March 31, 2026 reached J$662.78 million — a 53% advance on the J$434.13 million recorded in Q1 2025. Operating profit more than doubled, rising 101% from J$24.01 million to J$48.34 million. Net profit grew 76% from J$15.08 million to J$26.53 million. Earnings per share moved from $0.011 to $0.018.
It is important to note, as management does explicitly, that Yaad Man only contributed approximately 6% of Q1 revenue — having been part of the business for only six weeks of the quarter. The organic fuel retail business — service stations in Westmoreland and on Spanish Town Road — delivered the bulk of the growth, with Westmoreland benefiting from continued recovery from Hurricane Melissa. The full financial impact of the Yaad Man integration will emerge through Q2, Q3 and Q4 of FY2026.
“The recently acquired Yaad Man LPG assets now represents 85% of our LPG business. Shareholders should see the full impact of the recent acquisition in the subsequent quarters.”
— Andrew Williams, Founder & Chief Executive Officer, Regency Petroleum Company Limited
Revenue and Gross Profit: Volume Drives the Top Line
The 53% revenue surge reflects both volume growth and price effects. Petrojam ex-refinery prices for 87 Octane, 90 Octane and Auto Diesel were all higher in March 2026 than in March 2025 — with 87 Octane at J$167.88 per litre versus J$152.64, a 10% increase. But management is clear that RPL cannot control market prices and instead directs attention toward volumes. The volume performance across Westmoreland — a market recovering from Hurricane Melissa disruption — and the Spanish Town Road location, which is becoming more established in its surrounding community, drove the organic revenue growth.
Gross profit grew a more modest 36% to J$96.82 million, as gross margin compressed from 16.41% in Q1 2025 to 14.61% in Q1 2026. Management attributes this to two factors: higher prices from suppliers (which cannot immediately be passed through in full), and a change in the composition of products sold — the LPG business, which carries different margin characteristics from retail fuel, is now a more significant part of the mix. This margin compression deserves monitoring. If RPL’s LPG expansion dilutes blended margin further, the gross profit growth rate will lag revenue growth even as volumes accelerate.
PetroJam Ex-Refinery Prices — Selected Dates
Finance Costs: The Acquisition’s Price Tag on the Income Statement
The most significant income statement development below the gross profit line is the explosion in finance costs — from J$8.93 million in Q1 2025 to J$21.81 million in Q1 2026, a 144% increase. This is almost entirely attributable to the CIBC Caribbean (Jamaica) Limited financing arranged to support the Yaad Man acquisition and the simultaneous retirement of the company’s existing US Dollar bond.
The J$7.23 million commitment fee is a one-time charge — it will not appear in Q2 or subsequent quarters. This is the single most important normalisation an investor must make when assessing RPL’s run-rate profitability. Stripping out the commitment fee, Q1 finance costs would have been approximately J$14.58 million — still up 63% year-over-year from the recurring debt cost increases, but materially less alarming as a trajectory indicator.
The two CIBC loans — one to refinance the US Dollar bond and one to fund the Yaad Man acquisition (J$150 million) — are repayable over six to eight years at a fixed rate of 8.70% for three years before converting to floating. The total long-term borrowings on the balance sheet at period end stood at J$668.56 million, compared to nil a year earlier. This is the leverage that funded the company’s transformation, and its cost must now be serviced from operating cash flows.
At March 31, 2026, total long-term borrowings of J$668.56 million and lease liabilities of J$249.35 million (non-current) give RPL a combined long-term debt and lease obligation of J$917.90 million, against shareholders’ equity of J$656.06 million. The current portion of long-term loans is J$58.14 million — substantially lower than the J$221.70 million current portion a year ago, reflecting the refinancing from bullet bond to amortising term loans. This is a structurally healthier debt profile, even at a higher absolute level.
Operating Expenses: Largely Contained With Notable Movements
Total operating expenses of J$50.38 million represented a 6% increase from J$47.52 million in Q1 2025. Management notes this is a normalisation following several years of new service station openings. The expense breakdown reveals several meaningful movements within the overall stability.
Staff costs fell to J$10.71 million from J$13.52 million — a J$2.81 million reduction — attributed to disruption at the Crawford filling station, a comparatively lower headcount, and a shorter payment period versus Q1 2025. Insurance charges rose sharply as the company actively manages its risk profile following the Hurricane Melissa experience. Depreciation increased to J$13.45 million from J$9.80 million, reflecting the PP&E additions from the Yaad Man acquisition and right-of-use asset depreciation rising to J$3.96 million from J$2.81 million as the lease portfolio grows with network expansion.
An expected credit loss (ECL) charge of J$2.25 million appeared for the first time — nil in Q1 2025. Management contextualises this appropriately: as the LPG business scales, trade receivables grow, and IFRS 9 requires ECL provisioning against those balances. The charge reverses when customers pay. Monitoring the ECL trajectory against receivables growth will be important as the Yaad Man distribution network comes fully onto the books.
| Income Statement (J$) | Q1 2026 | Q1 2025 | YoY | FY2025 (Audited) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Revenue | 662,778,232 | 434,131,507 | ▲ 53% | 2,017,424,240 |
| Cost of Sales | (565,960,209) | (362,906,304) | ▲ 56% | (1,665,164,940) |
| Gross Profit | 96,818,023 | 71,225,203 | ▲ 36% | 352,259,300 |
| Gross Margin | 14.61% | 16.41% | –1.8pp | 17.46% |
| Other Operating Income | 1,901,043 | 301,059 | ▲ 531% | 3,741,799 |
| Operating Expenses | (50,377,907) | (47,519,766) | ▲ 6% | (197,120,686) |
| Operating Profit | 48,341,159 | 24,006,494 | ▲ 101% | 158,880,413 |
| Finance Costs | (21,810,355) | (8,925,393) | ▲ 144% | (44,412,747) |
| — CIBC Commitment Fee (one-off) | (7,228,424) | — | New | — |
| — Lease Interest | (7,297,674) | (6,696,736) | ▲ 9% | (28,089,854) |
| — Loan Interest | (3,774,957) | — | New | (1,548,748) |
| — Bank Charges | (2,559,707) | (1,759,108) | ▲ 45% | (10,756,534) |
| Profit Before Tax | 26,530,804 | 15,081,103 | ▲ 76% | 114,467,666 |
| Taxation | — | — | — | — |
| Net Profit | 26,530,804 | 15,081,103 | ▲ 76% | 114,467,666 |
| EPS (J$) | 0.018 | 0.011 | ▲ 64% | 0.075 |
Balance Sheet: A J$1.78 Billion Asset Base, Reshaped by Acquisition
Total assets grew 74% year-over-year to J$1.784 billion from J$1.025 billion — driven primarily by three acquisition-related additions. Property, plant and equipment increased from J$480.85 million to J$809.56 million, with J$284.88 million in Q1 additions representing the Yaad Man physical assets (motor vehicles, gas cylinders, filling plant and site offices). Goodwill of J$171.08 million, representing the premium paid above Yaad Man’s net asset value for intangibles including customer relationships and the distribution network, was recognised for the first time. Deferred expenditure of J$210.55 million — principally representing the CIBC loan commitment fees and related financing costs being amortised — also grew significantly.
The gas cylinder expansion is particularly notable in the PP&E detail. Additions to gas cylinders in Q1 alone totalled J$148.99 million, bringing the gross cylinder asset base to J$419.02 million. The net book value of cylinders after accumulated depreciation stands at J$326.22 million — by far the single largest PP&E category, representing 40.3% of total PP&E net book value. This is the operational heartbeat of the LPG business.
| Balance Sheet (J$) | Mar 31, 2026 | Mar 31, 2025 | Dec 31, 2025 |
|---|---|---|---|
| Goodwill | 171,076,200 | — | — |
| PP&E (net) | 809,559,564 | 480,851,154 | 538,133,745 |
| Right-of-Use Assets | 245,348,089 | 198,117,496 | 249,303,760 |
| Deferred Expenditure | 210,551,446 | 172,826,986 | 217,074,307 |
| Inventories | 40,844,507 | 19,846,534 | 28,509,329 |
| Receivables | 209,524,995 | 111,916,446 | 171,383,000 |
| Due from Related Parties | 86,742,776 | 28,606,541 | 63,400,169 |
| Cash & Cash Equivalents | 9,802,449 | 12,898,097 | 15,871,774 |
| Total Assets | 1,783,450,026 | 1,025,063,254 | 1,283,676,084 |
| Long-Term Borrowings | 668,557,281 | — | 18,652,132 |
| Lease Liabilities (non-current) | (249,347,723) | (202,667,080) | (250,593,719) |
| Payables | 147,325,290 | 69,699,100 | 153,440,668 |
| Current LT Loan Portion | 58,143,804 | 221,697,420 | 228,542,432 |
| Shareholders’ Equity | 656,064,832 | 530,430,959 | 629,534,028 |
Cash closed at J$9.80 million — down from J$15.87 million at year-end, reflecting the cash demands of the acquisition and integration period. Net cash used in investing activities was J$455.95 million, comprising PP&E additions (J$284.88 million) and the goodwill payment (J$171.08 million). This was funded almost entirely by the new CIBC long-term loan drawdown of J$479.51 million. Operating activities consumed J$29.47 million in net cash, driven by working capital build in receivables and inventory as the business scales.
Outstanding Issues: Insurance, Crawford, and Fuel Price Risk
Three unresolved items carry material value implications for RPL in the quarters ahead. The first is the J$55.38 million insurance receivable from the general insurer related to Hurricane Melissa damage. This balance has been sitting on the books and management continues to await payment. For a company with J$9.80 million in cash, the collection of this receivable would meaningfully improve liquidity.
The second is the Crawford, St. Elizabeth filling plant — the LPG location destroyed by Hurricane Melissa. Electricity has been recently restored to the surrounding area, but lines to the location remain unconnected. This has delayed the site’s return to service. With electrical work now underway by the relevant authorities, management is cautiously optimistic about reopening, but no firm date is given. Crawford represents lost operating capacity and revenue that is not reflected in Q1 results.
Fuel Price Risk — Middle East GeopoliticsEx-refinery prices from Petrojam have risen 18–26% since February 26 due to Middle East geopolitical tensions. The Minister for Energy has signalled potential adjustment to Petrojam’s pricing mechanism. RPL has not observed volume reduction yet, but management acknowledges that sustained high prices could reduce commuter activity and volumes. The company’s gold and platinum card loyalty programme is its primary demand retention tool in a high-price environment.
The third is the broader fuel pricing environment. Rising Petrojam prices compress margins when RPL cannot pass them through immediately — a dynamic already visible in the Q1 gross margin decline from 16.41% to 14.61%. If the government adjusts the pricing mechanism as the Energy Minister has suggested, this could either ease or intensify the margin pressure depending on the direction of the adjustment.
Pipeline: Four Projects in Various Stages
RPL’s operational pipeline entering Q2 2026 includes four distinct projects at different stages of development. The Norman Manley International Airport service station has received NRCA environmental permit and planning permission; equipment is in place and site clearing is imminent. The station will be franchisee-operated, with the franchisee funding the fit-out — meaning RPL carries minimal capital risk on this development while gaining the branded fuel supply relationship.
The Crawford truck stop in St. Elizabeth is expected to open within 60 days of the report date, with the partner completing final activities. This will be RPL-branded and receive fuel supply from the company. The Crawford LPG filling plant remains out of service pending electricity reconnection. And the Quality Pavement Repair (QPR) pothole filler initiative — a diversification partnership with D&O Technologies LLC — is awaiting manufacturing equipment to begin local production.
Market Performance and Capital Markets
RPL’s share price appreciated 11% during Q1, rising from J$4.07 to J$4.52 at quarter close, with a peak of J$5.08 on March 6. Market capitalisation at quarter close stood at J$6.49 billion on 1,435,786,770 issued shares. The stock’s peak represented a price-to-earnings multiple well above the annualised run-rate earnings at that point — investors appear to be pricing the Yaad Man integration uplift into the forward multiple. The company’s AGM is scheduled for June 8 at the Jamaica Pegasus Hotel.
The Yaad Man Acquisition Has Changed RPL’s Trajectory. Q2 Is When We See the Real Numbers.
Regency Petroleum’s Q1 2026 is not the definitive story of what this company becomes post-Yaad Man — it is the opening chapter. The acquisition closed mid-February, contributing only about six weeks of operations and approximately 6% of revenue. The full integration — 70,000+ cylinders, the Malvern filling plant, and the entire Western Jamaica distribution network — will flow through Q2, Q3 and Q4. Investors evaluating RPL today are essentially pricing a forward estimate, not an established run-rate.
On the operating fundamentals, the quarter was excellent. Operating profit doubling to J$48.34 million on a 53% revenue increase, with operating expenses rising only 6%, demonstrates meaningful operating leverage. The organic fuel retail business in Westmoreland and Spanish Town Road is performing well. The LPG acquisition brings the platform for what management calls a “quadrupling” of the business.
The finance cost story requires careful normalisation. The J$7.23 million one-time CIBC commitment fee will not recur. Adjusted for this, Q1 finance costs were approximately J$14.58 million — which translates to a recurring annual run-rate of roughly J$58 million. Against an operating profit run-rate that — with Yaad Man fully integrated — could plausibly reach J$180–220 million annually, this is serviceable leverage rather than threatening debt. The question is whether the CIBC loans at 8.70% fixed for three years, then floating, remain manageable if interest rates rise or revenue growth disappoints.
Three items require sustained monitoring. The J$55.38 million insurance receivable from the Hurricane Melissa claim has been outstanding; its collection would meaningfully relieve the company’s tight cash position of J$9.80 million. The Crawford LPG plant — offline since Melissa — represents capacity that will boost results when restored. And gross margin compression from 16.41% to 14.61% signals that the LPG mix shift and fuel price pass-through dynamics need to be tracked carefully as the product composition evolves.
The stock’s 11% Q1 appreciation and J$5.08 intra-quarter peak tell a clear story: the market sees the Yaad Man integration as transformational. Whether Q2 earnings — the first full-quarter post-acquisition result — justify that valuation will be the most consequential data point in RPL’s 2026 investment thesis.
Full Yaad Man contribution doubles LPG revenue in Q2+; NMIA and Crawford truck stop open on schedule; insurance receivable collected; operating profit tracks toward J$180M+ annually.
Fuel price spike reduces consumer volumes; gross margin continues compressing; Crawford plant remains offline; insurance receivable delayed; interest rate rise at CIBC floating rate reset (3 years).
Q2 2026 result — the first full quarter with Yaad Man. Revenue, gross margin and operating profit in Q2 will establish the true post-acquisition earnings trajectory and validate or challenge current market valuations.
Gross margin percentage quarter-by-quarter. If the LPG mix continues to dilute blended margin below 14%, the operating leverage story weakens. The J$55.38M insurance receivable collection timeline also bears watching.
Cited Sources
- Regency Petroleum Company Limited — Q1 2026 Report: Management Discussion & Analysis, January 1 – March 31, 2026. Signed by Dr. Andre Foote (Chairman) and Andrew W.L. Williams (CEO), approved for issue May 13, 2026. Jamaica Stock Exchange → RPL Filing
- Regency Petroleum Company Limited — Unaudited Statement of Comprehensive Income, Three Months Ended March 31, 2026 (Q1). Ibid.
- Regency Petroleum Company Limited — Unaudited Statement of Financial Position, March 31, 2026 (Q1). Ibid.
- Regency Petroleum Company Limited — Unaudited Statement of Cash Flows, Three Months Ended March 31, 2026 (Q1). Ibid.
- Regency Petroleum Company Limited — Unaudited Statement of Changes in Equity, March 31, 2026 (Q1). Ibid.
- Regency Petroleum Company Limited — Notes to the Financial Statements, Q1 2026: Note 1 (Expenses by Nature), Note 2 (Property, Plant and Equipment). Ibid.
- Regency Petroleum Company Limited — Top 10 Shareholders and Shareholdings of Directors and Senior Managers, As at March 31, 2026. Ibid.
- PetroJam Ex-Refinery Price Table — March 26, 2026; December 25, 2025; March 27, 2025. As reported in RPL Q1 2026 Management Discussion & Analysis. Ibid.

Acquisition Impact