Valero Energy Corp. (VLO) Q1 2020 earnings call dated April 29, 2020
Corporate Participants:
Homer Bhullar — Vice President of Investor Relations
Joe Gorder — Chairman and Chief Executive Officer
Gary Simmons — Executive Vice President and Chief Commercial Officer
Lane Riggs — President and Chief Operating Officer
Martin Parrish — Senior Vice President-Alternative Energy and Project Development
Jason Fraser — Executive Vice President and General Counsel
Donna Titzman — Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer
Analysts:
Doug Terreson — Evercore ISI — Analyst
Theresa Chen — Barclays — Analyst
Manav Gupta — Credit Suisse — Analyst
Roger Read — Wells Fargo Securities — Analyst
Phil Gresh — J.P. Morgan — Analyst
Doug Leggate — Bank of America Merrill Lynch — Analyst
Neil Mehta — Goldman Sachs — Analyst
Prashant Rao — Citigroup — Analyst
Paul Cheng — Scotiabank — Analyst
Benny Wong — Morgan Stanley — Analyst
Brad Heffern — RBC Capital Markets — Analyst
Sam Margolin — Wolfe Research — Analyst
Ryan Todd — Simmons Energy — Analyst
Jason Gabelman — Cowen — Analyst
Matthew Blair — Tudor, Pickering, Holt, & Co. — Analyst
Presentation:
Operator
Ladies and gentlemen, thank you for standing by and welcome to the Valero Energy Corporation’s First Quarter 2020 Earnings Call. At this time, all participants are in a listen-only mode. After the speaker presentation, there will be a question-and-answer session. [Operator Instructions] I would now like to hand the conference over to your speaker, Mr. Homer Bhullar, Vice President of Investor Relations. Please go ahead, sir.
Homer Bhullar — Vice President of Investor Relations
Good morning everyone and welcome to Valero Energy Corporation’s first quarter 2020 earnings conference call. With me today are Joe Gorder, our Chairman and Chief Executive Officer; Lane Riggs, our President and COO; Donna Titzman, our Executive Vice President and CFO; Jason Fraser, our Executive Vice President and General Counsel; Gary Simmons, our Executive Vice President and Chief Commercial Officer and several other members of Valero’s senior management team. If you have not received the earnings release and would like a copy, you can find one on our website at valero.com. Also attached to the earnings release are tables that provide additional financial information on our business segments. If you have any questions after reviewing these tables, please feel free to contact our Investor Relations team after the call.
I would now like to direct your attention to the forward-looking statement disclaimer contained in the press release. In summary, it says that statements in the press release and on this conference call that state the company’s or management’s expectations or predictions of the future are forward-looking statements intended to be covered by the Safe Harbor provisions under Federal Securities laws. There are many factors that could cause actual results to differ from our expectations including those we’ve described in our filings with the SEC. Now I’ll turn the call over to Joe for opening remarks.
Joe Gorder — Chairman and Chief Executive Officer
Thanks, Homer and good morning everyone. Well, we’ve all had a very challenging start to the year with significant impact to our families, communities, and businesses worldwide brought on by the COVID-19 pandemic. The ensuing collapse of economic activity due to stay-at-home orders and travel restrictions has driven down demand for our products, particularly gasoline and jet fuel. Despite these extraordinary challenges, we’re blessed to be able to continue supporting our community partners and organizations on the front lines that help people most in need in response to the COVID-19 pandemic. Across the country, we see neighbors and strangers helping one another and demonstrating genuine human kindness. With that in mind, our ethanol operations produced hand sanitizer for distribution to hospitals, emergency responders, and other organizations and I’m proud of our employees for their innovation and efforts to make this possible.
Valero entered this economic downturn in a position of strength and our team has been thorough, decisive, and swift in our operational and financial response to the current environment. Operationally, we’ve adjusted the throughput rates at our refineries to more closely match product supply with demand to ensure that our supply chain does not become physically infeasible. We also temporarily idled a number of our ethanol plants and reduced the amount of corn feedstock processed at the remaining plants to address the decreased demand for ethanol.
Financially, we remain well capitalized. We started the year with a solid cash balance. Due to the uncertainty in the markets and attractive rates available to us, we thought it’d be prudent to strengthen our financial position further. We entered into a new $875 million revolving credit facility, which remains undrawn and we raised $1.5 billion of debt for additional liquidity. We also temporarily suspended buybacks in mid-March. In addition, we decided to defer approximately $100 million in tax payments that were due in the first quarter along with approximately $400 million in capital projects for the year including slowing the Port Arthur Coker and Pembroke Cogen projects, which pushes out their mechanical completion by six to nine months.
That being said, we continue to make progress on several of our strategic projects. We completed the Pasadena terminal project, which expands our products logistics portfolio, increases our capacity for biofuels blending, and enhances flexibility for exports; and the St. Charles Alkylation Unit remains on track to be completed in 2020, and we’re continuing to make progress on the Diamond Pipeline expansion and the Diamond Green Diesel project, both of which should be completed in 2021, subject to COVID-19 related delays. The Diamond Green Diesel joint venture also continues to make progress on the advanced engineering review of a potential new renewable diesel plant at our Port Arthur, Texas facility.
So the actions we’ve taken are consistent with the capital allocation framework we’ve had in place for several years. We continue to prioritize our investment grade credit rating and non-discretionary uses of capital, including sustaining capital expenditures and our dividend and you should continue to expect incremental discretionary cash flow to compete with other discretionary uses primarily organic growth capital and buybacks. Our framework has served us well and we’ll continue to adhere to it in the future.
In closing, the health, safety, and well-being of our employees and the communities where we operate remain among our top priorities. Our prudent management of operations has allowed us to weather a global shutdown like this without layoffs and while a tremendous amount of uncertainty remains in the near future, our operational and financial flexibility allow us to navigate through today’s challenging macro environment. Our advantaged footprint with the flexibility to process a wide range of feedstocks coupled with a relentless focus on operational excellence and a demonstrated commitment to stockholders’ positions our assets as well as our country and the world return to a more normal way of life. So with that Homer, I’ll hand the call back to you.
Homer Bhullar — Vice President of Investor Relations
Thanks, Joe. For the first quarter of 2020, the net loss attributable to Valero stockholders was $1.9 billion or $4.54 per share compared to net income of $141 million or $0.34 per share for the first quarter of 2019. First quarter 2020 adjusted net income attributable to Valero stockholders was $140 million or $0.34 per share compared to $181 million or $0.43 per share for the first quarter of 2019. First quarter 2020 adjusted results exclude an after-tax lower of cost or market or LCM inventory valuation adjustment of approximately $2 billion. For reconciliations of actual to adjusted amounts, please refer to the financial tables that accompany this release.
The refining segment generated an operating loss of $2.1 billion in the first quarter of 2020 compared to $479 million of operating income for the first quarter of 2019. First quarter 2020 adjusted operating income for the refining segment, which excludes the LCM inventory valuation adjustment, was $329 million. First quarter 2020 results were impacted by low product margins related to the COVID-19 pandemic and the rapid decline in crude prices. Refining throughput volumes averaged 2.8 million barrels per day, which was in line with the first quarter of 2019. Throughput capacity utilization was 90% in the first quarter of 2020. Refining cash operating expenses of $3.87 per barrel were $0.28 per barrel lower than the first quarter of 2019 primarily due to lower natural gas prices.
Operating income for the renewable diesel segment was $198 million in the first quarter of 2020 compared to $49 million for the first quarter of 2019. After adjusting for the retroactive blender’s tax credit, adjusted renewable diesel operating income was $121 million in the first quarter of 2019. The increase in operating income was primarily due to higher sales volumes. Renewable diesel sales volumes averaged 867,000 gallons per day in the first quarter of 2020, an increase of 77,000 gallons per day versus the first quarter of 2019.
The ethanol segment generated an operating loss of $197 million in the first quarter of 2020 compared to $3 million of operating income in the first quarter of 2019. The first quarter of 2020 adjusted operating loss, which excludes the LCM inventory valuation adjustment, was $69 million. The decrease from the first quarter of 2019 was primarily due to lower margins resulting from lower ethanol prices and higher corn prices. Ethanol production volumes averaged 4.1 million gallons per day in the first quarter of 2020.
For the first quarter of 2020, general and administrative expenses were $177 million and net interest expense was $125 million. Depreciation and amortization expense was $582 million and the income tax benefit was $616 million in the first quarter of 2020. The effective tax rate was 26%, which was impacted by an expected U.S. federal tax net operating loss that can be carried back to years prior to December 2017 enactment of tax reform in the U.S. Net cash used in operating activities was $49 million in the first quarter of 2020. Excluding the unfavorable impact from the change in working capital of $1.1 billion as well as our joint venture partner’s 50% share of Diamond Green Diesel’s net cash provided by operating activities excluding changes in its working capital adjusted net cash provided by operating activities was $954 million.
With regard to investing activities, we made $705 million of capital investments in the first quarter of 2020, of which approximately $468 million was for sustaining the business including cost for turnarounds, catalysts, and regulatory compliance. Approximately $237 million of the total was for growing the business. Excluding our partner’s 50% share of Diamond Green Diesel’s capital investments, Valero’s capital investments were approximately $666 million.
Moving to financing activities, we returned $548 million to our stockholders in the first quarter of 2020. $401 million was paid as dividends with the balance used to purchase 2.1 million shares of Valero common stock. The total payout ratio was 57% of adjusted net cash provided by operating activities. As of March 31st, we had approximately $1.4 billion of share repurchase authorization remaining. And last week, our Board of Directors approved a quarterly dividend of $0.98 per share, further demonstrating our solid financial position and commitment to return cash to our investors.
With respect to our balance sheet at quarter-end, total debt and finance lease obligations were $11.5 billion and cash and cash equivalents were $1.5 billion. Our debt to capitalization ratio, net of cash and cash equivalents was 34%. In April, we closed on a 364-day $875 million revolving credit facility, which remains undrawn. Including this credit facility, we had over $5 billion of available borrowing capacity.
Turning to guidance, we now expect annual capital investments for 2020 to be approximately $2.1 billion, reflecting a reduction of $400 million from our prior guidance. The $2.1 billion includes expenditures for turnarounds, catalysts, and joint venture investments. For modeling our second quarter operations, we expect refining throughput volumes to fall within the following ranges: U.S. Gulf Coast at 1.325 million barrels per day to 1.375 million barrels per day; U.S. Mid-Continent at 315,000 barrels per day to 335,000 barrels per day; U.S. West Coast at 215,000 barrels per day to 235,000 barrels per day; and North Atlantic at 315,000 barrels per day to 335,000 barrels per day. We expect refining cash operating expenses in the second quarter to be approximately $4.50 per barrel.
Our ethanol segment is expected to produce a total of 2 million gallons per day in the second quarter. Operating expenses should average $0.49 per gallon, which includes $0.12 per gallon for non-cash costs such as depreciation and amortization. With respect to the renewable diesel segment, we expect sales volumes to be 750,000 gallons per day in 2020. Operating expenses in 2020 should be $0.50 per gallon, which includes $0.20 per gallon for non-cash costs such as depreciation and amortization. For the second quarter, net interest expense should be about $145 million and total depreciation and amortization expense should be approximately $580 million. For 2020, we expect G&A expenses excluding corporate depreciation to be approximately $825 million and we still expect the RINs expense for the year to be between $300 million and $400 million.
Lastly, due to the impact of beneficial tax provisions in the CARES Act as well as the COVID-19 pandemic and its impact on our business, small changes in assumptions yield a wide range of outcomes resulting in a low degree of confidence in any estimate of the effective tax rate. So at this point, we’re not providing any guidance on it. That concludes our opening remarks. Before we open the call to questions, we again respectfully request that callers adhere to our protocol of limiting each turn in the Q&A to two questions. If you have more than two questions, please rejoin the queue as time permits. This helps us ensure other callers have time to ask their questions.
Questions and Answers:
Operator
Thank you. [Operator Instructions] Our first question will come from Doug Terreson with Evercore ISI. Please go ahead.
Doug Terreson — Evercore ISI — Analyst
Good morning, everybody.
Joe Gorder — Chairman and Chief Executive Officer
Good morning, Doug.
Doug Terreson — Evercore ISI — Analyst
So, global refined product supplies following in response to the declines in demand that we’re seeing, was it more competitive plants probably reducing output less than others and on this point, I wanted to get your insights on Atlantic Basin and global storage levels, whether you think we’re nearing capacity and if so, when might we get there? So just some fundamental color on these market areas, if you have it. And then second, because refineries are completely shut down often face challenges when they restart, if they restart. I want to see if you kind of frame the pros and cons for us of those decisions and also whether the new fuel specs might affect restarts in the current scenario. So the questions are on market fundamentals and potential capacity outcomes.
Gary Simmons — Executive Vice President and Chief Commercial Officer
Okay, Doug. This is Gary. Yeah, on your question on market fundamentals in the North Atlantic Basin, we were staring at that pretty hard a few weeks ago and thought we were going to have an issue with that region filling up with products, but really been encouraged by the reaction to the industry to cut rates and to make less gasoline and diesel [Technical Issues] at least the APIs yesterday showed that PADD 1 had a small draw on gasoline, which is encouraging, but at this stage, it looks like the industry has done a good job to balance supply with demand and we’re not as concerned about filling up on inventory.
Doug Terreson — Evercore ISI — Analyst
Okay, good.
Lane Riggs — President and Chief Operating Officer
Hey, Doug, this is Lane. I’ll answer the second question. So you’re exactly right, whenever — the risk is, you know, everybody I’m sure — most refiners try to push their refinery utilizations down at somewhere near minimum, which normally is 60% to 65% for a given unit — because the risk of shutting one down very much puts you at risk of when you try to start back up, it’s not going to start up and you have to go into a full-blown turnaround. Now with that said, we actually did shut down our St. Charles FCC. It’s a big FCC and it was because we had just finished a turnaround, but we saw that as being a way to take off some gasoline producing capacity for our system and not take that risk. In terms of fuel quality, it’s just — you know, there’s a lot of investment out there in terms of lower sulfur, it just depends on, you know, if for some reason a GDU or your ULSD unit has a problem on startup, but other than that, I don’t — as I think about that for us, I haven’t seen that be a big problem for us.
Doug Terreson — Evercore ISI — Analyst
Okay, thanks a lot guys.
Joe Gorder — Chairman and Chief Executive Officer
Thanks, Doug.
Operator
Thank you. Our next question will come from Theresa Chen with Barclays. Please go ahead.
Theresa Chen — Barclays — Analyst
Good morning. Thank you for taking my questions. First question, just on the depth and duration of the demand shock. Gasoline margin seems to be responding to the industry lowering utilizations and margins have improved, but the diesel side has seen some volatility recently. Not sure if it’s just reflecting real economic contraction in activity. Can you just talk about what’s happening there on the diesel side?
Gary Simmons — Executive Vice President and Chief Commercial Officer
Yeah, Theresa, this is Gary. So I think as we talked about, the industry did a good job of balancing supply and demand on the gasoline side. For the most part, along with that, we were cutting refinery crude runs with the expectation that would bring diesel balances pretty close to supply being in balance with demand. However, the jet demand disruption was just so severe that everyone started blending jet into diesel, it caused the diesel yield from refineries to be really at record levels and even despite the lower refinery utilization, we’ve seen diesel production outpacing demand, causing the inventory build. I think we are seeing at least this week, starting to see some indications in the market that people in the industry, including ourselves, are making some adjustment to their operations to bring the diesel yields down, which should be supportive to the diesel fundamentals moving forward.
Theresa Chen — Barclays — Analyst
Got it. And in terms of the recent force majeure declarations, whether it be Flint Hills, your refining neighbor in Corpus or Continental as a producer or Pemex declaring force majeure on gasoline imports, do you see an acceleration of this? Do you think the reasoning would likely hold up in court? And can you just talk about how you see these developments evolving as both an entity that can declare force majeure or as a counterparty on which force majeure could be declared against?
Joe Gorder — Chairman and Chief Executive Officer
So Theresa, we’re trying to — okay. Are you asking kind of a legal perspective on force majeure or are you asking kind of do we expect the market to continue to do this?
Theresa Chen — Barclays — Analyst
Well, the latter more.
Joe Gorder — Chairman and Chief Executive Officer
Okay, so, Gary, you want to?
Gary Simmons — Executive Vice President and Chief Commercial Officer
Yeah, so I can tell you most of our — certainly on the crude side of the business, most of our contracts have a 30-day cancellation and we’ve been trying to tell our suppliers we expected to hold them to that and so, so far, we haven’t really seen much of a disruption in crude supply as a result of the force majeure you are reading about in the press.
Theresa Chen — Barclays — Analyst
Got it. Thank you for taking my questions again. I hope you all stay safe and well in these challenging times.
Joe Gorder — Chairman and Chief Executive Officer
Yeah, likewise, likewise. Thank you.
Operator
Thank you. Our next question will come from Manav Gupta with Credit Suisse. Please go ahead.
Manav Gupta — Credit Suisse — Analyst
Hey, Joe, at the start of the call you mentioned the weaker gasoline demand. What I’m trying to understand is Texas is lifting the order on Friday. Florida has minimum number of cases. So those two are big demand states and looks like their orders will be lifted, at least a partial reopen by end of this week and then there are about 16 states that have come behind them with their prospective reopen plans. So what I’m trying to understand is, yes, gasoline demand is bad right now, but as one after another of these states do start opening, like when do we start seeing a rebound in the gasoline demand as these states do start coming online.
Joe Gorder — Chairman and Chief Executive Officer
That’s a good question. Let me give you an anecdotal answer and then, Gary, can give you what we’re seeing in the system, he and Lane, but I mean in San Antonio proper, we have — because I’m serving on some committees that are working on some issues here, but we’ve seen a 14% increase in traffic over the last couple of weeks. So people are starting to get out more and as you said, we’re going to be opening up and I think there probably is a pent-up demand for folks to get out of their houses and get mobile and to shop again and to go to restaurants again. So I do think we’re going to see more activity and not only here, but much more broadly, particularly through the South. Gary, within the system, we’ve also seen some change in demands.
Gary Simmons — Executive Vice President and Chief Commercial Officer
Yeah, we have. So we saw a very sharp fall off in demand really the last two weeks in March. It kind of got to a point in our system where we’re seeing demand about 55% of what we would call normal. For the first couple of weeks in April, it seemed to have stabilized around that level, but now we’re starting to see demand pick back up already. So if you look at the seven-day average in our rack [Phonetic] systems, it’s about 64% of normal. So already about a 9% increase of where we were kind of early April and as you mentioned, where you are really seeing the pick-up is in the Mid-Continent, the Gulf Coast regions as some of these stay-at-home orders are lifted, we’re seeing a fairly significant sharp increase in demand.
Manav Gupta — Credit Suisse — Analyst
Thanks, guys. A quick follow-up, your benchmark indicator on the newbuild diesel side was almost down $0.45, but the realized margin actually was up quarter-over-quarter. I’m trying to understand how did you so successfully manage to beat your own benchmark and deliver a beat on the renewable diesel side?
Martin Parrish — Senior Vice President-Alternative Energy and Project Development
So Manav, this is Martin, on the benchmark, you have to realize we’re using a soybean oil price. Our actual feedstock costs are going to differ from that. There is other impacts too, you know, contractually what we’re doing this year versus last year. So I’m not going to give you a hard and fast answer on that, but it’s — we just — you’re kind of seeing the strength of renewable diesel and the strength of Diamond Green there.
Manav Gupta — Credit Suisse — Analyst
Thank you for taking my questions.
Joe Gorder — Chairman and Chief Executive Officer
You bet. Take care.
Operator
Thank you. Our next question will be from Roger Read with Wells Fargo. Please go ahead.
Roger Read — Wells Fargo Securities — Analyst
Hey, thanks, good morning.
Joe Gorder — Chairman and Chief Executive Officer
Good morning, Roger.
Roger Read — Wells Fargo Securities — Analyst
Well, tons of stuff to ask here, but I guess where I’d like to go first question really, what are you seeing in terms of the crude side of the market. How has that been flowing through in terms of, you know, we had negative crude prices for a day, availability of different lights and heavies and maybe how that’s flowing through. Maybe some guidance on what capture can be in such a uncertain market condition?
Gary Simmons — Executive Vice President and Chief Commercial Officer
Yeah, Roger, a lot of volatility in the crude markets and we’ve certainly been changing our purchase signals from week to week kind of moving throughout the quarter. I think you know for quite some time now we’ve been signaling really maximum light sweet along with heavy sour and we haven’t seen the economics of the medium sours as much. Now we got into March and medium sours became economic and we ramped up medium sours.
However that — I would say, we’ve kind of returned back to the place where we were before to where we’re back kind of maximizing light sweets and heavy sours in our system and certainly in some regions you’re seeing real wide market dislocations on some of the light sweets that we’re buying, especially in the Mid-Continent region Line 9 through Quebec is providing us with a big benefit, and then we’re balancing those light sweet purchases with a lot of different heavy sour feedstock. So kind of step back into some of the high sulfur fuel blend stocks along with some heavy sour crudes that we’re sourcing from Canada and South America.
Roger Read — Wells Fargo Securities — Analyst
And I’m going to go out on a limb and say you’re not having any trouble finding crudes at this point?
Gary Simmons — Executive Vice President and Chief Commercial Officer
No, no trouble in that area at all.
Roger Read — Wells Fargo Securities — Analyst
All right, that’s not [Phonetic] wanting to get Joe to laugh. Second question on —
Joe Gorder — Chairman and Chief Executive Officer
You did, you did.
Roger Read — Wells Fargo Securities — Analyst
Second question on the regulatory side and a couple of parts here, but we’re going to have a real issue is hitting any sort of ethanol blending volumes this year. So where do you stand on or where do you think the market stands maybe on getting some relief there. And then, I was curious if there is any other regulatory headaches in front of you at this point, stuff we don’t normally think about, but whether it’s the winter grade to summer grade exclusions that were given into May or any other sort of headwinds we should think about on the regulatory side?
Joe Gorder — Chairman and Chief Executive Officer
Okay. Jason, you want to speak to that?
Jason Fraser — Executive Vice President and General Counsel — Analyst
Yeah, Yeah I can definitely talk a little bit about the RFS. Of course, with the large drop in gasoline and diesel demand and the harm to our industry, the compliance cost for the RFS does stick out a little more, its definitely not helping things and RINs are still pretty high. They didn’t really drop [Phonetic] with the price of our products. So five governors recently sent a letter to the EPA requesting they exercise their severe economic harm waiver authority to reduce the RVOs for 2020. We definitely agree with those governors and believe the EPA has the authority and the basis to grant those waivers and lower the volumes. As for other regulatory headwinds, I can’t think of any right now —
Joe Gorder — Chairman and Chief Executive Officer
[Speech Overlap] The other guys can’t —
Jason Fraser — Executive Vice President and General Counsel — Analyst
So we’ll just take them one at a time, Roger.
Roger Read — Wells Fargo Securities — Analyst
I appreciate that. Thank you, guys.
Joe Gorder — Chairman and Chief Executive Officer
You bet. Take care.
Operator
Thank you. Our next question will come from Phil Gresh with J.P. Morgan. Please go ahead.
Phil Gresh — J.P. Morgan — Analyst
Yes, hi, good morning.
Joe Gorder — Chairman and Chief Executive Officer
Hi, Phil.
Phil Gresh — J.P. Morgan — Analyst
Hi. So first question, you had mentioned demand at about 64% of normal and your utilization guide for the quarter, it looks like it’s in the low-70s. Would you say that today you’re operating kind of below that midpoint and the expectation with that guidance is that utilization would ramp over the quarter or would you say that you intend to kind of have a more stable utilization and if demand gets better, we start to see inventory draws.
Lane Riggs — President and Chief Operating Officer
Hey, so Phil, this is Lane. So if you think about it, the low-70s is on a throughput basis, not all of which goes into gasoline and diesel. We’re trying to make sure that we are careful to match our feedstock plans with where we think demand is. Now pent into that is a slight — some recovery towards the end of it, but our buying habits right now is to be on the assumption that crude will be available and that we’re going to run our assets to meet demand and not necessarily let structure drive us to maybe outrun demand or anything like that.
Phil Gresh — J.P. Morgan — Analyst
Okay and just broadly, how do you think about — if you think about the macro on the gasoline and the diesel side over the next, call it, one to two quarters, how do you think about the inventory progression for the industry based on the way you’ve been modeling it?
Lane Riggs — President and Chief Operating Officer
Well, Gary took a shot at that earlier. I guess I could take another shot at it and then Gary can tune whatever I have to say here. I think the industry has done a really good job with respect to gasoline and we were, you know, when it first started, that was our primary concern and I think the industry responded with appropriate rate reductions including us and where we are today is you have like Gary mentioned, jets dropping into diesel.
So how I think that will play out is there are signals right now out there to essentially drop diesel into gas oil which will replace some VGO purchases into these conversion units. So you should see some diesel disruption and then everybody is going to have to stare at how much crude they really think they need to meet demand and so ultimately, it comes back to demand versus how does this crude supply, obviously there is a lot of crude, but you don’t have to reach out very long or far to get your supply chain very committed, then you can ramp up accordingly or cut accordingly depending on how that plays out.
Phil Gresh — J.P. Morgan — Analyst
Okay, great. And my follow-up is just on capex, how much flex do you see in your capital spending as you move into 2021, it sounds like most of the capex that you’re cutting back on this year was more related to growth projects, but just want any color as you look out. Thanks.
Lane Riggs — President and Chief Operating Officer
Yeah, we would expect if we needed to be something commensurate with the $400 million that we talked about in or gave the guidance for this year.
Phil Gresh — J.P. Morgan — Analyst
Okay, great. Thank you.
Operator
Thank you. Our next question will come from Doug Leggate with Bank of America. Please go ahead.
Doug Leggate — Bank of America Merrill Lynch — Analyst
Thank you. Good morning everyone. Hey Joe, It seems like a long time since we had our virtual dinner. So I hope you guys are all going well.
Joe Gorder — Chairman and Chief Executive Officer
Oh, it sure has, hasn’t it. Thanks, Doug.
Doug Leggate — Bank of America Merrill Lynch — Analyst
So I had two quick questions. First of all, I don’t know if Donna is there, but I wanted to ask about working capital, the mechanics of any potential unwind and how you would expect the working capital to — the trajectory through the year. I know it’s a bit of a moving piece. And I guess a related question, which is my second question, also financial, in the balance sheet. I know you’re at 34% net debt to cap. I think that’s probably the highest level you’ve had in quite a while. Obviously, there is no liquidity issues, but I’m just curious as to where you see the balance sheet headed over the medium-term and what — how would you look to move it back and I guess what I’m really trying to understand is if and when things normalize, would you tend to run with a more robust balance sheet going forward after this or how would your behavior change as it relates to just treatment of buybacks, balance sheet, dividends, things of that nature and I’ll leave it there. Thank you.
Joe Gorder — Chairman and Chief Executive Officer
Great.
Donna Titzman — Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer
All right. Well, I’ll start with the working capital. No, you’re correct, as we’ve seen prices level off a bit and then hopefully now as they start to recover with the economy waking back up, we would expect to see that working capital draw reverse itself. I can’t tell you how quickly that will happen. That is really all depending on how quickly we see these prices recover. And to answer the balance sheet question, obviously, the debt to cap has gone up a bit here of late. Our intentions would be as everything gets back to normal to also normalize that balance sheet a bit.
When we raised the $1.5 billion, we did that in short-term maturities and not in 10s [Phonetic] and 30s [Phonetic] with the idea that, that would become repayable much quicker than a longer-term issuance. So our intent would be to kind of get back to where we were pre all of this as quickly as we can and again, the liquidity as you mentioned is absolutely key today. So we are definitely in the cash preservation mode right now, but we have a very strong liquidity level and are very comfortable with where we’re at today.
Doug Leggate — Bank of America Merrill Lynch — Analyst
Donna, can I just ask for some clarification on the working capital, you run I assume a net payables position. I was really more interested in the mechanics. I understand we’ve had a big drop in crude prices. So obviously that hurts you, but do you anticipate — that was a big move obviously in Q1, but do you anticipate any additional moves in terms of use of working capital after the shock [Phonetic] we’ve had in oil prices or do you think the worst is kind of behind us there?
Donna Titzman — Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer
Well, I think you can expect that a lot of this started in mid-March and continued through the April time frame. So you should probably expect some of that to have carried into April, but as I mentioned, things are leveling off and hopefully now we’re looking at improvement from this point forward. So we shouldn’t see that same kind of level of cash being consumed.
Doug Leggate — Bank of America Merrill Lynch — Analyst
All right. Appreciate it. That was it for me guys. Thank you very much and good luck.
Joe Gorder — Chairman and Chief Executive Officer
Thanks, Doug. Take care, buddy.
Operator
Thank you. Our next question will come from Neil Mehta with Goldman Sachs. Please go ahead.
Neil Mehta — Goldman Sachs — Analyst
Hey, Steve. Good morning and hope all of you are doing well. I just wanted to follow-up on this question of demand and we’ve talked a lot about on this call, 2020 demand conditions, but Joe and team, I want to get your perspective on sort of the structural questions of demand particularly for two products, gasoline and jet. And so on gasoline, the thoughts around work from home and does that create a change in social behavior that has an impact on low gas demand. And jet the willingness of the consumer to travel. I think all of us are just trying to figure out whether there is a long-term impact from some of the changes that we’ve seen here over the last month or do you view this as more cyclical?
Gary Simmons — Executive Vice President and Chief Commercial Officer
Hey Neil, this is Gary. So I think we are taking those things into account and so where we saw a fairly sharp decline in demand to this 55% level, we would expect the recovery to be more gradual on the demand side as people continue to work from home. We see some offsetting things, certainly people working from home, but then you’re going to have people driving more and probably using mass transit less going forward just because the social distancing is hard when you are on mass transit. So, overall, we see a fairly gradual recovery in demand with gasoline demand getting back close to where it was pre-COVID.
On the jet side, I think we believe that the lower jet demand is probably here with us longer and it probably is a late year type recovery for people who are going to get back and start flying again or requires a vaccine or something on the medical side to happen where people start to feel comfortable flying again.
Neil Mehta — Goldman Sachs — Analyst
That’s great. Thank you. The follow-up is just on the dividend. I think the message you’re trying to deliver here is that the dividend is a core priority and something that you’re committed to, but just want to get your perspective on that and how you guys are thinking about the fact that the [Phonetic] — dividend.
Joe Gorder — Chairman and Chief Executive Officer
Yeah, okay, Neil, I’ll take a first crack and then I’ll let Donna also have a shot at this, but you know, with the situation we’re dealing with right now with the pandemic, we consider it to be a fairly short-term in nature and obviously, our team is running the business for the long -term and as the guys have mentioned, we’re already seeing improvements in demand, which we think are going to continue as people return to more normal activities. So let’s look at how we manage the business what we’ve said for several years now and how we’re managing it going forward, okay?
We’ve got this capital allocation framework in place that we’ve adhered to for years and within that framework, we consider the use of cash for sustaining capex and turnarounds and then the dividends to be non-discretionary and then the discretionary uses are acquisitions, growth projects, and share repurchases and there is the competition that we have for those dollars within those three categories. So with that in mind, think about what we’ve done and the actions that we’ve taken to date, okay? We’ve reduced our discretionary capital spending and our share buybacks and we’re not considering any acquisitions until there is certainly further improvements in the market.
So those three things are playing out the way they should within the context of that capital allocation framework, but if you look at additional actions that has been taken, you know, we have a very capable proactive Board of Directors and they declared the dividend last Friday and they have the same confidence in our business and this team that I have. So the things that we’ve talked about for years are the things that we’ve implemented and that we use both when margins are really strong and when margins are weak like they have been here over the last six or eight weeks and so, in my view, relative to the dividend, we’ve got a long way to go before we need to take any action there. Donna, anything you would like to add?
Donna Titzman — Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer
No, I mean, just all along, we have maintained a conservative balance sheet for the purpose of being able to survive times like this.
Neil Mehta — Goldman Sachs — Analyst
Great, guys. Very clear.
Joe Gorder — Chairman and Chief Executive Officer
Thanks, Neil.
Operator
Thank you. Our next question comes from Prashant Rao with Citigroup. Please go ahead.
Prashant Rao — Citigroup — Analyst
Thank you. Good morning, thanks for taking my question. My first question is on the balance sheet and specifically on debt. I wanted to sort of touch back on that. You guys took good advantage of the low interest rate environment and the strength of your financial position with that $1.5 billion in recently issued debt. I’m just wondering depending upon how the recovery here goes economically, are there further opportunities ahead to take advantage of these low interest rates, maybe potentially refi or retire other parts of the current debt structure, lower your overall interest expense. Donna, you made a comment about sort of the appetite for longer tenure versus shorter tenure debt. So perhaps that plays into this as well. So, any color there would be appreciated. Thanks.
Donna Titzman — Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer
Sure, so the problem with — this is something that we look at all of the time, not just in this environment, but on a regular basis. The issue typically with retiring or refinancing current debt out there is we have make-whole provisions in all of our agreements. So effectively, what we’re doing is paying the investor the impact of the current low prices anyway. So from an economic perspective, that rarely works out to be a good deal. That being said, we continue — but we are always looking for odd moments in the market where things may not trade as efficiently as others. Many times, those are smaller opportunities and not larger opportunities, but again, we’ll continue to look for those ideas, but I wouldn’t say that that would happen in any big way.
Prashant Rao — Citigroup — Analyst
Okay. Thank you, that’s clear. My follow-up is a sort of pre-differential question. We’ve seen a lot of disparity, some disconnects between what we see on the screen and the physical market, I guess the financial and the physical market and we get some questions on the ability to aid that disparity and what that means to the ability of refiners to capture some of those dislocations and how cautious should we be in thinking about that as we look forward and as we model here and did some of those pre-differential advantages maybe be preserved into further quarters or months ahead given that utilization rates are low right now. So I wanted to get a sense of those — there is a lot of working parts in there, but get a sense of how some — those of us who aren’t operating experts might be able to think about that from a modeling perspective?
Gary Simmons — Executive Vice President and Chief Commercial Officer
Sure, this is Gary. Kind of a couple of ways on the crude side. Some of our contracts — some of our supply contracts on the crude side are based on a monthly average price. So obviously when you had the dislocation that happened at the end of the month, it does figure into the monthly average and will ultimately make its way to our delivered crude cost and then we also — I can’t say that we anticipated the crude going negative like it did, but we certainly saw the potential for weakness as you got to contract expiry. So we did probably go into that period of time a little on the short side to give us the opportunity to go out and buy some of those discounted barrels and we’ve done that and then to your point, if we had room to absorb it in our system, we’ll run those barrels. If not, you know, there is places where we’re putting those barrels into storage and you’ll see that benefit in months to come.
Prashant Rao — Citigroup — Analyst
Thanks.
Operator
Thank you. Our next question will come from Paul Cheng with Scotiabank. Please go ahead.
Paul Cheng — Scotiabank — Analyst
Hey guys, good morning.
Joe Gorder — Chairman and Chief Executive Officer
Good morning, Paul.
Paul Cheng — Scotiabank — Analyst
First want to wish everyone and the team and your families safe and healthy. Joe and Gary, can you talk a bit about the export market, because I think that they’ve been holding up reasonably well in the first quarter, but seems like they start to be having some crack. I’m actually quite concerned because I think Latin America probably have a lot of the infected cases but they probably didn’t know yet. So maybe you can help us understanding that what you are seeing particularly in the last two or three weeks, have you seen any trend?
Gary Simmons — Executive Vice President and Chief Commercial Officer
Hey Paul, this is Gary. So really our April volumes, we don’t have the final accounting volumes done yet, of course, but our April export volumes are down about 10% from what we did in the first quarter or more typical type numbers. So you’re not really seeing it in April, but in May, you know with what we’re selling forward, you’re seeing far lower demand in the Latin American countries than what we’ve typically seen kind of support. On the distillate side, we did see a fall off in diesel exports.
Some of that has just been because the U.S. inventories were very low and so the U.S. market was stronger and we were better to keep the barrels in the domestic market than to ship them abroad, but on the distillate side, we saw exports falling off around 60% of normal, gasoline has been more 10%. Where we’re selling wholesale barrels like into Mexico, we’ve been surprised at how well those volumes have held up. So yesterday, in Mexico, we moved 85% of what we were moving in the first quarter. So our wholesale volumes — barrels that we’re selling in country are holding, but we are seeing the export markets fall off.
Paul Cheng — Scotiabank — Analyst
Thank you. And Gary, you talked about the gas — the storage, it’s not going to reach the 10 [Phonetic] in the Atlantic Basin. Can you talk about in the [Indecipherable] the inland market.
Gary Simmons — Executive Vice President and Chief Commercial Officer
Yeah, so that was the other area that we had a lot of concern on and again, you could see in the Mid-Continent, refiners adjusted and it looked like we may fill up in a couple of weeks and now they’ve kind of adjusted the gasoline balance with the demand and we’re seeing inventory draws and the Mid-Continent is one of the areas that we’ve actually seen the best recovery in demand out of all the regions.
Paul Cheng — Scotiabank — Analyst
Can you talk about California because we’ve seen a sharp improvement in the margin over the last, say, couple of weeks, but is there any particular reason driving that?
Gary Simmons — Executive Vice President and Chief Commercial Officer
Yes, so that really is more driven I would say from the production side. I think the refining industry has done a good job of bringing units offline and getting production balanced with demand. We’ve actually seen some inventories draw on PADD 5 and so that’s led to the strength in the gasoline market.
Paul Cheng — Scotiabank — Analyst
All right, thank you.
Joe Gorder — Chairman and Chief Executive Officer
Thanks, Paul.
Operator
Thank you. Our next question will come from Benny Wong with Morgan Stanley. Please go ahead.
Benny Wong — Morgan Stanley — Analyst
Hey, good morning guys. Thanks for taking my question. I hope everybody on the line is safe and healthy. My first question is really on planned maintenance. We’ve seen a lot of facilities defer maintenance work just given the challenges of COVID. Just looking a little bit further out, when we’re back to more of a normal environment, would you expect a little bit of pent-up maintenance activity that needs to be had by then or do you think there is enough [Phonetic] flexibility for guys who kind of do the work during this period reduce runs and shutdowns right now.
Lane Riggs — President and Chief Operating Officer
So, Benny, this is Lane. I’ll just give you our behavior as a proxy for that. We were fortunately in a good position in that the second half of the year, we had a low sort of planned turnaround basis. So we didn’t have a lot of planned turnarounds and so when we looked at all of our — so when we look at our turnarounds, we look at our maintenance, we are making sure that we maintain our plants just like we do in our framework and very carefully, but we did sort of push some discretionary maintenance into next year and I’m sure a lot of people are going to do that.
At some point, obviously people have to do turnarounds. People who are deferring turnaround are doing a lot of that. At some point, that does catch up and we’ll just have to see and at some point, you have to take a turnaround and there was a question earlier that I will answer too, if somebody shut a unit down that is along somewhere near the end of its run cycle, there will be some risk to starting it up, which may force them to take the turnaround early.
Benny Wong — Morgan Stanley — Analyst
Got it. Thanks, Lane. That’s super helpful. My second question is on the renewable diesel side. Just curious with this economic shut down the impact it’s had on demand and even on the feedstock side and just taking a little further out, any risk that these events might cause some of the jurisdictions that are looking at adopting LCFS to maybe those plans being delayed?
Martin Parrish — Senior Vice President-Alternative Energy and Project Development
Okay, this is Martin. I think if you step back and put DGD in perspective, right, we’ve got a great first quarter in the book. We’re running at full capacity and our outlook hasn’t changed as we’re committed to the long-term strategy of growing the business. With COVID-19, carbon prices dropped slightly, but the RIN has escalated entirely offset that and the gallon blender’s tax credit — dollar per gallon is in play. On the feedstock availability, you have to understand, we’re running 275 million gallons a year now. We have plans to go up to four times that amount and we still believe we can secure the feedstock for that.
So this is kind of a, there is disruptions, but it’s not significant. We’re not concerned about keeping feed in front of the unit. As far as what it does for the LCFS, I think all this is rather temporary and I characterize it as a bump in the road, but I don’t think it’s going to slow anything down materially and certainly in the rear view mirror, I don’t think it’s going to be that significant.
Joe Gorder — Chairman and Chief Executive Officer
Yeah, I don’t — Jason, I don’t know what you think, but I don’t think anybody is going to back off of LCFS type regulations.
Jason Fraser — Executive Vice President and General Counsel — Analyst
Yeah, I don’t think so. You may see a little bit of slow in them actually enacting laws and bills just because they’ve taken a lot of recesses with the social distancing. So the legislature in a lot of the states have really slowed down over the last couple of months, but we’re starting to see them talk about coming back and get back into session. I think, Arizona and California are coming back. We were just talking about it yesterday, but you could see that a little bit of delay in that, but I don’t think it changes the long-term trend or their views.
Benny Wong — Morgan Stanley — Analyst
Got it. Thanks guys. Appreciate the thoughts. Please stay safe.
Joe Gorder — Chairman and Chief Executive Officer
You too. Thanks.
Operator
Thank you. Our next question will come from Brad Heffern with RBC Capital Markets. Please go ahead.
Brad Heffern — RBC Capital Markets — Analyst
Hey, good morning everyone. Another question on capture. I think some of the things that have been discussed so far have been around crude discounts and sound like they’re positive for capture. I’m just wondering with these refineries running in these sort of unusual constraints, low utilization and maybe FCCs being shut down, are there decrements we need to be thinking about to capture as well either as it relates to how much you can optimize the system or maybe you can optimize the system or maybe the production of intermediates or something along those lines?
Lane Riggs — President and Chief Operating Officer
Hey, Brad, this is Lane. So I would just say with respect to anything, it might be something to think about. The conversion units create volume gains whether they’re hydrocrackers or FCC and so to the extent that we’re cutting FCCs and hydrocrackers to meet the demand that we think there are — you’ll have a — you could have a negative — your volume gain isn’t there to help in your margin capture. I would say outside of that, I don’t know if there’s anything else with how we’re operating that would directly impact that.
Brad Heffern — RBC Capital Markets — Analyst
Okay, got it, thanks. And then maybe one for Martin, just on the ethanol business, you guys gave the guidance of 2.0 [Phonetic] for this quarter, down a little bit more than 50%. Is there a reason that you’re not running it lower than that just given that we’re seeing negative margins on the screen here even even before opex. Thanks.
Martin Parrish — Senior Vice President-Alternative Energy and Project Development
Okay. Sure, well, as you know, we’ve got eight of our plants down and six running. So, we’re actually running lower than 50% today. This demand disruption really hit home in ethanol. Significant cuts have been made across the industry. We cut — if you look at the April EIA information, it would tell you is that demand — implied demand is less than 50% of last year. So we think we’re in the right spot. Ultimately, this will recover right and global renewable fuel mandates will drive export growth. Domestically, we’ll get going again and ethanol is going to be in the gasoline pool and we’ll see incremental demand as a result of fuel efficiency standards and year-around E15 sales.
Brad Heffern — RBC Capital Markets — Analyst
Okay, thanks all. Stay healthy.
Martin Parrish — Senior Vice President-Alternative Energy and Project Development
You too.
Operator
Thank you. Our next question will come from Sam Margolin with Wolfe Research. Please go ahead.
Sam Margolin — Wolfe Research — Analyst
Good morning, everybody. Hope all is well.
Joe Gorder — Chairman and Chief Executive Officer
Good morning, Sam.
Sam Margolin — Wolfe Research — Analyst
I’ve got a sort of outlook question. Gary, you mentioned that your light sweet throughput was up in the quarter. That’s probably because crude production was up in the U.S. still in the first quarter. That — it doesn’t look like it’s going to continue. I mean — in the environment where U.S. crude production declines and really doesn’t return to levels that it’s at today for three or four years, how do you think that affects your business and your capital allocation decisions? Do you think we’re going to re-enter an environment that’s very complexity oriented or is there something else that might be less obvious that you’re paying attention to. Anything around that theme would be helpful?
Lane Riggs — President and Chief Operating Officer
So, hey, this is Lane. So I would say from a capital allocation, if you think about the things that we’re investing in on the refining side, its the coker, right? There’s other small caps that always we work on our feedstock flexibility, but to the extent that there is something that has a feedstock feed element to — that’s really more about positioning yourself to continue to run for heavy sour. We built the two crude units to run domestic. I think we think obviously you have to destock even though there’s some production losses going into this, you’re going to have to destock domestic crude for a while as there is a recovery.
So we’re not making big investments to run additional domestic crude because we think we’ve done that. So we don’t have — we don’t have this sort of projects in the future to try to take more advantage of that because we think we’ve done it, but we don’t really have a lot of projects — big projects that are even pointed at trying to take advantage or do something different on our feedstock selection.
Sam Margolin — Wolfe Research — Analyst
Thanks and then just a follow-up on feedstock, you mentioned that high sulfur fuel oil kind of component still look attractive, certainly on a percentage to Brent basis, the discount is pretty wide. How do you balance that with sort of your throughput utilization decisions. I would imagine there’s some — there’s at least some incentive across the board to maybe run ahead of demand, but where do you sort of draw the line between regular way business and what might cross into trading or something that you don’t want to be involved?
Lane Riggs — President and Chief Operating Officer
That’s a really good question. So what I would say is we — all of our — our refineries are essentially this open capacity, right? It’s a little bit — it’s an interesting place to be when you’re trying to do your planning and doing relative values of feedstock into it is open. So we are — it’s pretty, pretty basic. We are doing our best to try to optimize our feedstock selection into matching demand and trying to be very careful not to run ahead of demand even though so there will be structure that might try to incentivize you to do so.
So we are being very — paying particular attention to doing that, but Gary mentioned that we started out, we were sort of — a lot of domestic crude in heavy and then as this thing unfolded, we saw gasoline get weak which would have disadvantaged domestic crudes, we sort of went to medium sour and really lit up [Phonetic] on heavy and as we’ve seen gasoline start to pick up and it looks like that’s in line, you’re seeing us sort of work back I think to sort of our traditional posture, its just we’re going to be running less of it.
Sam Margolin — Wolfe Research — Analyst
Yeah, thanks so much.
Operator
Thank you. Our next question will come from Ryan Todd with Simmons Energy. Please go ahead.
Ryan Todd — Simmons Energy — Analyst
Great. Thanks, maybe just one high-level strategic one for me, I know it’s hard to speculate at this point, Joe, but if you’re looking at the crystal ball, are there any structural changes you see down the line that are likely to impact your business and may impact the way you allocate capital. I know you’ve talked a little bit about the potential longer-term impacts to demand, but as you think about overall as you run your business operational practices, regional preferences within the portfolio, long-term calls on capital. Are there any structural things coming out of this that you think — that you are thinking about in terms of Valero down the line?
Joe Gorder — Chairman and Chief Executive Officer
Yeah, I know we’re always thinking about it, right, but you can’t run — I said this earlier, I think you can’t run the business based on a short-term set of circumstances and so we are reassessing our long-term strategy all the time and we meet with our Board on it to review it every year, but if you look at what we’ve done, okay and kind of our approach to the business, I don’t know that anybody sitting in the room here with me would consider refining to be a long-term growth story, okay? It’s really — it’s a business where I think the industry has set itself now to basically match supply and demand going forward and so the way we look at it is we run the business to maximize the margin that we can capture within the business and so our capital is focused on optimization projects and logistics projects, which allow us to lower our cost structure of things coming into the plants and going out of the plants and then just how do we get a little more value out of every stream it is that we process.
That’s the view that we’ve adhered to now for several years and I think it’s the view that we’re going to adhere to going forward. So it’s a little early right now for me to say that there is any fundamental changes other than those that we’ve already implemented around capital. A greater focus on the renewables, the greener fuels going forward, which we’ve done with the ethanol business and with the renewable diesel business, but other than that, I just don’t envision anything — any major change of direction right now.
Ryan Todd — Simmons Energy — Analyst
Great. I appreciate it. Thank you. That’s all for me.
Operator
Thank you. Our next question will come from Jason Gabelman with Cowen. Please go ahead.
Jason Gabelman — Cowen — Analyst
Thanks for taking the questions. I wanted to ask about the regional guidance that you provided, you mentioned that Mid-Con demand has been getting stronger, that regional utilization guidance is kind of at the lower-end of the range. North Atlantic also and then U.S. West Coast looks like those assets are going to be the highest — running at the highest utilization rates in 2Q. So can you just discuss some of the puts and takes by region, the results and the dispersion of run rates? Thanks.
Lane Riggs — President and Chief Operating Officer
Yes, this is Lane. I’ll take a stab at it. Our view, when Gary was talking about the Mid-Con and it’s getting better, when you think about a refinery operation, when you have a refinery sitting in the Mid-Con, if you get out of balance, it can become, you know, you might end up shutting your refinery down. So we have taken the position on where we are essentially landlocked to be very cautious on our feedstock plant with be assumption there is plenty of oil to go get it if we needed to whatever reason — we believe that demand is picking up. So it’s really around where was demand versus expectations and where were our concerns about sort of the feasibility of our operations where we are landlocked is all these policies around COVID impacted demand.
So that’s really where I think Gary’s thought were. It’s just now we see that the Mid-Continent has sort of bottomed out, seems to be recovering a little bit better. So we have a run — but our plan is to make sure that we are shortening our supply chain and that we can manage it and respond to it quickly and not get ourselves to where we’re overcommitted on supply chain in the event that we have — that creates a problem for us if something doesn’t quite happen the way that we hope it does and that’s really the narrative all the way across every system that we have. We’re just being very careful trying to match the demand with that region with an understanding that the West Coast, the Mid-Continent, is not, you have to get that right. If you get it wrong, you get into some — having to do very uneconomic things to fix those problems. The Gulf Coast — it’s a big system. It can go into a lot of different pipelines, servicing a lot of different parts of the country and then ultimately export to sort of satisfy its balance, but even there we’re being very cautious. Our North America — I mean the Atlantic is really — we’re doing some work in both of those refineries in the second quarter.
Jason Gabelman — Cowen — Analyst
Got it, thanks. And just a follow-up on longer-term margin outlook. Clearly, it looks like demand is starting to improve from the bottoms, but there is a lot of global refining capacity out there that’s not being utilized right now and historically, refiners have reacted pretty quickly to changes in demand. So I’m just wondering what your outlook is over the next year even if demand recovers, if it doesn’t come fully back, is there a risk that there is slack in the global refining system that could limit the gains in refining margins until demand more fully recovers. Thanks.
Gary Simmons — Executive Vice President and Chief Commercial Officer
Yes, this is Gary. I would say, certainly there is that risk, but again, I would point to — we’ve been very encouraged by the discipline the industry’s shown and we’re hopeful that maybe what you saw in March in the case that demand fell off sharply and it took a couple of weeks for refineries to modify their operations to come back closer to being in balance with demand. You see a reverse of that as demand picks up and we set our operations to run at lower production rates, maybe you get some big draws, but there is no way for us to really speculate how the industry is going to respond as demand recovers.
Jason Gabelman — Cowen — Analyst
Got it. Thanks for the time.
Operator
Thank you. Our next question will come from Matthew Blair with Tudor, Pickering, Holt. Please go ahead.
Matthew Blair — Tudor, Pickering, Holt, & Co. — Analyst
Hey, good morning, Joe. Glad to hear everyone is safe.
Joe Gorder — Chairman and Chief Executive Officer
Thanks, Matt.
Matthew Blair — Tudor, Pickering, Holt, & Co. — Analyst
If I take midpoint refining throughput guidance against your 450 [Phonetic] opex guidance, it looks like your projected total opex will be coming down by about $90 million versus Q1 levels. Is that $90 million simply your energy savings on running the boilers at lower rates or are there other areas where you’ve been able to cut cost as well?
Lane Riggs — President and Chief Operating Officer
Yeah, this is Lane again. So if you think about our cost structure, in a refinery, you have variable costs and fixed costs and the variable costs and it’s an interesting thing to think about, because in a $1.80 sort of Henry Hub pricing environment, variable cost which for us includes FCC catalyst chemicals and natural gas to fire our boilers and our heaters, there’s really somewhere now down between 15% and 25% whereas in years past where natural gas was much more expensive, we’ve been a bigger component.
So yeah, natural gas purchases is a part of that, it’s not — it’s really if you look all the way down the line, we have our variable costs if we’ve cut FCC catalysts, we’ve cut natural gas, but we’ve also — we also see our — we’ve reduced our contractor headcount some and looking at very carefully are sort of discretionary maintenance also bring that down and again try to be very careful with operating costs.
Matthew Blair — Tudor, Pickering, Holt, & Co. — Analyst
Sounds good and then could you also talk about your ability to capture contango in this market, both for U.S. barrels as well as for your offshore barrels. There has been some reports that refiners are looking to procure additional storage, maybe even like renting out Jones Act tankers. So can you just walk through all that?
Gary Simmons — Executive Vice President and Chief Commercial Officer
Yeah, well, certainly, if you know the market structure is such that if you can put barrels in tankage whether that’s floating storage or tankage in Cushing, the market pays you to do that. In terms of our everyday purchases, a lot of the market structure is built into the prices you see and you don’t necessarily get a big benefit from market structure except for Mid-Continent barrels that we purchase and we tend to see a bit when we’re in contango versus when the market structures in backwardation. It’s a pretty complex discussion and I would ask you if you want to go into that in detail, you can call Homer and we could set up a discussion to go into more detail about that.
Matthew Blair — Tudor, Pickering, Holt, & Co. — Analyst
Sounds good. Thanks guys.
Operator
Ladies and gentlemen, thank you for participating in today’s question-and-answer session. I would now like to turn the call back over to management for any further remarks.
Homer Bhullar — Vice President of Investor Relations
Thanks, Sherry. We appreciate everyone joining us today and hope everyone stays safe and healthy. If you have any follow-up questions, as always, don’t hesitate to reach out to the IR team. Thank you.
Operator
[Operator Closing Remarks]