Q2 2022 Atlas Corp Earnings Call
I would like to remind everyone that this conference call is being recorded today, August 10, 2022.
I'd now like to turn the call over to Ashton King, Manager of Investor Relations.
Good morning everyone and thank you for joining us today to discuss Atlas Corp's second quarter 2022 earnings report. We issued our earnings release.
yesterday evening after market close. We will refer to our quarterly earnings release, accompanying earnings presentation and earnings supplemental workbook today in this conference, which all can be found on the investors tab on our website, atlascorporation.com.
I would like to remind you today that our discussion contains four looking statements and I draw your attention to this disclaimer on slide two in the accompanying earnings presentation.
Please note that we report non-GAAP measures, which we believe provide investors a clear understanding of the performance of our business.
The earnings release contains supplemental financial tables and information pertaining to our quarterly earnings report and includes definitions of non-GAAP financial measures and reconciliations of such non-GAAP financial measures to the most closely comparable US GAAP measures.
These definitions may also be found in the appendices at the back of the earnings presentation, which we may refer to in our call discussion and can be found on our website.
Please turn to slide 3.
On the call with me are Bing Chen, President and CEO of Atlas Corp, and Graham Talbot, Chief Financial Officer of Atlas Corp.
Joining us on the call during the Q&A session is C-SPAN's Chief Commercial Officer Peter Curtis and C-SPAN's Chief Operating Officer Thorsten Pedersen.
Following our prepared remarks, we will open up the form to a question and answer session.
With that, I am pleased to now turn the call over to Atlas Corp's CEO , Bing Chen.
Thank you, Ashton, and good morning, everyone. Thank you for joining our call.
To begin, I would like to quickly cover the take private proposal that was received by our Board of Directors on August 4, 2022.
We cannot comment on the proposal. For more information concerning the proposal, please refer to our public filings.
As stated in our filings, the company does not intend to provide updates on the proposed transaction until appropriate or required.
In the meantime, management is absolutely focused on business as usual and continuing to successfully execute on our strategy.
Today, my comments will focus on key developments at C-SPAN and APR during the second quarter. Then, I will hand it over to Graham Taubalt to present our Q2 2022 results and provide a financial update.
Please turn to slide 4.
I would like to start by reviewing the major developments at C-SPAN.
We continued delivering strong quarterly results driven by healthy industry fundamentals and further developments of our long-term strategic partnerships.
We continue taking advantage of current market conditions by recycling capital through strategic vessel divestments.
In the second quarter, we sold nine Panamax specials that were no longer aligned with our long-term fleet strategy and continue seeking opportunities to optimize our fleet portfolio to meet the needs of our customers.
In response to our customers' demand, we leveraged our fully integrated platform to continue driving quality growth, executing agreements to build four 7,700TEU dual-fuel LNG new builds, but subject to closing conditions.
If completed, these vessels will commence 18-year charter with a leading global liner contributing nearly $1 billion of future gross contracted cash flows.
Including these four vessels, C-SPAN now has 29 dual fuel LNG new builds in this portfolio.
Leveraging our creative customer solutions, we forward fixed three vessels in the second quarter. In the third quarter, we forward fixed another 14 vessels with leading global liners. These forward fixtures contribute over $1.3 billion to our total.
current gross contract cash flow balance of 18.9 billion, not including the four new bills I previously mentioned.
This leads to our fleet being 100% contracted to the remainder of 2022, 99.6% for 2023, and 96.9% for 2024 on a TU basis.
We also continued diligent execution of our new builds. In the second quarter, we delivered four fourth and fifth 12,200 TU new build vessels.
which commenced 18-year charter with another leading global liner upon delivery.
These deliveries mark C-SPAN completing the full new build order of five 12,200 TU vessels, which we received from a customer in late 2020.
In June , we also delivered our first and second 11,800 TU vessels, which commenced a five-year charter with another leading global liners upon delivery.
With a running total of 117 new builds since our IPO in 2005, materially de-risking execution, we are working diligently to deliver our new build program on time and on budget despite the challenges presented by the pandemic.
During the second quarter, we maintained a strong vessel utilization rate of 98.3%. We also achieved a historically low lost time injury frequency of 0.26 as we continue to focus on the safety of our people.
Together with our highly differentiated business model and consistent commitment to operational excellence, these successes drove our continued strong quarterly performance.
Please turn to slide five.
Now, let's review some key developments at APR. In the second quarter, APR entered into a contract with a Mexico-based counterparty, providing the dry lease of four turbines with a capacity of 120 megawatts.
In May, APR's new 44-month Brazil contract commenced, followed by the IID contract in June .
The extension of APR's Brazil contract from a 12-month to 44-month is evidence of our strategy to migrate the business to a long-term contract cash flow.
As mentioned last quarter, APR completed its five-year contract in Argentina earlier this year. As of today, demobilization of the turbine is substantially complete.
The turbines previously at our Zaparto plant were deployed in APR's new dry lease contract and we are working diligently to redeploy the remaining MACELL turbines.
Upon successful full-size demobilization of the Moselle plant, we will receive the remaining identification proceeds set out in the APR Purchase Agreement.
And similar to C-SPAN's strong safety culture, APR achieved a perfect loss time injury rate of zero for the last 12 months.
Alongside the strong market conditions for grid stability, we continue to transform the business by strengthening APRs business development team, developing creative customer solutions, and remaining focused on transitioning the company to long-term power opportunities with predictable cash flows.
Thank you for your time today. I will now turn the call over to our CFO , Grant Tubman.
Thanks, Bing. Good morning, everyone, and thank you for joining us today.
Please turn to slide six.
So in Q2 2022, we maintained our strong operational and financial results, reflecting our team's continued high performance.
During the quarter, Atlas achieved the following performance relative to Q2 2021.
Revenue growth of 4.9% to $413.3 million.
adjusted EBITDA growth of 2.6% to $279.5 million.
FSO growth of 4.2% to $201.7 million.
At the end of the quarter we had liquidity of $1.1 billion.
I'm proud of the team's performance during the ongoing operational challenges caused by the COVID pandemic and supply chain disruptions.
Our consistently strong performance demonstrates the resilience of our platform that provides through-cycle returns to all stakeholders and maintains our industry-leading utilisation rate of 98.3% in the quarter.
At this time we can confirm our revenue, inhibitor and interest expenses tracking well to the guidance we issued during our investor day presentation.
However, for net earnings we have included a profit on sale of vessels in our guidance of approximately $60 million as shown in the footnotes of that presentation.
Although we have divested 10 Panamax vessels since the beginning of the year, the composition of that divestment portfolio was different than originally planned due to market conditions.
Year to date, the divestments have resulted in a cumulative book loss of approximately $10 million.
Please turn to slide seven.
During the second quarter we continued our focus on strengthening and optimizing our balance sheets.
Through their age, design and predictive future demand, we completed the sale of nine 4,250 TU vessels in the second quarter.
generating approximately $224 million in cash proceeds.
Here to date we have sold 10 vessels for gross proceeds of $257 million.
Going forward, we'll continue to look for opportunities to optimise our fleet and recycle capital through vessel divestment.
Our strategic shareholder, Fairfax, exercised warrants to purchase 25 million common shares of Atlas and Eiffel.
This resulted in cash proceeds of over $200 million which will be used to repay outstanding debt and for other general corporate purposes.
This is yet another demonstration of our shareholders' continued confidence in our platform.
A key element in the advancement of our capital structure is continuing to develop relationships with a global base of institutional investors.
In this regard we closed a $500 million sustainability linked US private placement of non-amortising notes.
with an 11.6 year weighted average maturity and a 5.3% weighted average fixed interest rate.
Proceeds of the transaction will be directed to pay down existing debt and fund quality growth opportunities.
We are also continuing to monitor our interest rate exposures with the aim of aligning our fixed revenue and interest rate exposure.
C-SPAN is well positioned in the current inflationary and rising interest rate environment, with approximately 70% of C-SPAN's debt on fixed rates as of quarter end.
Alongside locking in a significant amount of fixed rate debt to fund our new builds in 2021,
Securing $500 million of additional long-dated debt in the second quarter and entering into a $500 million long-term floating to fixed rate swap in the first quarter will continue to proactively manage our exposure.
Going forward, we'll continue to assess opportunities to strengthen and simplify our balance sheet as we progress towards our goal of an investment-grade credit rating.
Please turn to slide eight.
I'd like to summarise our strong quarterly performance by leaving you with five key takeaways.
Number one, Atlas continued to deliver solid financial results in the second quarter, with strong performance across all metrics and $18.9 billion of high quality, long-term gross contracted cash flows, ensuring through cycle performance amid a normalising industry environment.
2. We remain focused on quality growth through disciplined capital allocation by optimising our Bessel portfolio through strategic investments and in-demand new build orders.
Number three, APR is enriching its platform by strengthening its business development team, redeploying assets out of Argentina and focusing on securing long-term power opportunities that generate predictable contracted cash flows.
Number four, we continue to diligently execute on the construction and delivery of our new build vessels for our customers.
To date we've delivered seven new builds, all ahead of schedule.
The remaining vessels are progressing as planned with four deliveries scheduled for the remainder of 2022.
5. We are continuing to strengthen our balance sheet in line with our target of achieving an investment-grade credit rating, in addition to proactively managing our interest rate position.
Thank you for your interest today. Operator, we'd now like to open the line to questions. Thank you.
If you'd like to ask a question, you'll need to press star 1 1 on your telephone.
That is star 1 1 if you'd like to ask a question.
Please stand by when we compile the Q&A roster.
Our first question comes from Liam Burke with B. Riley. Your line is now open.
Thank you. Ben Graham, how are you today?
Thanks, Graham.
Good morning, Bing. You highlighted on your press release recharters four vessels in the second quarter and then quite a few in the third quarter. Could you give us some color as to vis-à-vis the current charters and the recharters, whether you benefited in duration or rate or both?
There Liam, it's Peter here.
Hope you're doing well.
Thank you.
Good question, thanks. Look, I just point everybody to our fully integrated operating platform, not only in terms of the design of vessels and
suitability of customers through our new build program, but also what we do to existing vessels to ensure their relevance within our customers' fleet. So these forward fixings have been a mixture of both with the existing customer and moving vessels from one customer to the other. By and large they are combined with
a program of modifications, some small, some not so small, and also by and large with an agreement for customers to either fund the modifications or for a share of the funding into the modifications.
which is part and parcel of our operating ethos. So, you know, we partner with them and we take a longer term view with them. And this is how we realize transactions such as this.
Hope so.
Sorry Peter, didn't mean to cut you off, but Liam I just wanted to add that broadly speaking these charters were scheduled to finish between 23 and 25 and post the forward fixing that pushes these out to 2026 to 2032.
So as we've discussed previously, our forward fixing program is to keep extending the life of our charters into longer term contracted cash flows and also at the moment, given where the market is, to make sure that we push our charters out through this period when we've got quite a bit of new capacity coming into the market.
Great. Thank you, Peter. Thank you, Graham. On the fleet renewal program, you've been very specific as to what vessel classes you want to continue to invest in. If I look at your fleet at the lower end, the 4000 TEU class have been one that you've been divesting pretty steadily. How about vessels that are smaller in that class? Are you comfortable owning them or is that something you'd look at divesting?
And as you're well aware, our business model is very much geared towards longer term contracts.
So the shorter end of the fleet is not normally the dominant area where we focus, but if there are opportunities that we identify with those smaller vessels and customer demand, we do enter into them, but it's not our core area of focus.
Just to add what Graham was saying, from our side, really, it's driven by the customer needs and also the vessel itself in terms of efficiency. So those are the two main criteria for us to determine our overall fleet strategy.
Yeah, and just to be clear Liam, I'm referring here to smaller than our 4250s that we were discussing earlier and we're very selectively, as you point out, exiting some of those, both to generate cash flow but more importantly to sort of high grade the fleet over the longer term.
Right, that's understood. Thank you.
As a reminder, if you'd like to ask a question, that is star 11.
Our next question comes from Ken Hekster with Bank of America. Your line is now open.
Hi, this is Adam Roszkowski for Ken Hechster. Thank you for taking my question. Maybe, Bing, the new builds that you mentioned, they seem to be coming in ahead of schedule. Maybe you could just – could you speak to yard capacity and what you're seeing on that end?
Yeah, the Newville so far, what we have delivered is total seven. As I mentioned earlier, five is 12,000 and the other two is 11,800. These are the vessels I think we were able to do, working very closely with the shipyard, overcoming those logistics challenges, given the shipyard lockdown.
And I think this is actually one of the key strengths of C-SPAN's, you know, the platform that we are able to, we have the know-how, we have the team, our people that's able to achieve these kind of outcomes. Going forward, on one hand, we have received the Force Majeure notice from our four Chinese shipyards for reasons of China lockdown.
But we have rejected those course measures and our team currently are working very diligently, yard by yard, vessel by vessel, in finding ways to help to improve and mitigate any potential impacts to those deliveries. And I think that this is what I said earlier in the presentation, that we are working diligently.
to ensure that we are able to continue delivering this new build on time and on budget. And that is our intention.
Got it, thank you. And then maybe just following up on the vessel sales you mentioned, you sold mine in the quarter. Maybe just get a sense of vessel pricing in the market right now, kind of where it's trending, is it maybe exceeding or maybe...
underpacing, if you will, some of your expectations on that front.
Yes, generally, I think the vessel S&P pricing is also correlated.
to the freight prior freight prices. It's just a matter of timing. So as we all know that the freight rate has started decreasing from its peak. It was October , 2021. However, the magnitude of that decrease in the steel, I think it's a little gradual and it's still far, far more higher than the pre-COVID level.
So in general, and I think with the new build that's gradually coming in, which including our own ships and also broadly the market, including our liner customers. So from a supply side, I think the new build has started coming in.
From a demand side, I believe that with the improvement in large part of the world in terms of the logistics and also the port congestions.
there's some level of alleviation on the congestion side that actually helps on the demand side. So therefore, I think that in terms of the new bill coming in and with the secondhand vessels trading. So I think that in terms of the new bill coming in and with the secondhand vessels trading.
the speed, the pace has been slowing down. That's the broader market I'm talking about now versus maybe six months or nine months before. Specifically with regard to our nine vessels sales, as Graham has pointed out earlier, really we have looking at the vessel by vessel, situation by situation that we make those decisions to sell those vessels. As you can
As you know that the value of the vessel, it's not the vessel itself. The value of the vessel is the vessel itself plus the attached charter value and plus the future expected charter rate. So that for us, we actually in the initial forecast as what Grant mentioned earlier, that the forecast and total number of vessels that's we're looking at on a total basis. And today we have.
So far, only divested 11 of them. So that is why we have, you know, whatever the numbers that we have in that's been has been reported.
Got it. Thank you. I'll pass it along.
Thank you.
Thanks Adam.
Our next question comes from Ben Nolan with Stevell. Your line is now open.
Hey, guys. I had a couple. First, appreciating that you're limited on what you can say with respect to the transaction. I was just curious sort of what the catalyst was or is in terms of why now, what's the motivation for thinking about going private and not asking about sort of timelines or anything else. I'm just just sort of where you're.
thinking about it.
Hey, good morning Ben. This is Ben. As the press released by the company, our board received an unsolicited offer and a special committee of independent directors has been formed.
The process is within a special committee that is supported by the special committee appointed financial and legal advisors.
So, to ensure that they follow the proper procedures. As for the management of the company, I hope that you can understand that we cannot discuss at this point or speculate on any offers nor the special committees process. What we can do instead is really that our team are very much focused on managing our business as usual. We are very much focused on managing our business as usual.
So I think that's what, from the management standpoint, this is what we can share with you at this point.
Okay, that's helpful. So then going to normal course of business things, Graham, could you, you alluded to it, but just in terms of the guidance that you had expected a $60 million gain on the sale of some of those assets, and now it's a small loss. Is it just an accounting thing? As I look at it, it seems like, if anything, the value of those assets is just a little bit higher.
If it, you know, just the market value of those assets is roughly twice of what you're getting for it. I would have thought that if anything that the game would be going higher.
Hi Ben, yes so it really is an accounting issue to do with the book values of the vessels that we've transacted and it actually relates back to three specific vessels in the transaction portfolio. This is one we were actually negotiating the sale of when we were compiling.
the forecast for the year and that was at a fairly mature stage but that transaction ended up not going through and we're still working on marketing that vessel and that actually carries quite a high...
profit on book sale and there were two others that we did sell which weren't originally in the portfolio that actually had a book loss. So these as you're aware accounting losses against the depreciated written down book values that we had carried in our books. So the cash flow is still all generated and everything else works in terms of the economic assessment.
But I just wanted to be fully transparent about what the assumptions were that were included in the footnotes to the long-term guidance and where we are tracking mid-year. Obviously we've still got a way to go, but I just want to make people aware of what the position is at this point in time.
Okay, that color is helpful. I appreciate it. And then last for me, there was the little footnote or the caveat to the four 7,000 TEU ships that you have recently agreed to build and charter that it's somehow not finalized. I was hoping that you could maybe just sort of walk through where that stands if and when you expect it to be formalized or...
what exactly is happening in that situation. And then it's Peter here. On that one, the little bit of an atypical thing in the contract is that it is subject to the provision of refund guarantees which protect installments. So for the furnishing of refund guarantees for the contract to be valid.
So until such time, the contract is not yet valid. So we wait on the Korean entity that would provide such a refund guarantee on these bills.
Okay, that is helpful. I appreciate it. Thank you, Peter.
That concludes today's question and answer session. I'd like to turn the call back to Bing Chen for closing remarks.
Well, thank you everyone for joining the call. I appreciate your time. And as we said, the business is continuing as usual. The team are focusing on conducting our day-to-day business. And if there's any questions, please, again, follow up questions, follow up with our investor relations with both Will and Ashton. So thanks again and have a great day.
Thank you everyone.
Thank you.
This concludes today's conference call. Thank you for participating.
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