David Krant
Analyst · Devin Dodge with BMO Capital Markets
Thank you, operator, and good morning, everyone. Welcome to Brookfield Infrastructure Partners fourth quarter 2023 earnings conference call. As introduced, my name is David Krant, and I'm the Chief Financial Officer of Brookfield Infrastructure. I'm joined today by our Chief Executive Officer, Sam Pollock; and our Chief Operating Officer, Ben Vaughan. I'll begin the call today with a discussion of our 2023 financial and operating results, followed by some brief remarks on our access to capital and recent financing initiatives. I'll then turn the call over to Ben, who will discuss the merits of investing boldly during periods of capital scarcity. Finally, Sam will provide an update on our recent acquisitions and will conclude with an outlook for the business. At this time, I would like to remind you that in our remarks today, we may make forward-looking statements. These statements are subject to known and unknown risks, and future results may differ materially. For further information on known risk factors, I would encourage you to review our annual report on Form 20-F, which is available on our website. 2023 was another successful year for Brookfield Infrastructure. We executed many of our strategic priorities across all areas of our business. Some of our key accomplishments include closing over $2 billion of new investments, generating $1.9 billion of total proceeds from capital recycling, obtaining a second investment grade credit rating and maintaining our financial strength during a capital constrained year. I'm also pleased to report that we exited 2023 on a high note with fourth quarter funds from operations of $0.79 per unit, a 10% increase over prior year levels. Considering these strong results and favorable outlook for 2024, the Board of Directors have approved a quarterly distribution increase of 6% to $1.62 per unit and share on an annualized basis. This marks the 15th consecutive year of distribution increases. I'll now go through our annual results and discuss each of our business segments in more detail. Funds from operations totaled $2.3 billion an increase of 10% compared to 2022. Organic growth for the year was 8% reflecting strong levels of inflation in the countries where we operate, volume growth across the majority of our critical infrastructure networks and the commissioning of approximately $1 billion of new capital projects that are now contributing to earnings. Taking a closer look at our results by segment. Our utilities businesses generated FFO of $879 million compared to $739 million in the prior year. This represents a 19% increase. This growth can be attributed to inflation indexation, which benefited our results by approximately 6% and the contribution associated with approximately $500 million of capital commissioned into our rate base. Results also benefited from the strong initial performance at HomeServe, which we privatized in January of 2023. Moving to our Transport segment. FFO was $888 million representing a 12% increase compared to the $794 million generated in the prior year. Base business results primarily benefited from inflationary tariff increases and higher volumes driven by strong economic activity around our networks. In particular, our rail operations realized an average annual rate increase of 8% and volumes were up 2% from the previous year. At our diversified terminals, rates and volumes benefited from strong demand for bulk goods and commodities that underpin the global economy. And finally, our toll road portfolio realized annual traffic levels and tariff increases of 4% and 9% respectively compared to the prior year. Our results additionally benefited from the acquisition of Triton, our global intermodal logistics operation, which closed at the end of the third quarter and is performing ahead of expectations. Our Midstream segment, FFO totaled $684 million for the year. Results were impacted by the sale of one-third of our interest in a U.S. Gas Pipeline in June of 2023 as well as the normalization of market sensitive revenues at our diversified Canadian midstream business. The outlook for our Midstream business remains strong, particularly as we continue to have success executing commercial agreements and increasing rates as a result of a lack of new investment in the sector. Lastly, FFO from our data segment was $275 million an increase of 15% year-on-year. The increase is largely attributable to three large-scale acquisitions completed during the year. These included a European Telecom tower operation in the first quarter and two hyperscale data center platforms in the third and fourth quarters. Partially offsetting the contribution from these new investments was the sale of our New Zealand Integrated Data Distribution business completed in the second quarter of 2023. The existing businesses performed well and continue to benefit from sector tailwinds and network densification requirements. The strong operational and financial performance I've just outlined was supported by our consistent access to capital despite volatile market conditions throughout the year. Following several years of exceeding our new investment target, we are pleased to end the year with $2.8 billion in corporate liquidity. During the Q4, central banks began to shift their monetary policy stance, which proved favorable for capital markets and allowed us to close the year on a very active note. In addition to proactively refinancing and extending debt maturities within our businesses, we recently completed opportunistic asset level financings to right size the capital structure at two mature pipeline operations in North America. Combined, these financings generated $550 million of capital for the partnership. And more importantly, reduced the equity required in a future sale of these pipelines. These activities combined with the optimism we have seen in return to the investment landscape sets us up well to achieve our $2 billion capital recycling target in 2024. That concludes my remarks for this morning. I'll now turn the call over to Ben.