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Civeo Corporation (CVEO)

Q2 2018 Earnings Call· Fri, Jul 27, 2018

$31.10

-0.65%

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Transcript

Operator

Operator

Good day and welcome to the Civeo Second Quarter Earnings Call. Today's conference is being recorded. At this time, I'd like to turn the conference over to Regan Nielsen, Manager, Corporate Development and Investor Relations. Please go ahead, sir.

Regan Nielsen

Management

Thank you and welcome to Civeo's second quarter 2018 earnings conference call. Today, our call will be led by Bradley Dodson, Civeo's President and Chief Executive Officer, and Frank Steininger, Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer. Before we begin, we would like to caution listeners regarding forward-looking statements. To the extent that our remarks today contain information other than historical information, please note that we are relying on the Safe Harbor protections afforded by federal law. Any such remarks should be read in the context of the many factors that affect our business, including risks disclosed in our Form 10-K, 10-Q, and other SEC filings. I will now turn the call over to Bradley.

Bradley Dodson

President

Thank you, Regan, and thank you to everyone for joining us today on our second quarter 2018 earnings call. I'll begin the call today with an overview of the quarter and some commentary on our three business segments. Frank will then provide a detailed financial and segment level review, and I'll conclude with our updated outlook and guidance for 2018 before we move on to question-and-answer portion of the call. We made several significant accomplishments in the second quarter. We closed the Noralta acquisition, we integrated the Noralta operations into our Canadian business and we amended the credit agreement. Operationally, we generated solid quarterly results in Australia and the U.S. In Canada, the second quarter operating results were good, but not as good as were initially expecting. However, the outlook for our Canadian operations is approving therefore, LNG activity as well as ongoing activity in our core business. On the LNG side, in Canada, we were pleased to announce four conditional contract awards for the Coastal GasLink pipeline project in Canada, these contracts are expected to collectively occupy over 2,000 mobile camp rooms at peak activity and generate approximately CAD100 million revenues from 2019 to 2021, and they are subject to positive final investment decision from the LNG Canada joint venture, which is expected later this year. Perhaps as importantly, the long way and commencement of activity related to proposed LNG Canada development in Western Canada presents Civeo with a potentially sizable new commercial opportunity. While we are pleased to get these initial Coastal GasLink contracts, we are actively pursuing additional conditional contract awards related to LNGC, including additional contracts for our existing Sitka Lodge in Kitimat, British Columbia. For our Australian and U.S. businesses, they performed well in the second quarter while our Canadian business was negatively impacted by…

Frank Steininger

Management

Thank you, Bradley, and thanks everyone for joining us this morning. I'll start with a review of our second quarter results across our three segments. Today, we reported total revenues in the second quarter of $130.2 million, with a net loss on a GAAP basis of $48.3 million or $0.29 per diluted share. During the second quarter, the company generated adjusted EBITDA of $24.5 million, operating cash flow of $11.1 million and free cash flow of $8.6 million. The second quarter net loss includes the impact of the accretion of a net beneficial conversion feature on the outstanding preferred shares totaling $48.5 million, shown as a preferred dividend on the second quarter statement of operations. Let me put some further color around the $48.5 million preferred dividend recorded during the second quarter. Under generally accepted accounting principles or GAAP, a convertible instrument contains a beneficial conversion feature when the conversion price is less than the fair value of the shares, the instrument is convertible into at the commitment date. As part of the consideration paid to acquire Noralta, we issued convertible preferred shares to the sellers. As fair value of the Civeo common shares, into which the preferred shares are convertible into, was greater than the effective conversion price at the closing of the Noralta acquisition, therefore resulting in a beneficial conversion feature under GAAP – under U.S. GAAP. Since preferred shares were convertible at the date we closed the Noralta transaction, we will require, under GAAP to immediately recognize the accounting impact of the non-cash beneficial conversion feature as a team dividend, therefore, impacting our second quarter loss for the quarter. Turning to the second quarter results for our segments, I'll begin with a review of the Canadian segment performance compared to the prior quarter. Revenue from our Canadian…

Bradley Dodson

President

Thank you, Frank. I’ll now line our guidance for the third quarter and the full-year of 2018, and provide a brief outlook for our business segments and make some closing remarks before we open up the call for questions and answers. As you saw in the press release, we adjusted our full-year guidance. We adjusted full-year EBITDA expectations down by approximately $8 million. This is related to the EBITDA mix in the second quarter, which was largely due to the Canadian Oil Sands occupancy being lower in the second quarter and expected weaker Canadian and Australian dollar exchange rates in the second half of 2018. Overall, our outlook for the second half of 2018 is consistent with our prior expectations. Moving on to the segments, in Canada, we expect to experience continued turnaround work in the third quarter, however, not to the magnitudes seen in the second quarter. This third quarter turnaround work includes the temporary shutdown activity of a major customers' facility, which should provide some additional occupancy to both the legacy Noralta assets as well the legacy Civeo assets. Ultimately, we expect third quarter room nights in Canada to be down 7% to 9% sequentially from the second quarter, primarily due to again, lower turnaround activity and lower occupancy at our McClelland Lake Lodge as the Fort Hills project moves into operations. For the third quarter, we are assuming our Canadian dollar exchange rate at $0.76, and we expect segment revenues to be between $78 million and $81 million with adjusted EBITDA of $18 million to $19 million for the third quarter of 2018. These expectations are based on a range of $850,000 to $865,000 room nights and a room rate of approximately CAD 112 per night in the third quarter. For the full-year in Canada, we are…

Operator

Operator

Thank you. [Operator Instructions] We’ll go first to Mike Malouf at Craig-Hallum Capital Group.

Michael Malouf

Analyst

Great. Thanks guys for taking my questions. If we could just focus a little bit more on the LNG opportunity, I was wondering – I had two questions on that. First off, have you been able to guard any sort of increased color with regards to the FIDs and if you could give us any insight on that? And then second of all, can you go into a little bit more about some of the ancillary and additional work that you might once that – if that FID does come through and you get these initial contracts starting to ramp? Thanks.

Bradley Dodson

President

Thank you, Mike and thanks for the question. In terms of any further color on FID, I think we're all expecting or looking out in the same fashion, we're expecting it to be sometime later this year, either late third quarter, early fourth quarter. And don't really have any further color beyond that, as it relates to additional opportunities, we certainly were very pleased when the four conditional contracts related to mobile camp accommodations for the Coastal GasLink pipeline that was four of the multiple camps that are necessary to construct that pipeline. We're also hoping to put potentially some pipeline personnel into our Sitka location, and then we – as it relates to the Sitka location, we also hope to have both the joint venture personnel as well as their EPC contractors in Sitka. So we're working on that. And then lastly, we continue to work forward on the Cedar Valley Lodge contract, that is the one we previously announced and had one related to building with our joint venture partner Bird Construction, a 4,500 room facility on the LNGC site. The last piece of the puzzle would be operating that asset. So for us, the focus is on securing some work for the Sitka Lodge, it is the near-term focus and continue to assist LNGC and their EPC contractors as it relates to the Cedar Valley Lodge.

Michael Malouf

Analyst

Okay. Great. That’s helpful. And then just a follow-up question, on Noralta, do you have maybe an update on how the expense savings that you've reached so far, as you look to counter 2019 for example, how much do you think you'll end up saving internally with regards to consolidation of their facilities?

Bradley Dodson

President

Thanks for the question. I think the team as a whole, the combined team as a whole has done a very good job and very quickly executing that. It's always a piece of work and difficult to integrate two companies. I think the team has come together very quickly and efficiently. We feel very comfortable with the CAD10 million that we initially estimated and hope, as we get a few more months underneath our belt, given that we only have had 90 days of integrated operations, that we'll be able to raise that. So I'd say there is an upper bias to the $10 million, but let us get another 90 days under our belt and we'll update the investors.

Michael Malouf

Analyst

Okay. Great. Look forward to that. And thanks for taking the questions.

Operator

Operator

[Operator Instructions] We'll go next to Steven Gengaro at Stifel.

Stephen Gengaro

Analyst · Stifel

Good morning, guys. Bradley, could you give us a little more color on what you're seeing in Australia as far as customer interest and obviously, you've given us guidance for the next quarter and for the year, but just to kind of get a sense of what you're seeing as far increase go? And how you think that maybe plays out over the next several quarters?

Bradley Dodson

President

Sure. Well I think, if you look at how things have progressed and if you let me Stephen, I'll kind of talk from our quarterly room nights, which is a number of rooms occupied or built for the given quarters. So in the first quarter, we had [341,600] room nights in Australia for the first quarter, we gone up to [376,400] in the second quarter. We think we expect to grow closer to 400,000 in the third quarter. So things are progressing nicely. We're starting to see increased turnaround work and as we expect it throughout the year, we thought we kind of pace upwards throughout the year. Right now, we expect to have a strong fourth quarter. We're trying to firm up what that looks like. As we've talked about in the past, what we've seen is customers are securing a block of rooms, kind of their base load needs, knowing that they are definitely need more than that and they're not committing to that. They're paying for that flexibility in higher rates but they're not committing to it. So we're trying to do our best to forecast for the market what we think the occupancy is going to be, but there is a component of it every quarter that's going to be more flexible because it all relates to maintenance work. So I would say we're more optimistic today than we were a quarter ago in terms of trying to secure larger blocks of base load work, if you will, but it continues to be a highly fluid market, an improving market, but a higher fluid market.

Frank Steininger

Management

Yes. And there's some – I mean, there's some discussions in the market there with regards to new mines and expansion from some of our customers but nothing has been – we haven't reached FID nor announced any of those plans, but there are discussions. So if the prices continue to stay hold – to hold, we could see as we move into 2019, later I could be there too Stephen.

Stephen Gengaro

Analyst · Stifel

Okay, great. Thank you. And then second – and I know there was a question earlier on the LNG side in Canada, if this thing was to get the complete go ahead, when would you see revenue? Would it be a night – I mean, I guess – when you're going to get, let's say by September 1 or at the end of the third quarter, would you get a revenue stream flowing through in the first half of 2019, second half 2019, any way to think about that? I mean, obviously…?

Bradley Dodson

President

Sure. Well, I think there are a couple of pieces to it. One, we need to work – win the work for Sitka. If we win the work for our Sitka Lodge in Kitimat, then even if it's conditional on FID, I would expect that they would need to use that asset ASAP, at that point, because we are the largest and most available asset in the region. And they've used this in the past. If you recall, prior to them delaying the project in 2016, they had been staying at the Sitka Lodge, and obviously, we have to win the work, and we have to perform well in terms of meeting their expectations, but I think the Sitka asset is very well positioned.

Frank Steininger

Management

You can see in revenues in 2018 related to that asset.

Bradley Dodson

President

We’re assuming we have FIDs this year, you will have 2018 revenue. There'll be some 2019 revenue – well, and then obviously, it will continue into 2019 and 2020. As it relates to the Coastal GasLink pipeline projects, the most of that is going to be 2020 and 2021. We'll have some in 2019. We’ll have mobilization revenues and some occupancy revenues, but that is largely 2020 and 2021.

Stephen Gengaro

Analyst · Stifel

Okay, that’s helpful. And then if I could just throw in one more, you're giving us more detail, which is helpful but when I think about the Canadian margins and I think about the catering operations, I mean, I think they're – if I'm right, there's low capital intensities, so the returns are good, but there is a margin impact there? Are you guys thinking about this, if I was to break it out that your core combinations margins are relatively sticky, and the overall margin is just impacted by other business lines?

Bradley Dodson

President

Largely that's the case, Stephen. Haven't seen a degradation either and from a margin perspective, either in the Civeo legacy assets or the Noralta assets, they're quite frankly performing as we expected to slightly – from a margin perspective slightly better, where we missed in the second quarter was quite frankly on volumes where we were expecting higher occupancy levels related to turnaround work from two of the major operators out there. That just didn't come to fruition. And really kind of came to an end about mid to late May. So at any rate, the mix will play a role as we move into capital-wide operations, that will play a role both in Canada and Australia, as we try and operate our – we win work to operate customer owned assets, where the margins are mid- to high single digits.

Stephen Gengaro

Analyst · Stifel

Okay, great. That’s very helpful. Thank you. End of Q&A

Operator

Operator

And that does conclude the question-and-answer session. At this time, I'll turn the conference back over to Mr. Dodson for any closing remarks.

Bradley Dodson

President

Thank you. Thank you all for joining us today. We look forward to the second half of 2018. There are some good things happening in our core businesses and obviously some things we all looking forward to should Canadian LNG move forward. So we look forward to reporting on that later this year. Thank you.

Operator

Operator

And that does conclude today's conference. Again, thank you for your participation.