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Imperial Petroleum Inc. (IMPPP)

NASDAQ·Energy·Oil & Gas Exploration & Production

$26.02

+0.61%

Mkt Cap $908.69M

Q3 2025 Earnings Call

Imperial Petroleum Inc. (IMPPP) Q3 2025 Earnings Call Transcript & Results

Reported Tuesday, July 15, 2025

Results

Earnings reported

Tuesday, July 15, 2025

Revenue

$11.19B

Estimate

$11.10B

Surprise

+0.80%

YoY +8.70%

EPS

$2.03

Estimate

$2.00

Surprise

+1.70%

YoY +12.40%

Share Price Reaction

Same-Day

+1.60%

1-Week

+0.00%

Prior Close

$184.21

Transcript

Operator:

Good day, and thank you for standing by. Welcome to the Q3 2025 Imperial Petroleum Results Conference Call and Webcast. [Operator Instructions] Please note that today's conference is being recorded. I would now like to turn the conference over to your speaker, Mr. Harry Vafias, CEO of Imperial Petroleum. Please go ahead, sir. Harry Vafias: Good morning, everyone, and thank you for joining us for our third quarter 9 months 2025 Conference Call. I'm Harry Vafias, the CEO of Imperial Petroleum. And joining us today is Ms. Sakellari, who will be discussing our financial performance. Before we commence our discussion, please read the safe harbor disclaimer on Slide 2. In essence, it's made clear that this presentation may contain some forward-looking statements as defined by the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act. We raise the attention of our investors to the fact that such forward-looking statements are based upon the current beliefs and expectations of Imperial Petroleum and are subject to risks and uncertainties, which could cause future results to differ materially from these forward-looking statements. In addition, we'd like to clarify that during this conference call, we will quote monetary amounts unless explicitly stated otherwise, are all denominated in U.S. dollars. On Slide 3, we're summarizing our key operational and financial highlights for Q3 '25. Our operating performance in the third quarter was most satisfactory. This was the first quarter that our recently acquired 7 drybulk ships were fully integrated. Due to this integration, our fleet calendar days increased by 36.1% quarter-on-quarter. Our fleet operational utilization for Q3 '25 was quite high, about 89%, much improved compared to the same quarter of last year when operational utilization was only 66%. Our drybulk ships are most of the time on short period time charters with low commercial off-hire, and this leverages the operating performance of our fleet as a whole. In terms of our fleet deployment mix in Q3 '25, our majority of our vessels, all of our drybulk ships and almost half of our product tankers were under time charter employment. So 75% of our voyage days were time charter days, while the remaining 25% of our voyage days were dedicated to spot activity. Touching briefly on our financial performance, the full integration of our drybulk ships in conjunction with strong rates, both in tanker and drybulk markets were reflected in our Q3 numbers and mostly in our operating income. In Q3, our revenues came in at $41.4 million, marking a 25% increase against the same period of last year. Our operating income for the quarter was in the order of $10.3 million marking a 72% increase compared to Q3 '24 and a 23% increase compared to Q2 '25. We view it as very positive that our fleet expansion has led to increased income from our core operations. We ended the quarter with a net income of $11 million, which was slightly lower compared to the second quarter of '25 due to the income decline from time deposits and minor losses from foreign exchange fluctuations. For the 9 months of '25, our net income came in at $35 million, our EBITDA close to $50 million, while our operating cash flow was as high as $57 million. Our organic operations fueled operating liquidity. In terms of our cash including time deposits, we ended the 9-month period with about $100 million of cash, decreased compared to our 6-month '25 financials due to the $129 million payment for the 7 drybulk ships that took place within July and August '25, and our cash base is about $172 million. On December 1, we concluded a capital raise of $60 million through a registered direct equity offering to institutional investors. These proceeds will be used for further acquisitions as we aim to increase our fleet ideally to a size between 25 and 30 ships. Through our fleet expansion, we strive to further boost revenue, profits and asset utilization. In terms of market conditions, we are under a period that both tanker and drybulk segments are doing quite well. And we see that asset values for both markets we operate in are firming and should this trend continue, it's highly probable that values will climb higher in the near future. Imperial Petroleum has solid fundamentals as we have 0 debt and a strong operating cash flow, and this gives us comfort that going forward, we're able to satisfy our working capital needs. Our strong operating cash flow generation supported our fleet expansion during the past couple of years. Our total cash of approximately $100 million at quarter end is expected to be primarily deployed towards our upcoming cash needs, including $52 million of capital expenditures to be paid in Q2 and Q3 '26 related to our 3 remaining drybulk vessel deliveries and an additional $14 million in total drydocking costs. In 2026, 12 of our vessels are scheduled to undergo drydocking driving these cash requirements. On Slide 4, we are providing a summary of our current fleet employment. 75% of our fleet is currently under time charter employment while our drybulk vessels are under short-term charter contracts. The commercial strategy we currently follow for a drybulk ship provides healthy cash flow while minimizing idle time and voyage costs. As for our tankers, at the moment we employ 3 product tankers and our suezmaxes in the spot market, while the remaining 4 product tankers are under period employment ranging from short- to medium-term contracts. On Slide 5, we're discussing the evolution of market rates for both tankers and drybulks. Within Q3, market rates strengthen in both tanker and drybulk segments. Rates for suezmax tankers gained momentum mainly at the back of OPEC output increase which resulted in the VLCC rates more than doubling and trickling down this positive momentum to the suezmaxes. The suezmaxes ended the third quarter with a daily rate of about $55,000 a day. Product tanker rates were boosted towards mid-quarter by higher activity in the Atlantic and stronger refining spreads across U.S.A., Asia and Europe. Rates in drybulk sector exerted within Q3 the highest rise witnessed over the past year. Daily rates for supramaxes climbed within the third quarter from $10,000 to $16,000 a day, while kamsarmaxes increased from $12,000 to $15,000. This is attributed to higher global iron flows that began in June, especially in Chinese iron ore demand for both Australia and Brazil along with higher activity on minor bulk cargoes. The broader market has been resilient in Q4, particularly for suezmax tankers. Suezmax rates a couple of weeks ago were close to $80,000 a day. Rates for product tankers are gradually escalating within Q4 due to the colder weather combined with the end of the maintenance refinery season. Rates for drybulk vessels have been -- have stabilized at these increased levels witnessed in Q3 and positive market prospects indicate that this trend may continue. On Slide 6, we are reviewing the tanker market. Within Q3, the set up for the tanker market was strong. We witnessed a rebound in refining margins, higher-than-expected oil demand and a general reversal of prior OPEC cuts. The crude tankers exerted a strong performance within the third quarter of '25 with earnings increasing every month. Additional U.S. sanctions imposed on crude tankers tightened the fleet supply, thus helping conventional trades. Overall, the medium-term outlook for crude tankers remains positive at the back of OPEC exports and Chinese crude imports maintaining a steady pace. However, geopolitical uncertainty, such as the ending of the Russian-Ukraine War and the opening of the Suez Canal may pressure the market in the long run. The performance of product tankers was modest in Q3 maintaining, however, an overall strength compared to the same period of last year. In the Atlantic, transatlantic routes from Europe freight levels climbed, while the U.S. Gulf remained subdued despite partial recovery later in the quarter. East of Suez, activity softened on reduced product flows before stabilizing towards the period end. The order book for the product tankers stands at 11.2%, while about 19% of the fleet is above 20 years of age. The order book for the suezmaxes is currently 21% with about 15% of the fleet being above 20 years of age. While assessing tanker fleet capacity, we should also look upon the sanctioned fleet percentages. About 6% of the total product tanker fleet is in the EU, U.K. and OFAC and UN sanctions. And this percentage for the total suezmax tanker fleet is 11.6%. On Slide 7, we are discussing the drybulk market, following a softer first half, the drybulk market took an upturn in Q3. Rates for both kamsarmax and supramax moved from $12,000 to $16,000. Indeed, Q3 '25 was a stronger period for seaborne coal trade with coal rivals from China marking a significant quarter-on-quarter rise. In addition, volumes in the Atlantic in this mid-size drybulk segment was also supported by the increase of grain volumes in the Atlantic and a rise in U.S. corn exports 25% year-on-year. Trade growth is expected to mark a faster expansion in '26, mainly at the back of South Atlantic iron ore and bauxite volumes. The recent U.S.-China trade truce should support freight rates as soyabean exports to China will increase. Indeed, China will continue to drive growth, but at a slower pace than priorly, via the increasing aluminum production and strong imports of iron ore, bauxite and minor bulks. Current order book is quite low for handysize, 7.2% and supramax 8.7%, but relatively high for kamsarmax 14.5%. Ordering activity has slowed down while there is a considerable percentage of aged vessels across all dry subsegments. I now pass the floor to Ms. Sakellari to summarize our financial performance. Ifigeneia Sakellari: Thank you, Harry, and good morning to all. The third quarter of '25 was once more profitable. It was the first quarter that we fully utilized our enhanced drybulk fleet segment, and this paid off as we materially increased our operating income. It's worth mentioning that the daily net revenue from the drybulk vessels increased by about 23% in Q3 '25 compared to the same quarter of '24. Our tanker segment, particularly suezmax tankers performed strongly as well, except for one of our product tankers involved in CPP trading as this was a market that remained relatively weak in the third quarter of '25. Looking at our income statement for Q3 '25 on Slide 8 revenues came in at $41.4 million in Q3 '25, marking a 25.5% million increase compared to revenues generated in the same period of '24. This increase is mainly due to our recent drybulk vessel addition along with an improvement of market rates, particularly for the suezmax tankers, as rates for these vessels increased within Q3 '25 to $55,000 per day and are now even higher, close to $70,000 per day. Voyage costs amounted to $11.6 million, marking $1.4 million lower than in Q3 '24. The decrease in voyage expenses attributed to the change in our fleet employment, which now shifts towards period coverage. In Q2 2025, our time charter coverage was about 75% versus 27% in Q3 '24. Our net revenues for the quarter came in at about $30 million compared to $20 million in Q3 '24. This is equivalent to a 50% increase. Running costs amounted to $10.9 million, increased by $3.7 million due to the increase of our fleet by an average of 8.6 vessels between the 2 periods. The current average daily OpEx for our tanker fleet is around $7,200 and $5,600 for drybulk fleet. We incurred negligible drydocking costs this quarter as none of our vessels underwent drydocking. As mentioned, we do have a pretty heavy drydocking schedule for 2026 as 12 of our vessels will need to be docked. In addition to this quarter and compared to the same period of last year, we faced a reduction in our income from noncore operations due to a reduction of funds, added time deposit and a foreign exchange loss minor incurred in the quarter. In Q3 '24, nonoperating income was $4 million compared to $700,000 in Q3 '25. EBITDA for the third quarter of '25 came in at $18 million, while net income at $11 million correspond to a basic earnings per share of $0.30. For 9 months '25, our EBITDA came in at $37.4 million. Our operating cash flow was $57 million, while our net income was $35 million corresponding to an EPS of $0.98. Moving on to Slide 9, let us take a look at our balance sheet for the 9 months of '25. As of September '25, our free cash, including time deposits was about $100 million. As already mentioned, within Q3 '25, we paid $129 million for the acquisition of 7 drybulk vessels, hence, our cash base declined. We still enjoy a flexible capital structure as we have no debt and solid liquidity. Looking at our fleet book value, this increased to $343 million, reflecting a 65% expansion in the company's asset base within just 9 months. Proceeding to Slide 10, we provide a summary of our liquidity, profitability and market considerations going forward. For the 9 months of '25, our operating cash flow was $57 million. Our profitability margin remains wide as market rates are favorable and significantly higher than our breakeven levels. In Q3 '25, our average time charter equivalent per fleet voyage day was close to $23,000 for tankers and about $12,000 for drybulk fleet. In terms of market considerations, it still remains crucial how the current geopolitical tensions will unravel and if new geopolitical tension will arise such as the recent friction between U.S. and Venezuela. U.S. trade war seems to have stalled for now, but the question remains how it will play out in the long run. Rates for both tankers and drybulk seem strong thus the prospect for the fourth quarter is favorable. In Slide 11, we summarize some key remarks around the strategy going forward. We base our strong operating performance and successful commercial management of our highly quality build ships. Going forward, we strive to expand further, while also address our current capital commitments and working capital needs. At this stage, our CEO, Mr. Harry Vafias, will summarize our concluding remarks for the period examined. Harry Vafias: The full integration of our recently delivered 7 drybulk ships, increasing our fleet to 19 ships and soon to 22 ships enhanced within Q3 '25, our income and profitability stemming from core operations. Market rates for both tanker and drybulk markets are solid, and this seems likely to hold in the upcoming quarters. With our debt-free balance sheet and our cash base that is currently $172 million, and our focus on quality build Japanese and Korean build ships, we aim for an even better performance in the fourth quarter of 2025. We'd like to thank you all for joining us at our call today and for your interest and trust in our company, and we look forward to having you again with us at our next call for our Q4 '25 results. Thank you.

AI Summary

First 500 words from the call

Operator: Good day, and thank you for standing by. Welcome to the Q3 2025 Imperial Petroleum Results Conference Call and Webcast. [Operator Instructions] Please note that today's conference is being recorded. I would now like to turn the conference over to your speaker, Mr. Harry Vafias, CEO of Imperial Petroleum. Please go ahead, sir. Harry Vafias: Good morning, everyone, and thank you for joining us for our third quarter 9 months 2025 Conference Call. I'm Harry Vafias, the CEO of Imperial Petroleum. And joining us today is Ms. Sakellari, who will be discussing our financial performance. Before we commence our

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