Chris Wright
Analyst · Barclays. Please go ahead
Good morning, everyone, and thank you for joining us for our fourth quarter and full year 2022 operational and financial results. Liberty achieved outstanding returns in 2022, with the highest earnings per share in company history. Full year adjusted pretax return on capital employed, ROCE and cash return on capital invested, CROCI, were each at 31% and both accelerated as the year progressed. These results demonstrate the enhanced earnings power of our diversified platform and technology portfolio as well as our profitability potential over the longer duration cycle ahead. 2022 revenue grew to $4.1 billion, a 68% increase over the prior year. Net income was $400 million or $2.11 fully diluted earnings per share. Adjusted EBITDA increased to $860 million. Fourth quarter revenue of $1.2 billion increased 3% sequentially, and adjusted EBITDA grew 7% sequentially to $295 million as continued momentum from strong execution in the third quarter and strengthening pricing more than offset weather and holiday seasonality. Michael will review our financial results in greater depth. But suffice it to say, we are pleased with the tremendous improvement we saw in each successive quarter throughout 2022. Our strong conviction in the outlook and growing free cash flow led us to launch and expand a sector-leading return of capital strategy in 2022. We paid our first quarterly cash dividend since the pandemic during the fourth quarter and earlier this week, we upsized our July 2022 share repurchase program from $250 million to $500 million. In the second half of 2022, we returned a combined $134 million in share repurchases and dividend payments to shareholders. We retired 4.4% of our outstanding shares since last July, and we now have $375 million remaining in our authorization. We are focused on the opportunistic execution of our buyback strategy and the speed at which we execute on our buyback authorization will be driven by the relative dislocation in our stock price relative to what we believe the intrinsic value of the stock to be. Our 2022 financial performance illustrated the value created from our actions over the pandemic years, including transformative transactions, technology innovation and investment in the extraordinary talent at Liberty for future success. Together, the Liberty team achieved new records whether measured by revenue, pump hours per fleet, frac stages or tons of sand pumped, all of which were delivered while navigating tight supply and labor markets. We always strive to raise the bar of elite service quality and performance in the industry. Today, dependability and efficiency are critical to our customers who contend with meeting development plans in a tight frac market and volatile commodity price environment. The frac market is currently tight in all shale basins. In any given year, the near-term fundamental picture can ebb and flow. And today, natural gas markets are in focus, an increase in natural gas storage levels from a rise in domestic production, moderate winter weather so far and lower LNG export growth are weighing on gas prices. To-date, there has not been any significant reduction in activity in the natural gas regions despite a significant drop in gas prices. We do expect to see some industry pullback in response to gas prices. And if necessary, Liberty would move any spare capacity to oilier areas where demand for our services significantly outstrips our current supply. This issue is not a significant concern for Liberty. While markets are preparing for the most widely anticipated recession in nearly 50 years, tumult in global oil supply, coupled with today's rather low spare global production capacity implies strong need for North American barrels in the coming years. Today's low spare production capacity is the inevitable result from years of underinvestment in upstream oil and gas production. The gradual reopening of China and rising global travel are expected to drive incremental demand for oil, even it balanced against slowing economic activity. Oil supply, on the other hand, growth remains very challenged as the release of U.S. strategic petroleum reserves subsides. The impact of the Russian oil products export embargo hits next month and reduced investment across the Russian industry gradually impacts production. The fundamental outlook for North American hydrocarbons is the healthiest Liberty has seen in our 12-year history. Against this strong backdrop, we expect many possible bumps in the road like softening in natural gas activity and elevated recession risk. However, the multiyear outlook for North American activity is robust. Currently, our customers and competitors are investing with discipline, keeping capacity flat to only very modest growth. For years, E&P operators, oil and gas alike have invested in expanding metal inventory, understanding the geology and resource quality, optimizing drilling and completion designs and assembling their teams to execute on development plans. Their hard work is now paying off with high rates of return, particularly in oil, even as breakeven prices have increased from extreme pandemic lows. The majors are redirecting capital spending to the attractive risk reward opportunities in North America. Independents continue their robust shale programs at a minimum to offset natural production declines. As North American oil and gas portion reaches new heights. There is a rising level of frac activity simply required to keep our customers' production flat. Two factors summarized today's frac market, full utilization of existing frac capacity and strong demand for gas-powered fleets that significantly reduced fuel costs natural gas is much cheaper than diesel, while driving down frac fleet emissions. This transition to natural gas-powered fleets is happening at a measured pace, roughly aligned with the attrition of the industry's older generation diesel frac capacity. There is also a wide variety of performance specs, quality of these next-generation fleets, and we are investing to be the technical leader. When the shale revolution expanded to include oil basins as well as gas basins, roughly a dozen years ago, there was a building frenzy of new frac fleets, the overhang of these excess fleets took many years to overcome. Today, that overhang is gone, and all the large players in frac are investing with discipline. Today, frac fleet demand sufficient to keep production roughly flat or drive only very modest growth requires all existing frac capacity. Tighter labor markets and supply chain challenges are making it hard for the smaller players and lower quality players to keep their existing fleets running and deliver an acceptable quality of service. Aging frac pumps and limitations to maintenance supply chains promote the attrition of older equipment across the completion market. Equipment are treated in recent years has largely been scrapped or sold for industrial applications in international markets, and we see these trends continuing for the foreseeable future as gas-powered technologies take hold. Hence, we view the risk of surging frac fleet capacity supply crashing service prices as relatively low. Of course, we closely monitor frac market conditions and would adjust our behavior if clouds appear on the horizon. Today's tight frac market creates a sense of urgency among E&P operators to align with top-tier partners for both differential long-term technology and the outstanding service quality required to deliver on their production goals. Over the past few years, Liberty's team has rapidly innovated to develop the most technically advantaged frac fleet with digiFrac and 2022 marks the first commercial deployment of these game-changing pumps. digiFrac sets the bar for combining the lowest emission fleets in the market with superior design, of performance, reliability and cost efficiency. We are currently undergoing a phased deployment of our first fleet as the modularity of both our pumps and high thermal efficiency power production allows us to commission the fleet on a pump-by-pump basis while maintaining continuity of operations for our customers. digiFrac pumps are fully compatible with our existing conventional and dual fuel pumps as they all share our proprietary control software, allowing optimization of pump operations across the fleet. Gas-powered pumps are a focus of our innovation efforts as we look to develop technologies that are beyond the scope of what the industry offers today. Next week, we plan to unveil the world's first natural gas hybrid frac pump, part of our digi platform at the SPE frac Conference in Houston. This technology will have an even lower emissions profile than any electric frac fleet technology available today. Together with our existing fleet, our suite of pump and power technologies will enable fit-for-purpose customizable solutions. With the breadth of equipment, we will be able to pair digiFrac with dual fuel technologies to optimize gas consumption under a variety of circumstances. Customers will also be able to leverage a combination of available grid power and Liberty's generators to power fleet and consume any type of gas, including field gas, CNG or LNG. This suite of new technology developments will allow customers to have an optimized solution to match their needs. All will include a fully electric backside, proprietary quiet fleet technology and the lowest possible emissions footprint. We see a multiyear cycle favoring service companies that offer differential technologies, fortifying strong customer engagement and competitive advantages. We enter 2023 with strong competitive advantages that will enable further profitability expansion, including efficiency gains. 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