John Hadjipateras
Analyst · Evercore ISI. Please proceed with your questions
Thanks John. My comments today will focus on our financial position and results, and our liquidity, as well as some commentary on the self-tender offer announced today. At December 31, 2020, we had $133.6 million of free cash. As of Friday, January 29, our cash balance stood at $149.3 million. The increase since year-end is reflected in the strong chartering results that we are currently seeing. Turning briefly to the tender. At the tender price of $13.50 per share and based on the 49.9 million shares outstanding - currently outstanding, we would be repurchasing 7.4 million shares or about 14.8% of the shares currently outstanding. Based on charters booked and our expected expenditures, we currently anticipate that we will generate roughly $50 million to $60 million of free cash flow this quarter, including the cash already generated in January. Thus, even after accounting for the $100 million buyback, we would maintain a cash balance that is consistent with our approach to balance sheet management without any borrowings. In addition, the buyback is accretive to shareholders equity per share, a key valuation metric for the investment community. Overall, we view this transaction as an efficient and a highly accretive way to return capital to our shareholders. Further details on the mechanics and logistics will be available later today via the SEC website. For the discussion of our third-quarter results, you may also find it useful to refer to the investor highlight slides posted this morning on our website. Turning to our third quarter chartering results, we achieved total utilization of 96.2% for the quarter, the daily TCE, that's Time Charter Equivalent revenue over operating days as both those terms are defined in our filings of $42,298, yielding utilization adjusted TCE that's TCE revenue per available day of about $40,690. This quarter saw steady month-over-month improvements in rates and utilization. Spot TCE per available day, which reflects our portion of the net profits of the Helios Pool for the quarter was about $41,754. Overall, the Helios Pool reported a spot TCE, including TCAs - including COAs of approximately $45,237 per available day. Our daily OpEx for the quarter was $9,189, excluding amounts expense for drydockings, it was $9,487 including those costs. Sequentially, OpEx was down, reflecting overall strong cost containment. Our time charter-in expense remained relatively stable at $4.4 million. As a reminder, we do not include time charter-in costs in our vessel operating expenses. Total G&A for the quarter was $5.5 million. In cash G&A, i.e., G&A excluding non-cash comp expense was about $5 million, which was down about 10% from the preceding quarter. We continue to look for efficiencies in our cost structure. Our reported adjusted EBITDA for the quarter was $60.1 million. Similar to our chartering results, we saw steady month-over-month increases in EBITDA this quarter. As a reminder, we look at cash interest expense on our debt as the sum of the line items, interest expense, excluding deferred financing fees and other loan expenses, and realized gain loss on interest rate swap derivatives. On that basis, total cash interest expense for the quarter was $6 million, representing a $900,000 reduction from last quarter. As I mentioned, last quarter, we did blend and extend our $200 million notional swap, which resulted in our extending its maturity by three years to 2025 and reducing the fixed interest rate from 1.933% to 1.091%. We also did a similar transaction on our $50 million swap, which resulted in a decrease in rate from just over 2% to 1.145%. The swap remains at $50 million notional until March 2022, at which point it will begin to amortize. So a big part of the reduction that we witnessed was due to those favorable blend-and-extend transactions in the swaps. Overall, we continue to benefit from our hedging policy and the favorable pricing of our Japanese financing, leaving us with a current interest cost, fixed hedged, and a small floating piece of 3.71%. As a reporting matter, our realized and unrealized gain loss on derivatives also include the effect of our FFA portfolio. The calculation of EBITDA in our filings, however, only adds back the interest on the realized gain loss, not the FFA piece. John will touch on our drydocking program, but our remaining drydocking commitments are quite manageable from a financial perspective. Although, we currently hold a roughly 70% economic interest in Helios, we do not consolidate its P&L or balance sheet accounts, which has the effect of understating our cash and working capital. Thus, we believe it is useful to provide some additional insight in order to give a more complete picture of our financial condition. As of Monday, February 1, the pool had roughly $45.7 million of cash on hand. We feel that our liquidity and capital structure has positioned us well for any rate environment, and we believe that this allows our company to make capital allocation, such as the one announced this morning, from a position of strength. Our Board's decision to begin a $100 million self-tender underscores its commitment to shareholder value creation and aggressively returning cash to shareholders when appropriate. Assuming successful completion of this tender offer, we will have repurchased roughly 16.3 million shares, representing over 28% of the shares outstanding following our IPO in 2014. We continue to remain interested in accretive growth opportunities that meet our risk-reward criteria as well. We will continue to be prudent in deploying cash, but our financial position allows us to act quickly in meaningful opportunities as they may arise. With that, I'll pass it over to Tim Hansen.