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Martin Midstream Partners L.P. (MMLP)

Q2 2023 Earnings Call· Thu, Jul 20, 2023

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Transcript

Operator

Operator

Good morning. My name is Audrey, and I will be your conference operator today. At this time, I would like to welcome everyone to the MMLP Q2 Earnings Call. Today's conference is being recorded. All lines have been placed on mute to prevent any background noise. After the speakers' remarks there will be a question-and-answer session. [Operator Instructions]. At this time, I would like to turn the conference over to Sharon Taylor, Chief Financial Officer. Please go ahead.

Sharon Taylor

Analyst

Thank you, operator, and good morning to everyone who has joined the call. With me today are Bob Bondurant, CEO; David Cannon, Controller; and Danny Cavin, Director of FP&A. I'll begin with our cautionary statements. During this call, management may be making forward-looking statements as defined by the SEC. These statements are based upon our current beliefs as well as assumptions and information currently available to us. Please refer to our press release issued yesterday afternoon as well as our latest filings with the SEC for a list of factors that could impact the future performance of Martin and cause our actual results to differ from our expectations. We will discuss non-GAAP financial measures on today's call, such as adjusted EBITDA, distributable cash flow and free cash flow. In addition, we will refer to adjusted EBITDA after giving effect to the exit of the butane optimization business. You will find a reconciliation of these non-GAAP measures to their nearest GAAP measures in our earnings press release posted on our website. Now I will turn the call over to Bob to discuss second quarter results by segment.

Bob Bondurant

Analyst

Thanks, Sharon. Before I speak to the performance of our continuing operations, I want to briefly discuss the final liquidation and exit of our butane optimization business. We sold the remaining butane inventory in stores during the month of April, using the proceeds to pay down our revolving line of credit. However, because butane prices continued to fall during the month of April, we realized negative EBITDA of 6.3 million in the second quarter. And for the 6 months, we had negative EBITDA in butane of 15.1 million. Finally, for the trailing 12 months, we had negative EBITDA in butane optimization of 27.4 million. These losses are not included in our bank leverage debt as we have exited the butane optimization business. However, we will continue to operate our underground NGL storage facility in North Louisiana, which has both truck and rail access, utilizing a fee-based volume-driven business model. The result of our underground storage facility are included in the terminalling and storage segment. I would now like to discuss the performance of our ongoing operations, comparing the actual results of the second quarter to our second quarter guidance. Excluding the losses of the butane optimization business, we had adjusted EBITDA of 31.8 million compared to our second quarter adjusted EBITDA guidance of $32.2 million, a difference of 1%. For the trailing 12 months, excluding the results of the butane optimization business, we had adjusted EBITDA of 111.3 million through the second quarter of 2023. For the second quarter, our largest cash flow generator was our transportation segment, which had adjusted EBITDA of 12.1 million compared to guidance of 11.6 million. Within this segment, our land transportation business had adjusted EBITDA of 8.7 million compared to guidance of 8.8 million. Our actual line haul revenue was approximately 1.2 million less…

Sharon Taylor

Analyst

Thank you, Bob. As always, I'll begin with our balance sheet metrics and liquidity. Then I'll discuss 2023 guidance revisions within our 4 operating segments. At June 30, 2023, the total of our long-term debt outstanding was $460.5 million, which is a reduction of $39.5 million from the end of last quarter. The outstanding debt consisted of $60.5 million drawn on our $175 million revolver that matures in 2027 and $400 million of senior secured second lien notes due 2028. At June 30 per the credit agreement, lender commitments to the revolver stepped down from 200 million to 175 million. However, our liquidity increased from approximately 40 million at March 31 to approximately 56 million at June 30, as we were able to reduce not only our credit facility borrowings but also our outstanding letters of credit that were issued to support the butane optimization business. By using the proceeds from the liquidation of our butane inventory, to significantly reduce borrowings under our revolver, we reduced total bank compliant leverage to 4.14x at the end of the second quarter compared to 4.25x at the end of the first quarter. Further, on June 30, our first lien leverage ratio was 0.54x, our interest coverage ratio was 2.16x, and the partnership was in compliance with all covenants, banking or otherwise at the end of the quarter. Capital expenditures for the quarter were a total of 9.8 million, of which 7.9 million was maintenance CapEx and 1.9 million was growth CapEx. Maintenance CapEx was forecasted to be 11.9 million for the quarter, a difference of 4 million and growth was forecasted to be 5.3 million, a difference of 3.3 million. And while year-to-date, we are below our forecasted capital expenditure totals, we still intend to complete maintenance CapEx of 26.6 million and growth…

Operator

Operator

Thank you. [Operator Instructions] And we'll take our first question from Selman Akyol at Stifel.

Selman Akyol

Analyst

So I guess first thing, I just want to start with is just on the transportation. And I know you guys talked about higher rates, but you also talked about, I think increased mileage and higher production at the refineries, which also drove. So can you maybe discuss just the outlooks going forward?

Bob Bondurant

Analyst

Yes. I'll hit both pieces. On the truck transportation side, we've done a really good job of keeping rates strong. The sulfur production rates, which is a big piece of our business in the area primarily on the Gulf Coast, we had forecasted kind of more than the 3,000 tons per day of production. It's been averaging more than the 3,500 tons a day production and we see that going forward. We see a lot of sulfur production both from utilization in the refineries and also I think their crude slates that they're running. We are seeing a little bit of softness on the chemical side and on the lubricant as well, which we've been talking about in our prepared remarks related to the ag business. So those are kind of netting out on the trucking side. So we feel good about our guidance going forward there. On the barging side, rates are up significantly, especially from where they were a year ago. They're just a tightness in supply of units on the inland barge side, refinery utilization is high. We're seeing our average rate in the second quarter was probably 9,400, 9,500 a day with some dirty barges now getting over 10,000 a day. And as we roll over contracts, we see upward pressure on those rates. So that's the big piece of why we raised our marine guidance. Also in the first half of the year, we had several barges that go in for dry docks. We only have one unit in the back half of the year that goes in for dry dock. So utilization will also be a lot higher in the back half of the year compared to the first half of the year.

Selman Akyol

Analyst

In relationship to contracting on the barges, are you getting any extension in time or duration?

Sharon Taylor

Analyst

Yes. We now have some barges that are actually off the spot market [indiscernible] term. There's still mostly 3 to 6 months term Selman, but we are starting to see folks wanting to lock up contracts for a longer period of time.

Selman Akyol

Analyst

Got it. And I guess, longer period of time at higher rates, right?

Sharon Taylor

Analyst

Yes, sir.

Bob Bondurant

Analyst

Yes. And when we see the market doing that, we believe they see it continuing to rise, so they want to lock it up.

Selman Akyol

Analyst

Got it. And then do you have a heavy dry-docking schedule for 2024 as we look forward?

Bob Bondurant

Analyst

No. This was a heavy year for us. It's going to be less next year. I can't [indiscernible], but I know it's significantly less next year compared to this year.

Selman Akyol

Analyst

Awesome. And then, on the transportation side, you had picked up a good chunk of business over in Florida, and I was just wondering how that was going. I presume you've seen that slow, but just checking.

Bob Bondurant

Analyst

Yes. That's levered around the fertilizer business down there. However, that has been good. It's actually continuing to improve. We hold a lot of different products in addition to sulfuric acid. There's a lot of, what we call pond water down there that has to move around. And as Florida gets rains and water fills up these pits, it's a constant movement of pond water. So it's kind of not intuitive that something exposed to the fertilizer business, you're doing really well. But because of that kind of unique nature, we're still very strong in Central Florida.

Selman Akyol

Analyst

Appreciate that. And then remind us on the ELSA project, total capital to be invested and what kind of returns are you looking for?

Bob Bondurant

Analyst

Yes. So the investment in the oleum tower over the course of the remainder of this year and maybe a little into early next year, but primarily this year is roughly $13.5 million. And then next year, when the project ELSA comes online into the JV, we'll invest $6.5 million of cash into the JV. So net-net, you have $20 million invested. We've been telling the market kind of the midpoint of the range of EBITDA is about -- between the two pieces is about $6 million.

Selman Akyol

Analyst

Got it. And don't mean to split hairs here, but when you talk about it coming, the tower comes online in the first quarter. And you think about them making an additional investment into the JV. Should we think of that JV then ramping up pretty quickly and so you'll get a return on that additional $6 million starting in the second quarter or should we think of it that it's going to be more like in the third or the fourth quarter?

Bob Bondurant

Analyst

I would move it towards the back half of the year. The distributions from the JV, I would say the contract related to the oleum, we're providing the JV would start in the second quarter.

Selman Akyol

Analyst

Got it.

Bob Bondurant

Analyst

Sharon?

Sharon Taylor

Analyst

Yes. And then distributions from the JV towards the back -- the third quarter.

Selman Akyol

Analyst

Got it. Okay. That's very helpful. Thank you. And then, in terms of the agriculture market, and I know you guys marked it down for Q3 and the rest of the year. But I guess, is it really waiting until next year to see the improvement, is that the way we should be thinking about it?

Bob Bondurant

Analyst

I think so. Now what could happen is in the fourth quarter, you do sometimes see if farmers believe the prices are going to go up, they'll start pulling in the fourth quarter and advance that price. So you could maybe see some volume in the fourth quarter, but that's hard to predict at this point in time. But on a more macro level, with the Russia doing their thing in Odessa here the last few days, corn price, Beaumont, Odessa in that port there. Corn prices are up about 10% in the last 3 or 4 days. So I believe the farmer demand provided weather cooperates will be really strong next year.

Operator

Operator

[Operator Instructions]. And we'll go to Patrick Fitzgerald at Baird.

Patrick Fitzgerald

Analyst

I just have just a couple of cash flow questions. What is now that you're through the butane inventory, what does working capital look like from here?

Sharon Taylor

Analyst

I do not have that number in front of me, right at this moment, Patrick, I apologize for that. As you know, it's been changing for us since we've been exiting the butane optimization business. So what I would say historically is not what I would be looking at the moment.

Bob Bondurant

Analyst

Keep asking your question, I'll do a little research here. Keep asking questions.

Patrick Fitzgerald

Analyst

And then I just kind of wanted to ask a bigger picture question. So with your CapEx, with your guidance, which is very helpful, in terms of EBITDA and your CapEx guidance, in your cash interest now, you'll be on a run rate to generate about, I don't know, $15 million of free cash flow annually, which is relative to your market cap, not a small amount. So what's the plan going forward? You're close to your 4x leverage target for the end of the year. Are you just going to keep paying down the revolver and take leverage lower or is there something more strategic you can do to kind of get your equity moving?

Sharon Taylor

Analyst

So per the covenants of our credit facility and our notes, until we reach 3.75x leverage, we don't have the ability to increase our distributions. There's some capital constraints that we will have. So we will continue to use that free cash flow to get that leverage number down below 3.75x. And based on our current forecast, we get there towards the back end of next year.

Patrick Fitzgerald

Analyst

And then I guess your view is, you would just turn the distributions on at that point?

Sharon Taylor

Analyst

Well, we'll look at where we are, what type of growth projects we might have, we should be past the capital required for the ELSA facility at that time, but we still have opportunities down in the Beaumont, Neches area with some of our assets down there in the property. So we'll look at what's the best use of that capital. Do we have anything right now that we're planning on spending that capital on as far as growth projects? No, nothing outside of ELSA. But I hate to say, yes, our entire focus will be on increasing the distributions. Of course, that will be a big one that we -- I just don't want to put us in a box. But yes, that is when you look at the priorities, doing something to enhance our unit price and provide value for our unitholders is certainly number one on our minds. And to get back to your working capital number, the range right now is between $45 million and $50 million over the next 4 quarters.

Operator

Operator

And there are no further questions at this time. I would like to turn the call back over to Bob Bondurant for closing remarks.

Bob Bondurant

Analyst

Thank you, Audrey. In summary, we've had a good start to 2023. Our diversified refinery services business model has served us well, and we anticipate meeting our full year adjusted EBITDA guidance even in the face of headwinds in a couple of our businesses. By exiting the butane optimization business, we expect our future earnings to be less volatile and the reduction of working capital needs to be significant. Looking to the future, we believe we have a significant opportunity to improve the success of our partnership with the DSM Semichem joint venture that is scheduled for start-up at the end of the first quarter of next year. And we intend to continue to strengthen the balance sheet by paying down debt and lowering our leverage to below 3.75x. Thanks to everyone who joined the call. I look forward to speaking with you again next quarter.

Operator

Operator

And this concludes today's conference call. Thank you for your participation. You may now disconnect.