William Restrepo
Analyst · Barclays
Thank you, Tony, and good morning, everyone. Fourth quarter financial results surpassed our expectations with EBITDA for all segments increasing sequentially. In the US, we managed to maintain our Lower 48 daily revenue at the strong level we achieved in the third quarter, while our operational expenses decreased meaningfully, following measures to reduce our field overhead. Consequently, our daily margins improved materially rather than decreasing as we had anticipated. International drilling benefited from increased rig count in Colombia and Saudi Arabia, together with disciplined cost control across geographies. Drilling Solutions delivered strong results well above our expectations, bolstered by year end sales of casing running tools as well as robust deployments of our software and data offerings. For Rig Technologies, we believe an upgrade and recertification cycle is developing as global rig count increases. The segment also overdelivered with strong year end shipments of rig components together with higher than expected equipment rentals and sales of spare parts. In addition, the margin mix of our revenue contributed favorably to the healthy fourth quarter result for the segment. We expect the first quarter drilling activity in the Lower 48 markets to improve over fourth quarter levels, though at somewhat lower average pricing. We also anticipate that the international growth we have experienced should continue throughout 2024. Although we are forecasting positive trends for our Drilling Solutions and Rig Technology to persist in the first quarter, we will miss the impact of the seasonal year end equipment sales. For the full year 2023, revenue from operations totaled $3 billion. This compares to $2.65 billion for 2022, a 13% improvement year-over-year. NDS and Rig Technologies led the way with both delivering 24% growth. Our drilling rig segments also grew significantly. Lower 48 improved by 15% while international increased by 12%. For the fourth quarter, revenue from operations was $726 million or 1% below the third, a slight decrease, reflecting a decline in US average rig count. This impact was partially offset by strong increases in Drilling Solutions as well as incremental rig count in Colombia and Saudi Arabia. Revenue for our US Drilling segment at $266 million was down $11 million or 4%. This decrease reflected a 3.4 rig reduction in our lower hole rig count. Daily revenue of $35,800 was up slightly versus the third quarter. Revenue from our International segment of $343 million remained essentially in line with the prior quarter. In Saudi Arabia, we successfully deployed the fifth newbuild rig and improved operating efficiency. In addition, two rigs restarted operations in Colombia. Revenue from this incremental activity was offset by a reduction in low margin reimbursable in certain geographies. Revenue from Nabors Drilling Solutions grew sequentially by $4.2 million, an increase of 6%. Despite lower rig count in the Lower 48, NDS demonstrated resilience by continuing to add third party revenue and expanding expresses in international markets. Compared to the third quarter, NDS increased Lower 48 third party revenue by 8% and international revenue improved by 13%. Rig Technologies revenue decreased by $2.2 million or 3.5%, primarily due to lower capital equipment sales through the Nabors fleet. Nonetheless, we experienced a material increase in third party high margin rig component, rental and spare part sales. Full year 2023 EBITDA reached $915 million, increasing by 29% from $709 million in 2022. This growth was spread across all of our segments. The improvement was primarily driven by significant daily margin expansion in both our drilling businesses and rig count expansion in international markets. NDS and Rig Technologies also contributed meaningfully. Combined, these two businesses grew EBITDA by $43.6 million in 2023, a 38% improvement year-over-year. For the fourth quarter, total adjusted EBITDA was $230 million, $20 million higher than the third quarter and 9.6% improvement. All of our segments contributed to the growth. Despite decreased Lower 48 activity, US Drilling EBITDA increased by $1 million or 1% compared to the prior quarter. This improvement was driven by the M400 maintenance related downtime in the third quarter and higher daily margins in the Lower 48 market. Lower 48 drilling rate EBITDA decreased by $1.2 million or 1.2% sequentially. Average rig count of 70.3 declined by 4.6%. Average daily rig margin of 16,240 was almost $400 higher than the prior quarter on a moderate increase in value revenue and a $300 per day reduction in operating expenses. The leading edge price environment continues to hold steady and our efforts to limit costs are proving effective. For the first quarter, we project our average daily rig gross margin at approximately $15,300. The expected sequential reduction reflects repricing of renewals as rigs roll to new contracts. During the fourth quarter, our rig count was 70.3 on average and we exited the quarter at 74 rigs. We anticipate a high level of churn during the first quarter. Consequently, despite an underlying favorable trend in activity, we expect rig count in the first quarter to average between 73 and 75 rigs. On a net basis, Alaska and the US offshore businesses performed better than we anticipated. In the fourth quarter, the combined EBITDA of these two operations was $18.7 million, an increase of $2.2 million. EBITDA rebounded following third quarter planned maintenance on our M400 rig in the Gulf of Mexico. The strong offshore results were partially offset by year end maintenance on two Alaska rigs. Combined EBITDA for Alaska and US offshore should increase between $1.5 million and $2 million in the first quarter, driven by a rebound in Alaska activity and partly offset by a one rig drop offshore. International EBITDA increased by $9.4 million and 9.7% to $105.5 million. Average rig count and average daily gross margin improved, largely driven by the additional three rigs deployed as well as by operating expense reductions and improved operational performance in Saudi Arabia. For the quarter, average rig count increased by 2.4 to 79.6 rig. Average daily gross margin came in at $16,650, up almost 900 from the third quarter. We project international average rig count in the first quarter to increase by approximately two rigs, driven by new build start-ups in Saudi Arabia and the commencement of our contract awards in Algeria. For average daily gross margins, we are targeting between $16,100 and $16,300. The anticipated sequential decrease as compared to the fourth quarter reflects potentially higher start-up costs for several rigs during the first quarter. Drilling Solutions’ adjusted EBITDA grew by 13.4% to $34.5 million in the fourth quarter. Gross margin for NDS was 52.4%, up from 51.2%. We continue to see increased market penetration, particularly in third party rigs and in international markets. Internationally, NDS grew EBITDA by almost 10% sequentially. In the US, casing running and performance software drove robust growth. We expect first quarter EBITDA for drilling solutions to come in between $30 million and $31 million, primarily driven by the absence of seasonally high equipment sales. NDS daily gross margin for the Lower 48 was $3,912, up 15% from the prior quarter. Our combined drilling rig and solutions daily gross margin reached $20,151, a 4.7% improvement. It is worth highlighting the NDS growth year-on-year. Comparing to full year 2022, NDS EBITDA increased by over 30%. NDS EBITDA contribution to Nabors as a whole also increased, while gross profit margin widened. Rig Technologies generated EBITDA of $8.8 million, a 22% increase versus the third quarter. This growth was primarily related to high margin year end capital equipment shipments, rentals and spare part sales. I would also like to point out that our energy transition business has started to contribute meaningfully to our Rig Technologies’ EBITDA. We expect Rig Technologies’ EBITDA in the first quarter of $5 million to $6 million. Now turning to liquidity and cash generation. Overall, our 2023 EBITDA was historically strong. It is true, however, that last year, we had a significant EBITDA showfall in our US segment, driven by the market. And in Saudi Arabia, we delayed newbuild deployment. Notwithstanding these shortfalls totaling nearly $200 million in EBITDA, we still generated $111 million in free cash flow. Other factors did affect our free cash flow in 2023. Our CapEx for the year at $553 million was higher than we had forecasted by about $70 million, most of the variance coming from Saudi Arabia. In addition, we incurred capital expenditures from incremental international awards that required significant upfront investment spent well before the corresponding EBITDA generation. Also, we purchased our operating base in Vaca Muerta, Argentina, as our activity in that basin continues to expand. Interest expense was also higher than we planned with rates increasing sharply during the year. Finally, working capital rather than being a tailwind, actually increased in the second half of the year as clients held on to their cash for longer, likely driven by the higher interest rate environment. In terms of capital structure, we remain busy during 2023, addressing our debt maturity profile. During the year, we completed capital market transactions for a total of $900 million. Late in 2023, Nabors issued $650 million of senior priority guaranteed notes due in 2030. During January of this year, we retired $630 million of our near term debt maturities, mainly our 2024 convertible debt and our 2025 senior unsecured notes. These transactions extend our next debt maturity into 2026. Free cash flow totaled $52 million for the fourth quarter. This result includes an increase in capital expenditures versus our projection and working capital headwinds. CapEx of $124.5 million in the fourth quarter fell by $32 million below the level of the preceding quarter, but was significantly higher than our target mainly in Saudi Arabia. This amount included investments for the SANAD newbuild program of $42.9 million. For the first quarter of 2024, we expect capital expenditures of approximately $170 million to $180 million, including $50 million for SANAD newbuild. This should be the high water quarterly mark for the year. We will refrain on providing annual free cash flow and CapEx guidance at this point. We're currently considering a total of eight additional international tenders. In conclusion, the fourth quarter had many positives. First, our EBITDA rebounded close to the levels of the first half and was significantly above our expectations. Second, the Lower 48 was higher than we expected and very strong price and cost performance. We are seeing increasing rig count in that market with stability in leading edge pricing. Third, international rig count increased and margins were also significantly stronger than expected, almost $900 over the prior quarter. Fourth, NDS was strong and international and third party sales with our gross margin profitability expanding. Fifth, Rig Technologies also grew with signs that an upgrade rectification cycle is commencing and with encouraging performance from our IT business. And finally, I can say that the future bodes well with double-digit international revenue growth expected in 2024 and a base being built for further Lower 48 recovery. This improved drilling environment and further progress on our market penetration strategies should also continue to drive improved results for Drilling Solutions and Rig Technologies. Although at this point, we will not provide annual guidance, we expect Lower 48 rig count to recover throughout the year from the 2023 quarterly average. Our full year 2024 average should end up somewhere close to our average for the full year 2023. International average rig count should increase by somewhere between seven and 10 rigs, depending on timing of deployments. We also expect Drilling Solutions and Rig Technologies to increase significantly as compared to 2023. And during 2024, we expect to deliver a significant sequential increase in free cash flow. And of course, we are planning to allocate this cash generation towards reducing our net debt. With that, I will turn the call back to Tony for his concluding remarks.