William Monteleone
Analyst · Tudor, Pickering and Holt. Please go ahead
Thank you, Jim. Third quarter adjusted EBITDA and adjusted earnings were $214 million and $172 million or $2.88 per fully diluted share. We generated record quarterly cash flow from operations of $341 million, driven by normalizing working capital in combination with strong earnings. Logistics segment adjusted EBITDA contribution was $22 million, up sequentially from the second quarter by approximately $1 million. Refining segment adjusted EBITDA was $188 million compared to $228 million in the second quarter. Focusing on Hawaii first. The third quarter, Singapore 3.1.2 declined approximately $10 per barrel to $26.43. Feedstocks costs were approximately $7.80 premium to Brent. Combining 3.1.2 and feedstocks indexes, the overall margin environment compressed about $14 per barrel versus the second quarter. However, we are able to maintain a relatively flat adjusted gross margin of $19 per barrel in both quarters. Product crack hedging was a modest cost in the third quarter compared to the $51 million second quarter impact. Declining prices also drove improved capture on our lag priced contracts. On a percentage basis, adjusted gross margin improved to approximately 104% of the combined market indicators. October market conditions remained strong with the 3.1.2 averaging over $23 per barrel. We anticipate fourth quarter landed crude differentials will be between $8.50 and $9 per barrel versus ICE Brent, reflecting steep backwardation and increasing freight costs. We have continued our crack hedging framework and currently have approximately 25% to 30% of our Q4 sales hedged at levels consistent with current market conditions. As Richard referenced, we have some planned maintenance activities that we expect to reduce finished gasoline production by approximately 500,000 barrels during the quarter. In Washington, market conditions declined by approximately $13 per barrel, but remained seasonally strong at $33. Much like Hawaii, despite this nearly $13 per barrel drop in the index, we are able to maintain roughly flat adjusted gross margins at approximately $20 per barrel. Improving capture rates were largely driven by increased sales, strong VGO market conditions, wider inland crude discounts relative to ANS and improving asphalt netbacks in a declining price environment. Backwardation remains at partial offset to these improvements. Looking forward, October has been volatile with regional refining outages driving an average PNW 5-2-2-1 of approximately $41 per barrel. WCS differentials continue to widen, providing additional feedstock benefits compared to ANS. Wyoming market conditions declined approximately $9 per barrel compared to the second quarter of $46 per barrel. Adjusted gross margin declined approximately $19 per barrel, which includes approximately $14.6 million FIFO expense or $8.70 per barrel. Wyoming market conditions remained strong with the October 3.2.1 averaging $51 per barrel. Laramie generated hedge adjusted EBITDAX of $26 million, unhedged adjusted EBITDAX of $40 million and net income, excluding unrealized derivatives of $17 million for the third quarter. Capital expenditures totaled approximately $18 million, and exit production as of September 30 was 104 million cubic feet a day equivalent. During the quarter, net debt improved by $14 million, down to $50 million. Shifting back to the Par Pacific cash flow statement. Par Pacific's third quarter cash flow from operations, excluding turnaround funding, was $341 million. Working capital, excluding turnarounds, reversed as expected with an inflow of $44 million. The largest driver to the working capital inflow were normalizing AR balances relative to activity levels and reduced collateral posting to support commercial and hedging activities. Capital expenditures totaled $9 million. During the quarter, we reduced our gross debt by approximately $14 million including open market repurchases totaling approximately $10 million face value. Gross debt sits at $519 million, and our cash position grew by approximately $220 million and leaves us well capitalized to complete the recently announced Billings transaction. Our quarter end liquidity totaled $495 million, made up of $409 million in cash and $86 million in availability. With the strong market backdrop, we expect to continue building liquidity in anticipation of funding the Billings acquisition in 2023. As previously messaged, we are revising our debt target to between $500 million to $600 million of gross term debt based on incorporating the Billings Logistics contribution into our forward thinking. This concludes our prepared remarks. Operator, I'll turn it back to you for Q&A.