Ira Birns
Analyst · Bank of America
Thank you, Mike, and happy birthday. Before I review our second quarter results, please note that the following figures exclude the impact of nonoperational items highlighted in our earnings release. These items principally include acquisition-related expenses and integration costs related to the Flyers Energy acquisition, which in aggregate were $1.4 million after tax in the second quarter. You could find the breakdown of the nonoperational items on our website and on the last slide of today's webcast presentation. So I'm not sure I could think of a quarter historically, which better demonstrated the resiliency of our business and the value of the diversity of our business model in this past quarter. Simply put, we delivered solid results even though our aviation business continues to be significantly impacted by severe market pricing backwardation throughout most of the second quarter given the principally contract-oriented nature of our aviation business. However, these volatile market pricing dynamics drove our spot-oriented marine business through record results and our land segment, which on the back of the recent Flyers Energy acquisition has become a larger and more ratable piece of our broader business delivered very strong results as well. Now let's continue with the financial highlights. Sustained high fuel prices and increasing volume drove consolidated revenue to a record $17.1 billion in the second quarter, up more than 140% year-over-year. And year-to-date, putting us just under the $31 billion in revenue that we posted for the full year in 2021. Volume again grew year-over-year across all our business segments, with commercial aviation passenger volumes recovering to approximately 85% of pre-pandemic levels. Adjusted second quarter net income and earnings per share were $26 million and $0.41 per share, respectively. Adjusted EBITDA for the second quarter was $76 million, an increase of 31% compared to the second quarter of 2021, again, despite the significant negative backwardation related impact to aviation results this past quarter. With regard to segment volumes, our aviation segment volume was 1.8 billion gallons in the second quarter, an increase of 33% -- sorry, Mike is getting a birthday call, an increase of 33% compared to the second quarter of 2021. The year-over-year volume increase resulted principally from the ongoing recovery in commercial passenger activity. Volume in our marine segment for the second quarter was 4.9 million metric tons, an increase of 6% year-over-year. As evidenced in the past and then again during this past quarter, during times of elevated fuel prices, constrained credit and rising interest rates, we become a more critically valued counterparty, which increases our success rate and contributes to profitable volume growth. Our land segment volume was 1.5 billion gallons or gallon equivalents during the second quarter. That's an increase of 19% year-over-year. The year-over-year volume increase was principally driven by volume associated with the Flyers acquisition. Consolidated gross profit for the second quarter was $253 million. That's up 37% year-over-year and represents the highest level of quarterly gross profit since the first quarter of 2020. In terms of aviation gross profit, the fundamentals of our aviation business remains strong with commercial passenger aviation continuing to recover from the pandemic and business in general aviation and cargo activities, all posting solid results versus last year. However, the segment's second quarter gross profit declined to $53 million, which is down 40% year-over-year, driven principally by the impact of severe market pricing backwardation and to a lesser extent, the exit from Afghanistan last year. As a reminder, we began experiencing the impact of severe pricing backwardation in the latter half of the first quarter. Again, this is when future forward prices began trading significantly below spot oil prices. During the second quarter, backwardation became increasingly severe and continued through much of the quarter. Our team has now successfully renegotiated sufficient customer contracts to minimize related risk going forward. While still backwardated, market conditions we experienced in the second quarter have now reverted much closer to historical norms. As we look ahead to the seasonally strong third quarter and with the backwardation issue generally behind us, we expect aviation gross profit to rebound significantly with results expected to be up year-over-year despite the discontinuation of the Afghanistan business last year. The Marine segment performed extraordinarily well, benefiting from record high bunker fuel prices at increased level of price volatility as well as the credit constrained marketplace. This resulted in quarterly gross profit of $78 million, an increase of 244% year-over-year and the highest level of marine quarterly gross profit in the history of the company. Kudos to the global marine team for such absolutely fantastic performance with solid results across all sectors and geographies. For the third quarter, we expect marine results to again materially exceed the prior year. However, with bunker fuel prices somewhat lower quarter-to-date, it is unlikely that the third quarter will be as strong as the second quarter. Our land segment delivered gross profit of $122 million in the second quarter. That's up 66% year-over-year, principally as a result of the recent Flyers acquisition, which continues to outperform our expectations. Additional highlights included strength in our U.K. operation, which delivered strong results in what has traditionally represented a seasonally low quarter for them and year-over-year growth in our commercial and industrial and retail activities. Our World Connect business also continues to perform well with a growing suite of products and services to support our customers' decarbonization efforts and with a robust pipeline of related investment opportunities, there are clearly more growth opportunities ahead in this space. Land gross profit should be up materially year-over-year in the third quarter, driven by the impact of Flyers, but also continued growth in our broader land business, but should experience a sequential seasonal decline principally driven by our U.K. operations. Core operating expenses were $197 million in the second quarter. That's up 5% sequentially, principally driven by higher operating expenses associated with increased business activity during the second quarter. We expect core operating expenses to be in the range of $198 million to $204 million in the third quarter. Bad debt expense in the second quarter was $2.6 million. We continue to manage our accounts receivable exceptionally well as volume growth and higher fuel prices have increased the size of our overall receivables portfolio to a record level. Adjusted EBITDA was $76 million in the second quarter, representing an increase of 31% year-over-year. Despite the aviation backwardation impact, this was our best quarterly performance since the pandemic began. Our interest expense was $25.9 million in the second quarter, significantly higher than recent run rates, principally related to rapidly rising interest rates as well as increased borrowings under our credit facility and increased activity under our trade finance facility, both associated with growing volumes and high fuel prices throughout the quarter. Based upon the current interest rate environment and funding requirements, we expect the level of interest expense to be in the range of $24 million to $27 million in the third quarter. Significant foreign exchange volatility during the second quarter also resulted in a few million dollars of foreign exchange losses during the quarter. Moving on to tax. So over time, we have been required to establish tax valuation allowances in jurisdictions where cumulative losses precluded our ability to utilize certain deferred tax assets. This was exacerbated by the pandemic. Coming out of the pandemic, as profitability has been increasing in many of the countries, which such allowances were necessary, it should enable us to reverse these allowances over time. In the second quarter, one such reversal drove our quarterly tax rate down significantly and was the principal contributing factor leading to a negative effective tax rate for the quarter. For the third quarter, our effective tax rate should return to a more normalized mid-20s level. And for the full year, inclusive of any allowance reversals, we expect our effective tax rate to be in the range of 17% to 20%, which is down from 26% in 2021. Despite a 14% sequential increase in average fuel prices and higher volumes during the quarter, we generated operating cash flow of $43 million. As a result of our efforts to expand the size of our banking facility while also increasing the capacity of our trade finance facilities, our liquidity position remains strong, supporting our growth initiatives for the second half of the year and beyond. We repurchased just over 1.5 million shares of our common stock during the second quarter, increasing year-to-date repurchases to more than 2 million shares, and we have now repurchased nearly 15 million shares over the past 10 years, demonstrating our continued commitment to drive additional shareholder value through both buybacks and dividends. In summary, despite the backwardation related challenges in aviation, we delivered solid results in the second quarter. Core aviation activity continued to rebound from the pandemic. Our marine business delivered absolutely fantastic results and our land business, including Flyers Energy also had a very strong quarter. In addition to our core fuel, natural gas and power business activities with expanding renewables offerings and a growing suite of additional carbon reduction solutions offered by World Connect, we are very excited about the future. All of our customers around the world are at some stage of their decarbonization journey, and our product and service offerings in support of their sustainability efforts should provide growing opportunities for us going forward. We also continue to maintain a strong balance sheet with a solid liquidity profile, providing sufficient capital to support organic growth and value-creating investments while also returning capital to our shareholders again through share repurchases as well as dividends. With that, I'd like to turn the call back over to our operator, Michelle, to start the Q&A session. Thank you.