David Johnson
Analyst · Craig-Hallum. Please go ahead
Thanks Christine. Good morning everyone. Thanks for joining us today to review Westport Fuel Systems results for the first quarter 2021. This is David Johnson speaking. If you're new to our story, thanks for your interest and on this slide, you'll see a brief synopsis about our company. Following a record fourth quarter close in 2020, we started 2021 with solid revenue growth, despite the ongoing challenges brought on by COVID-19. Our HPDI business is ramping well in Europe and our independent aftermarket delayed OEM, and electronics businesses are profitable. We have a comprehensive global offering of [indiscernible] clean, affordable gas and fuel components and systems offered through a global network of distributors and partners. Pleased to continuing to gain confidence that our HPDI Solutions outperformed with demonstrated operational cost savings and reduced carbon emissions. And as a result, our products are taking down an increasing role in large fleets and accelerating the global transition to cleaner fuels. We're driving innovation to power a cleaner tomorrow and changing the way the world moves people and freight. I'll cover just a few highlights from the first quarter and then provide a business overview before handing over to Richard to go into more details on our financial performance. Our revenues were $76.4 million in the first quarter compared to $67.2 million for Q1 last year, a 14% increase. Q1 sales revenue in our light-duty and heavy-duty OEM businesses also increased significantly, up 25% versus the year ago quarter. Like many OEMs, our HPDI launch partner is experiencing supply chain production issues due to global semiconductor shortages. While our HPDI manufacturing has thus far been unaffected by this particular issue, global shortages are expected to impact revenues and margins through the second quarter. We do, however, expect the impact of this issue to decrease in the second half of 2021. Our business mix is shifting with growing revenue for HPDI, hydrogen, and our light-duty OEM businesses, especially in India. But the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic effects and resulting shifts in sales mix, resulted in nearly flat performance of our IAM business. In total, gross margins are under pressure and not where we want them to be. We ended the quarter with $59.7 million of cash and cash equivalents including gross proceeds of $13.2 million raised from our at-the-market equity offering in the three months ended March 31st, 2021, for a cumulative total of $27.6 million raised. I'm immensely proud of the progress our global team has made towards sustainable profitability, which is the foundation upon which we'll continue to build success. Westport Fuel Systems is addressing a huge market, $100 billion annually of which roughly half is heavy-duty trucking and market share for gaseous fuel solutions is growing. We have substantial regulatory, economic, and societal tailwind in markets around the world. Consumers buy our aftermarket conversion kits to save money, while using cleaner fuels and our products also help OEMs respond to regulations, while meeting their customers' demand. We've worked hard to develop a solid reputation as an industry leader in gaseous fuels over the last two decades with sales in 70 countries. HPDI was launched in Europe in 2018 and our share of the market continues to grow. The EU market for alternative fuel trucks grew by 38% in 2020. Despite the impact of COVID-19 and we finished last year with an HPDI sales rate almost double compared to 2019. Unless it's unclear, HPDI is not a concept demonstration, its product and with HPDI, OEMs can avoid penalties for CO2 non-compliance that are built into the regulations in Europe. For example, if no improvements are made to today's European diesel-powered trucks, some of those trucks in 2025 will generate a penalty of €38,000 per truck sold payable by the OEM. This year, we expect to launch HPDI in China, the largest market for natural gas trucking. HPDI 2.0 is the only product in production at scale that can fully and cost effectively respond to the regulatory standards for commercial vehicles in Europe, India, and China. We've announced the initial demonstration of the efficiency of hydrogen HPDI and we've shown the cost effectiveness of hydrogen internal combustion engine using HPDI. It's increasingly clear there is no panacea for zero-carbon transportation across all applications. Today there is and tomorrow there will be a diversity of technologies and diversity of fuels. Gaseous fuels are cleaner, renewable, and go all the way to zero carbon-hydrogen and because our gaseous fuel systems are available and affordable today, we will lead the way. For heavy-duty long-haul applications, the size, weight and cost of batteries, not to mention the recharge time make battery electric technology a non-starter for this application. Regarding fuel cells, the demonstration vehicle that OEMs have shown include not just the fuel cell, but significant batteries and of course, electric motors. And for both of these concepts, investments required the industrial batteries, fuel cells, and motors and then to rearchitect vehicles is massive. In North America, vehicles using gaseous fuels are not so common. So, the existing and accelerating global adoption of gaseous fuels may be surprising to some of you. With the increasing substitution of renewable fuels like biomethane, our products can further decrease the greenhouse gas impact of transportation, and they do so much more affordably than battery electric vehicles for example. Against that bat backdrop, I also want to share with you the views of two global players, our customer Volvo and our partner Cummins. As you can see, both companies forecast an ongoing important role for natural gas over the next two decades and an important role for hydrogen as key ingredients on the pathway to near zero carbon and fossil-free transportation. In the long-term view, the mix of products that will be sold is to be determined. We already designed both produce and sell hydrogen components for transportation and industrial applications. This area of our business saw substantial growth in 2020 and remained strong in the current quarter and we could see a pathway for continued growth, The potential for OEMs and others to avoid new and significant investments required to develop and manufacture fuel cells, electric motors, and batteries are incredibly compelling. Like trucking, other high-load applications like mining, marine, and rail have come to rely on the efficiency, power, durability, and reliability of diesel engines and HPDI is the only alternative that offers the same performance and yet can leverage existing supply chain, manufacturing infrastructure, and economies of scale, and offer a roadmap on a technology platform that has a proven track record and longevity. We believe the potential to use hydrogen with HPDI and to do so more cost effectively than fuel cells means there's a very large portion of the future product mix for long-haul transportation that will count on Westport Fuel Systems products. In November, we announced new product development work to apply HPDI 2.0 to an updated base engine platform designed to meet Euro 6 [indiscernible] regulations that take effect in 2024. We interpret this as our customers competence in our HPDI systems and increasing demand of their fleet customers who are already realizing the benefits of our HPDI solutions. In China, our JVs HPDI engine has been certified and we're pleased with the increased minimum volume commitment by Weichai Westport. I'll go into more detail regarding China momentarily. For us, North America is next. UPS has already adopted natural gas announcing in 2019 that they're adding 6,000 natural gas vehicles to their fleet. In February, Reuters reported that Amazon ordered 700 CNG trucks. Fleets aren't waiting for technology breakthroughs. They're acting now to reduce carbon and our solutions to save them money. With the path established by our JV with Cummins, HPDI in North American could take natural gas to the next level. The joint venture term is scheduled to end on December 31st, 2021 and we're evaluating our strategic alternatives in anticipation of this termination. We see a growing opportunity to sell the supply our alternative fuel systems, especially our HPDI technology in heavy-duty applications in the North American market. We're making significant progress in China where our joint venture with Weichai Power secured certification for the WP12 natural gas engine, powered by HPDI 2.0. As one of the largest suppliers of natural gas engines in China, our JV currently supplies engines to leading Chinese commercial vehicle OEM and they serve the largest natural gas trucking market in the world. The engine certification sets us up to serve that market as vehicle OEMs complete certifications to their vehicle offerings with our engines. In the first quarter, we announced the co-investment agreement to expand the manufacturing footprint for HPDI 2.0 injectors in China and also announced amended agreement terms with Weichai Westport for the supply of a minimum of 25,000 HPDI systems through December 31st, 2024, which represents a 39% increase in the minimum volume compared to the original agreement. China has already planned for technology, the largest LNG retailing infrastructure in the world and already has hundreds of thousands of natural gas trucks on the road. And we're bullish about the opportunity that's in front of us in China. Recently, we presented with AVL, a leading independent engineering firm an analysis showing that the cost advantages of hydrogen-fueled HPDI equipped internal combustion engines for trucking. Next, we demonstrated that hydrogen with HPDI works very well, out-of-the-box delivering efficiency on par with fuel cells in heavy-duty applications. And we presented that data at the Vienna Motor Symposium for review by industry experts just last week. Among the combustion systems we investigated, we determined HPDI combustion offers the highest power density, highest efficiency, and is most robust system for using hydrogen in internal combustion engines for heavy-duty applications. We're in discussions with potential partners and customers to gain input and to further develop and validate this exciting opportunity. Although it's still early days, we don't think it's a stretch to say this could be a game-changer for the internal combustion engine and for clean transportation globally. Before I hand back to Richard, I'd like to highlight our commitment to strong governance, social responsibility, and environmental sustainability. This is inherent in Westport Fuel Systems' DNA. The strength and diversity of our Board is a critical asset that provides oversight and guidance to the implementation of our strategies and achieving our goals. At the Board level, we have a 50/50 gender mix and more than one-third of our global workforce identifies as female, we're committed to our employees' health and safety, with 97% of our employee base being represented by joint health and safety committees. Our major operational sites are also ISO-certified for Environmental Management and Product Quality. In 2018, we established the sustainability working group that reports directly to me. Our commitment to the environment is in our DNA. It's in our products, and we're committed to reducing the energy and carbon intensity of our global operations. For those of you know the transportation sector well, they'll recognize some of the talented individuals who've joined our team and led their considerable expertise. On our Board, Dan Hancock, our Chair brings 43 years of experience GM to our company. During his career, he was CEO of Allison Transmission and CEO of the Fiat-GM Powertrain joint venture. Rita Forst led vehicle and powertrain engineering during the 36 years career at Opel in Germany. Dr. Karl Viktor Schaller, led Purchasing and Vehicle Engineering as a Board member at MAN and later was the Chief Technical Officer of BMW's Motorcycle division. Many of you will have also known Tony Guglielmin, retiring CFO of Ballard, who joined our Board earlier this year. And on our management team, Jim Arthurs and Lance Follett have 30 years of Westport Fuel Systems leadership experience. Tim Smith joined us late last year bringing his 30 years of experience Daimler, Navistar, and Tier 1 automotive supplier, Dana. Nicola Cosciani joined us from Italian automotive industry and leads our global manufacturing operations in Italy. And our CFO, Richard has extensive public company leadership experience with an international mining company and in the telecom sector, with Bell Canada earlier his career. Our leadership team together represents impressive skills, experience, and rich geographical and cultural diversity and we're grateful for their commitment to excellence in the pursuit of our objectives. Now, over to you Richard for more detail on our Q1 financial results.