Gulf Island Fabrication Q3 2024 Earnings Call Transcript

Key Takeaways

  • Adjusted EBITDA increased 11% year-over-year to $2.9 million with strong free cash flow conversion despite challenges in the Services division.
  • Fabrication revenue rose 14% year-over-year to $17.1 million and adjusted EBITDA nearly doubled, driven by improved facility utilization and small-scale projects.
  • Services revenue fell 12% to $20.2 million in Q3 due to customer-driven project delays in Spark Safety and temporary offshore work stoppages from Gulf of Mexico hurricanes.
  • New Cleaning and Environmental Services (CES) line is gaining traction with increasing bidding activity, positioning Gulf Island for growth in Gulf decommissioning.
  • Company ended Q3 with approximately $67 million in cash and investments, extended its share repurchase program to December 2025, and holds over $60 million in available liquidity for growth or shareholder returns.
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Earnings Conference Call
Gulf Island Fabrication Q3 2024
00:00 / 00:00

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Operator

Good afternoon, ladies and gentlemen, and welcome to Gulf Island's Conference Call to Discuss Third Quarter 2024 Results. All participants will be in a listen-only mode for the duration of the call. This call is being recorded. At this time, I would like to turn the floor over to Cindi Cook for opening remarks and introductions. Cindi, please go ahead.

Cindi Cook
Cindi Cook
Executive Assistant to the CEO at Gulf Island

Thank you, and good afternoon. I would like to welcome everyone to our Third Quarter 2024 Teleconference. Our results were released this afternoon, and a copy of the press release is available on our website at gulfisland.com. A replay of today's call will be available on our website after 7:00 P.M. this evening. Please keep in mind that the press release and certain comments on this call include forward-looking statements, and actual results may differ materially. We would like to refer everyone to the cautionary language included in our press release and to the risk factors described in our most recent Form 10-K and subsequent SEC filings. Please also note that management may reference EBITDA, Adjusted EBITDA, adjusted revenue, new project awards, and backlog on this call, which are financial measures not recognized under U.S. GAAP.

Cindi Cook
Cindi Cook
Executive Assistant to the CEO at Gulf Island

As required by SEC rules and regulations, to the extent used, these non-GAAP financial measures are reconciled to their most comparable GAAP financial measures in our press release. Today, we have Mr. Richard Heo, President and CEO, and Mr. Wes Stockton, Executive Vice President and CFO. Mr. Heo?

Richard Heo
Richard Heo
President and CEO at Gulf Island

Thank you, Cindi. Good afternoon, everyone, and welcome to our third quarter results conference call. I'm happy to be here with you this afternoon, and I hope that each of you and your families are continuing to stay healthy and safe. During today's call, I'll provide key takeaways from the quarter, a review of segment performance and end-market trends, and an update on the progress we have made on our strategic initiatives. Wes will then discuss our third quarter results in greater detail and provide some commentary on our outlook for 2024. We'll then open up the call for questions and end with closing remarks.

Richard Heo
Richard Heo
President and CEO at Gulf Island

The third quarter results demonstrate the improved durability of our operating model as we generated 11% year-over-year growth in Adjusted EBITDA and strong Free Cash Flow conversion despite headwinds in our services division, which included customer-driven project delays and lost revenue due to hurricane activity in the Gulf of Mexico during the quarter. We're very proud of these results, which would not have been possible if not for our strategic decision to build a more stable operating foundation made up of our small-scale fabrication and services business. Our fabrication Adjusted EBITDA nearly doubled from the prior year, and while our services division continued to face some headwinds during the quarter, the business still generated nearly $2 million in third quarter EBITDA, highlighting the resilience of this business. Now, turning to our segment results.

Richard Heo
Richard Heo
President and CEO at Gulf Island

First, looking at our services division, while the overall spending environment in our key offshore services market remains relatively strong, we continue to be impacted by customer-driven project delays for our Spark Safety business. As we discussed last quarter, these projects have not been lost, but the project start dates continue to be delayed due to some customer-specific issues. In addition, we were impacted by lost revenue during the third quarter due to the hurricane activity in the Gulf of Mexico in September. Luckily, we did not experience any significant damage to our Houma facility from the recent hurricanes, including Hurricane Francine, that made landfall less than 50 miles from our facility as a category two storm, but our services operations were impacted due to the temporary removal of our personnel from customer offshore platforms as the storms approached and passed through the Gulf.

Richard Heo
Richard Heo
President and CEO at Gulf Island

While we are disappointed by the recent impacts in services, we remain encouraged by the strategic positioning of our services business, and we continue to invest in our key growth initiatives to further strengthen our competitive position and ensure that we can endure customer and market-driven fluctuations. To that end, last quarter, we highlighted our decision to make incremental growth investments in support of our new Cleaning and Environmental Services business line, or CES. This new offering expands our services portfolio to better support decommissioning activity in the Gulf of Mexico, which we believe represents a meaningful potential opportunity for our company. Bidding and project activity for our CES business line is beginning to increase, and we are poised to benefit as the decommissioning activity in the Gulf of Mexico inevitably gains momentum.

Richard Heo
Richard Heo
President and CEO at Gulf Island

Now, turning to fabrication, where our revenue increased 14% from last year, driven by continued strength in our small-scale fabrication business. The demand environment in small-scale fab remains active, including pull-through fabrication from our services customers, and we benefited from improved facility utilization during the quarter, driving our third quarter fabrication Adjusted EBITDA to nearly double compared to last year. Our fabrication bid activity remains strong, and we expect the positive momentum to continue into 2025. A key priority and longer-term focus for our fabrication business is expanding our exposure to markets outside oil and gas, such as infrastructure, clean energy, and high-tech manufacturing. Our contract for the fabrication of structural components for NASA highlights the potential benefits as we expand our end market focus outside our traditional oil and gas markets. These end markets place a premium on quality and schedule certainty, areas where we have proven record of delivering.

Richard Heo
Richard Heo
President and CEO at Gulf Island

As it relates to the large fabrication market, unfortunately, there has not been much of a change. We believe that there are a lot of capital decisions that have been put on hold given the uncertain political landscape, and we're hopeful that today's election will remove the uncertainty and benefit the bidding environment. Overall, our optimism for the large fabrication market has not changed as the favorable structural drivers remain in place. There is limited capacity in the market, and there are numerous potential large capital projects that could be moving forward in our backyard. While it remains difficult to predict timing, we remain optimistic in our ability to secure a large award, and in the meantime, we will build on the foundation of small-scale fabrication while we wait for the right large project opportunity.

Richard Heo
Richard Heo
President and CEO at Gulf Island

As it relates to our shipyard division, as we have discussed, we substantially completed our remaining operational shipyard obligations during the fourth quarter of last year, with the warranty periods for our ferry projects being the final remaining items associated with the wind-down of the business. The warranty period for our 70-vehicle ferry project ended in the third quarter of 2024. As it relates to the 40-vehicle ferries, the warranty period for one of the ferries ended in the second quarter of this year, and the last vessel's warranty period ends in the first quarter of 2025. Last quarter, we noted that we submitted our final claim to the North Carolina Department of Transportation.

Richard Heo
Richard Heo
President and CEO at Gulf Island

Our claim was rejected, which was not a surprise, and we have moved forward with legal avenues to recover previously incurred costs associated with the 40-vehicle ferry projects resulting from the customer's design deficiencies on the vessels. Overall, we're pleased with our third quarter results as our ability to generate year-over-year EBITDA growth and strong cash generation, despite several market headwinds, highlights the resilience of our operating model. We remain optimistic regarding the market drivers of our small fab and services business, and we are excited by the potential for our Spark Safety and CES offerings. In addition, we are in an extremely attractive financial position with over $60 million of available liquidity to pursue our growth initiatives.

Richard Heo
Richard Heo
President and CEO at Gulf Island

This provides us with several avenues for potential value creation, and as we continue to execute on our strategic plan, we're committed to pursuing the best path to deliver shareholder value, which could also include capital return opportunities if we're not able to find sufficient growth investment opportunities that satisfy our risk return hurdles. Prior to turning the call over to Wes, I'd like to comment on our announced chairman of the board transition. Our current board chair, Bill Chiles, will retire at the end of term in May 2025, and we expect to reduce our board size to five directors at that time. As a result, and consistent with our goal of right-sizing our board and maintaining an optimal leadership structure, on November 30th, I will assume the board chair role along with my current CEO duties.

Richard Heo
Richard Heo
President and CEO at Gulf Island

My assumption of the chair role next month, along with Bill's continuation on the board through the end of his term, will provide for an orderly transition of his responsibilities. I'd like to express my gratitude to Bill for his commitment to Gulf Island for over a decade, and I look forward to working with the board to continue to advance the company's strategic initiatives. And I'll turn the call over to Wes to discuss our quarterly results in greater detail.

Westley Stockton
Westley Stockton
EVP and CFO at Gulf Island

Thanks, Richard. Good afternoon, everyone. I will discuss our consolidated results and then provide some additional details regarding our segment performance, putting in context the factors mentioned by Richard and their impacts on the quarter. I will then conclude with a discussion of our liquidity and full-year financial outlook. Now, turning to our quarter results, consolidated revenue for the third quarter 2024 was $37.6 million compared to consolidated revenue of $5 million for the same period of the prior year. Excluding the impact of the shipyard division, which included negative revenue for the 2023 period associated with the resolution of our MPSV litigation, adjusted consolidated revenue for the third quarter 2024 was $37.2 million, essentially flat from adjusted consolidated revenue of $37.7 million for the third quarter of last year as growth in our fabrication division was offset by lower revenue for services.

Westley Stockton
Westley Stockton
EVP and CFO at Gulf Island

Adjusted consolidated EBITDA was $2.9 million for the third quarter 2024, up from adjusted consolidated EBITDA of $2.6 million for the prior year period. Specifically for our services division, revenue for the third quarter 2024 was $20.2 million, a decrease of 12% compared to the third quarter 2023. The decrease was due to lower new project awards driven by delayed timing of certain Spark Safety project opportunities and lower activity due to delays caused by Hurricanes Francine and Helene in September. Services EBITDA for the third quarter 2024 was $1.9 million, or 9.3% of revenue, down from $3.1 million or 13.4% of revenue for the prior year period. The decline was primarily due to lower revenue, a lower margin project mix, and ongoing investments associated with the startup of the division's CES business line.

Westley Stockton
Westley Stockton
EVP and CFO at Gulf Island

For our fabrication division, revenue for the third quarter 2024 was $17.1 million, an increase of $2.1 million, or 14% compared to the third quarter 2023 due to higher small-scale fabrication activity. Adjusted EBITDA for the third quarter 2024 was $2.7 million, up from $1.4 million for the prior year period, primarily due to higher revenue and improved utilization of facilities and resources associated with our increased small-scale fabrication activity, offset by a lower margin project mix. And for our corporate division, EBITDA was a loss of $1.7 million for the third quarter compared to a loss of $1.9 million in the prior year period.

Westley Stockton
Westley Stockton
EVP and CFO at Gulf Island

With respect to our liquidity, we ended the third quarter with a cash and investments balance of approximately $67 million, up nearly $4 million from the end of the second quarter, highlighting a strong free cash flow conversion on EBITDA of $2.9 million for the quarter. Given our NOLs strong balance sheet and anticipated lower capital needs going forward, we continue to expect a high EBITDA to free cash flow conversion rate. At September 30th, our debt obligation associated with the resolution of our MPSV litigation remains at $20 million, with annual payments of approximately $1.7 million beginning on December 31st, 2024. So our first payment will be made in the fourth quarter. Our cash balance and the long duration of our debt puts us in a strong liquidity position and provides significant flexibility to pursue our growth objectives.

Westley Stockton
Westley Stockton
EVP and CFO at Gulf Island

Further, during the third quarter, we repurchased 111,000 shares of our common stock for $606,000 under our share repurchase program, and at quarter end, we had remaining authorization to purchase approximately $4 million of our common stock. Our share repurchase program, which was previously set to expire in December 2024, has been extended to December 2025, and given our strong financial position, we are evaluating additional opportunities to return capital to our shareholders, and finally, turning to our earnings outlook and capital requirements for 2024. Our prior full-year 2024 indicative guidance was for Adjusted consolidated EBITDA of $11-13 million.

Westley Stockton
Westley Stockton
EVP and CFO at Gulf Island

We continue to expect our full-year Adjusted consolidated EBITDA to be in this guidance range, with results likely to be at the lower end of the range due to the continued project delays impacting our services division, combined with lost revenue resulting from hurricane activity during the quarter, partially offset by anticipated higher small-scale fabrication activity. With respect to our capital requirements, our capital spending plans for 2024 continue to approximate our previous full-year expectations, with capital expenditures for the fourth quarter anticipated to be $500,000-$1 million. This concludes our prepared remarks. Operator, you may now open the line for questions.

Operator

Thank you. If you would like to ask a question, please press Star 1 on your telephone keypad. A confirmation tone will indicate your line is in the question queue. You may press Star 2 if you would like to remove your question from the queue, and for participants using speaker equipment, it may be necessary to pick up your handset before pressing the Star keys. Our first question is from Martin Malloy with Johnson Rice. Please proceed.

Martin Malloy
Martin Malloy
Partner and Director of Equity Research at Johnson Rice

Hello. Congratulations on the nice quarter. My first question I wanted to ask about in the commentary about the fabrication segment, you mentioned the bidding activity being pretty strong and also looking at some non-oil and gas areas, clean energy infrastructure, high-tech. I know you've done the NASA work before and on the infrastructure side. I think you've done some locks and dry docks before. Just kind of curious if there's any more information you can provide with respect to the types of projects and what's giving you the confidence that these areas are going to pay off potentially for you in terms of awards.

Richard Heo
Richard Heo
President and CEO at Gulf Island

Yeah. So some of the end markets that we've recently been chasing in the past couple of years that we targeted, Marty, with regard to small fab has continued to pick up. And it's all of the kind of what I call marine and civil infrastructure upgrades. That market's still robust. Subsea, albeit in kind of 2024, was a little softer than our forecast. It's starting to look pretty good for us in 2025. And then on the infrastructure side, with our kind of strong execution on the NASA project, we're getting a lot of opportunities to bid similar types of projects outside of that NASA contract. So we feel really good about where fabrication sits today and the opportunities that we're bidding in 2025.

Martin Malloy
Martin Malloy
Partner and Director of Equity Research at Johnson Rice

Okay. And the second question I had was just we share your optimism on the decommissioning P&A market for the Gulf of Mexico. Anything more you can add to what you're doing there in terms of investment or visibility on the work for next year?

Richard Heo
Richard Heo
President and CEO at Gulf Island

Yeah. I think, as you know, in the Gulf of Mexico, there are essentially two large players with regard to operators, Exxon and Chevron, that have large assets that have boomeranged back as a result of some of these bankruptcies, right? And if you listen to their earnings and forecast, I mean, this activity is an 8-10-year program, potentially plus. Our component's relatively small, Marty, in that whole decommissioning life cycle. But we feel that with our Cleaning and Environmental Services and, again, our long history of having performed the safe out, the decommissioning component that historically we've shown that we can demonstrate, or we've demonstrated that we've shown we can execute safely, we feel like there's a good opportunity for a very small portion of that estimated $400-$600 million a year in the next 8-10 years.

Richard Heo
Richard Heo
President and CEO at Gulf Island

So we feel that our positioning with the Cleaning and Environmental services, along with our history of decommissioning activities, and then also our fabrication capabilities that is a component of that safe out, we feel like we're in a good position to take some of that market share.

Martin Malloy
Martin Malloy
Partner and Director of Equity Research at Johnson Rice

All right. Thank you. I'll hop back in queue.

Operator

We have reached the end of our question and answer session. I would like to turn the conference back over to Richard for closing remarks.

Richard Heo
Richard Heo
President and CEO at Gulf Island

In closing, I want to thank our customers and shareholders for their continued support, as well as recognize our employees who continue to demonstrate a commitment to Gulf Island success. For those on the call, thanks again for your interest in Gulf Island. And please note, we'll be attending the Sidoti Virtual Investor Conference on November 14th. If you're not able to make it, if you're not able to connect during the quarter, I look forward to speaking with you on our next conference call and updating you on our progress. Be safe and take care.

Operator

Thank you. This will conclude today's conference. You may disconnect your lines at this time, and thank you for your participation.

Executives
Analysts
    • Westley Stockton
      EVP and CFO at Gulf Island
    • Martin Malloy
      Partner and Director of Equity Research at Johnson Rice
    • Cindi Cook
      Executive Assistant to the CEO at Gulf Island