NYSEAMERICAN:SLI Standard Lithium Q3 2024 Earnings Report $1.45 0.00 (0.00%) As of 05/2/2025 04:10 PM Eastern Earnings History Standard Lithium EPS ResultsActual EPS-$0.04Consensus EPS -$0.05Beat/MissBeat by +$0.01One Year Ago EPSN/AStandard Lithium Revenue ResultsActual RevenueN/AExpected RevenueN/ABeat/MissN/AYoY Revenue GrowthN/AStandard Lithium Announcement DetailsQuarterQ3 2024Date5/9/2024TimeN/AConference Call DateMonday, May 13, 2024Conference Call Time11:00AM ETUpcoming EarningsStandard Lithium's Q3 2025 earnings is scheduled for Thursday, May 8, 2025Conference Call ResourcesConference Call AudioConference Call TranscriptInterim ReportEarnings HistoryCompany ProfilePowered by Standard Lithium Q3 2024 Earnings Call TranscriptProvided by QuartrMay 13, 2024 ShareLink copied to clipboard.There are 8 speakers on the call. Operator00:00:00Ladies and gentlemen, thank you for standing by. Welcome to Standard Lithium's Fiscal Third Quarter Conference Call. All lines have been placed on mute to prevent any background noise. After the speakers' remarks, there will be a question and answer session. It is now my pleasure to turn today's call over to Sala Gamoudi, Chief Financial Officer. Operator00:00:21Sir, please go ahead. Speaker 100:00:27Thank you, and welcome, everyone. Joining me on the call today are Robert Mintak, Director and CEO Andy Robinson, President, Director and COO and Mike Farman, Chief Development Officer. As a reminder, some of the statements made during our call, including any forward expectations, company performance and timing of projects may constitute forward looking statements. Please note the cautionary language about forward looking statements contained in our press release, which also applies to this call. I will now turn the call over to Rob. Speaker 100:01:03Thanks a lot. The start of 2024 coinciding with our fiscal Q3 presented a complex economic environment. Inflationary pressures, rising interest rates and shifting geopolitical dynamics added to the headwinds the lithium sector has faced over this past year. A key factor, as listeners are likely aware, was the retreat in lithium pricing from its all time highs seen in 2022. This coupled with a broader cooling of market sentiment within the EV and Energy Transition space further compounded the challenges. Speaker 100:01:37Over the past fiscal year, we've taken proactive measures to navigate this environment. We strengthened our team with strategic additions at the executive level and implemented the necessary financial tools to balance the continued advancement of our projects and strategic plan, while always cognizant of potential dilution to our shareholders. We are seeing signs of stability returning to the lithium sector with both pricing and investor interest gradually picking up. Our strong projects are in favorable jurisdictions that position us well to capitalize on this improving sentiment. At our Southwest Arkansas project, we engaged the Fenco Engineering and kicked the definitive feasibility study and front end engineering design work. Speaker 100:02:21And working closely with the team at Koch Technology Solutions, we installed a commercial scale direct lithium extraction column at our demonstration plant. I'll leave more of the specifics on these developments to Andy to share as part of his operational update. However, the most significant development for Standard Lithium and the one I'm sure many of you are eager to learn more about happened after the close of Q3. As we have clearly communicated over the past year, we strongly believe in the benefit that strong strategic partnerships bring. The lithium industry is facing significant challenges. Speaker 100:03:01Projects are becoming more expensive, access to capital is becoming harder, and even with funding, the necessary expertise for successful project delivery is rare and solving these challenges requires taking an innovative approach. Only then will the industry be able to deliver the required supply that's necessary for the energy transition. To that end, working closely with our advisors, we conducted a robust process to find an ideal partner that would bring the ingredients we need for success. Last week, we announced a landmark project level strategic investment and partnership with Equinor, a global leader in energy and low carbon solutions. The investment is at our Southwest Arkansas and East Texas projects. Speaker 100:03:55Equinor's backing is a strong endorsement of our strategic direction. We believe this partnership validates the quality of our industry leading DLE flow sheet, the expertise of our team and the world class potential of our resources in Arkansas and Texas. We're confident this partnership will generate long term shareholder value. I'll now hand it over to Andy, who will provide more insights on the transaction, what the partnership means at the project level and an update on operational developments. Speaker 200:04:31Thanks, Robert. As you mentioned, we're extremely excited to be working with the Equinor team to advance our largest and highest grade projects within the Smackover. The joint venture with Equinor validates 1st and foremost the quality of our lithium brine assets in Southwest Arkansas and East Texas. One of the fundamental items that we've learned at the company is that irrespective of lithium chemical pricing and market fluctuations, having large high quality assets with the highest grade will always leave you in a favorable position relative to your competitors. This is as true in lithium as it is in any natural resource project. Speaker 200:05:08The work conducted by Equinor over the last several months has scrutinized these resources and has determined that the Smackover formation is where they want to invest. Another important part of their diligence was related to our DLE knowledge and experience, which we've gained through operating the demo plant for the last 4 years. There's a lot of discussion in the lithium world with respect to DLE. We view DLE as a critical tool, one that allows us to unlock the value in the resource. Our partnership with Coke has been fundamental in building a shared understanding of how DLE works with the Smackover brands. Speaker 200:05:43And the amount of knowledge, data and experience that our shared technical teams have in DLE and brine processing was another reason that supported the investment. Over the past quarter, we announced a successful commissioning of the 1st commercial scale DLE column at our demo plant that was performed in partnership with Koch Technology Solutions. Results to date have exceeded our expectations with lithium recoveries averaging over 97% and the rejection of impurities at the DLE step being greater than 99%. Speaker 300:06:15To the Speaker 200:06:15best of our knowledge, this is the first and only truly commercial scale BLE column in operation in North America. The success of this commercial column is based on the prior year and a half continuous operation of the Coke technology at our demo plant location. Over 8,500 cycles have been completed and 17,000,000 gallons of brine have been processed. And I've said it before, but the only way to know if your flow sheet works is to operate it continuously for long periods of time. We've learned so much from the demo plant and we'll use these fundamental process learnings in the FEED studies for the South West Arkansas project as well as into Langhess and East Texas. Speaker 200:06:56All of the work that we do at the demo plant is to make the flow sheet cheaper to build and cheaper to reliably operate. When that knowledge is combined with the highest grade brine resources in North America, it moves us towards the most advantageous project economics. Project work continues in Arkansas and our Lancaster and Southwest Arkansas projects. New JV with Equinor means that we are fully funded to work as quickly as we can through feed on the Southwest Arkansas project. We'll be adding significantly to our team with key Equinor people. Speaker 200:07:27These additions will significantly bolster the project strength in terms of subsurface and reservoir knowledge, project delivery, project finance, health and safety, sustainability and commercial and offtake relationships. The JV is kicking off a series of work programs for infill drilling, well field development, additional process testing and overall feed design. This new JV project team is being put together as we speak and we're excited to see increased project de risking of the Southwest Arkansas project as we move towards bankable feasibility and the final investment decision. In East Texas, we continue to grow our existing land position in the highest quality and highest grade resource areas. The new JV with Equinor means that we are now fully funded to expand our leasing activities as well as complete additional drilling work to verify the quality of these growing brine resources. Speaker 200:08:20As with the SWA project, we're adding key Equinor people to the project team to allow us to execute more efficiently across all of the project development disciplines. Our first goal in Texas is to produce resource reports for the key project areas. So we're looking forward to completing the work necessary to make that happen. As we mentioned before, the grades that we're seeing in East Texas are excellent. In some places, over 800 milligrams per liter. Speaker 200:08:46These are unparalleled anywhere other than a handful of projects in South America. The work that we've completed on our other projects has demonstrated that when you're looking to use DLE, the lithium grade in the brine is the most significant factor to consider. And so we think that these very large, very high grade lithium brine assets will become significant for both us and our JV partner. And with that, I'll turn the call over to Salar, who will speak to our quarterly results and the impact of the JV on our corporate economics. Speaker 100:09:17Thank you, Andy. For our fiscal Q3 3 9 months ended 2024, we reported a net loss of $10,400,000 or $0.06 per share and $30,300,000 or $0.17 per share respectively. Our net losses for the current periods were primarily driven by expenses at our demonstration plant, where we have continued to invest in improving our flow sheet, refining our technology and have continued to test commercial scale applications with success. Further, expenses related to back office personnel and share based payments make up a significant portion of our operating expenses. These expenses have increased from the prior year as we have expanded our engineering, finance, procurement and accounting functions in order to best serve our upcoming growth. Speaker 100:10:03Further, our non cash share based payments are meant to compensate and align our personnel with the interests of our shareholders. Turning to our balance sheet. Our cash balance remained flat from the 2nd to the 3rd quarter and our working capital remained positive with no term or revolving debt obligations. Subsequent to quarter end, our balance sheet strength has further been bolstered by our Equinor partnership, which provided an immediate $30,000,000 U. S. Speaker 100:10:30Liquidity injection and takes away $60,000,000 in near term capital requirements for our Southwest Arkansas and East Texas projects that Equinor will full fund up to that total amount. This transaction resulted in no parent company level equity dilution. As we have stated previously, our plan of capital formation in order to execute on our projects while minimizing cost of capital was and is an order of importance to 1, secure a strategic partnership 2, secure offtake and potential customer financing 3, secure low cost project debt financing and 4, pursue other forms of financing such as government grants and parent company level equity financing. The Equinor partnership exhibits that we are executing on our plan of delivering value to our shareholders. With that, I'll turn the call over to Robert for closing remarks. Speaker 100:11:29Thank you, Sala. The transaction with Equinor achieved a number of objectives for us. From a financial perspective, it provides Standard Lithium the required capital to 1st, progress the Southwest Arkansas project through DFS and FEED and second, due to work on the ground in East Texas where we see the potential to develop what could be one of the best lithium resources in the world. It's delivering on these projects in a timely way that will determine long term fundamental value for our shareholders and this requires money. In these tough capital markets for lithium and battery materials companies, an equity financing of comparable size to this Equinor transaction would have cost us significantly more if it could have been done at all. Speaker 100:12:14Looking at it slightly differently, that implied what I'll call look through value of standard lithium under the Equinor transaction represents a significant premium to the value the market has ascribed to these projects. Importantly, this is all done without giving up control. I would encourage you to look at the transaction presentation on our website to get a better understanding of this transaction. This is more than just a financing for standard lithium. It comes with benefits that have considerably more value in the long term. Speaker 100:12:47It comes with a partner that has tremendous resources and skills to not only fund the work we need to do now and in the future through its 45% contribution of capital, but also the resources required to build a truly world class U. S.-based sustainable lithium business, a business that will through the development of a portfolio of assets create significant value for our shareholders. And in closing, before I hand it back to the operator, I want to express my sincere gratitude to the entire Standard Lithium team for their continued dedication and hard work that's made this possible. I also want to give a shout out to both Salag Amoudi and Mike Barman. Their additions to our team have been critical to bringing these type of transactions to reality. Speaker 100:13:34And finally, a special thank you to our strategic advisor, David Park, for his invaluable insights and support through this process. Thank you. Operator, back to you. Operator00:13:49Thank you. We will now begin the question and answer Our first question comes from the line of Joseph Reagor with Roth MKM. Please go ahead. Speaker 400:14:44Hey guys, thanks for taking the questions. On the financing side, can you give us kind of an overview of how you see financing the Phase 1a LANXESS project, timing and structure? Speaker 500:15:06Thank you. Judd, this is Alaskamudi. So on the Phase 1a project, the critical path items there are the negotiation of the brine fee with LANXESS as they've determined that they would like to be a supplier. And then as well, we need to establish a royalty rate in Arkansas. When I say we, I mean that's really the AOGC and the local regulators to do. Speaker 500:15:37And so I think on the conclusion of those two processes, we'll have a clear vision on the final economics of the project and also how we would determine for financing for that project. Speaker 400:15:55Okay. Thanks. Can I ask a second follow-up to Ng on financing or yes? I'm sorry, could you repeat the question? I had a follow-up question. Speaker 400:16:11The operator said one question each. I was making sure it's okay. On the Equinor financing, have you guys already received the $30,000,000 or is that still in process? Speaker 500:16:22Yes, we have. We have received that. Speaker 300:16:24Okay. I'll turn it over. Operator00:16:29Our next question comes from the line of Greg Jones with BMO Capital Markets. Please go ahead. Speaker 600:16:36Hi, good morning, Robert and team. In relation to the Equinor deal, firstly, congratulations on the announcement. I was wondering if you could share any color on how you were thinking about structuring as you were going through that process. In relation to SWA, there's a pre feasibility study that provides some parameters around the project. East Texas is at an earlier stage of development. Speaker 600:16:59How did you think about striking the right balance between retained ownership, the qualities that Equinor brings as a partner and your view of what East Texas could become in the future? Speaker 100:17:14Hi, Greg. Thank you. I'm going to utilize my team members that are on the call today because we have a strategy that has been well communicated that from the get go of kicking off Standard Lithium, building these projects benefits from having strong partners that are aligned. The Southwest Arkansas project is an extremely valuable opportunity for the scale and the existing regulatory environment in Arkansas. The preliminary feasibility study that we concluded in Q3 of last year influenced how we would move that project forward and the brine grade results were exceptional. Speaker 100:18:01And the opportunity to develop that large of a scale project became more and more important. The expertise that was going to be required to keep it moving forward in a timely manner required subsurface expertise, the project development excellence that an oil and gas major could bring. And we've seen in the last year that interest in this region by super majors taking a smack over. So that really opened additional doors that we had been pursuing, but really moved the needle on the opportunity that presented itself. The timing of the work that we have done in East Texas aligned exceptionally well with that. Speaker 100:18:47The challenge has been in the market with the lithium pricing cycles that we've gone through from the roller coaster ride, but having a strong asset made these extremely attractive. We always wanted to maintain majority control on these projects and bring the values and the required capital to move them towards a final investment decision. So that aligns with our strategy, maintaining control, getting the adequate capital to get to the next stage where we believe we would create additional shareholder value before we would have to tap the markets to build any further on this. But on the larger strategy, the additions of Salah and Mike this year have allowed us to really engage at that level. So I'm going to bring Mike Barman onto the call now, our Chief Development Officer, on how we executed on the strategy. Speaker 100:19:42Mike, if you're ready to jump on? Speaker 300:19:45Yes. Thanks, Robert. So in answering your question, Greg, there were a number of things, just to add to what Robert said. In selecting the partner, I mean, so I think we were pretty clear that we were looking for a partner. We were focused on the oil and gas space given the complementary skill sets to what we're looking to achieve with this project. Speaker 300:20:10At the end of the day, what we're really trying to do is take as much risk out of the projects as possible through this process. And so we did want to give a meaningful ownership. We did want this to be a true partnership. Retention of operatorship and control was important to us. We did want a partner that was and is has a demonstrated track record of sustainability and ESG is a priority, which is sometimes mixed in terms of views when it relates to the oil and gas industry. Speaker 300:20:48And then we wanted to make sure that we gave enough ownership that there was in fact a true partnership that everybody had a meaningful stake in success here. And Speaker 600:20:57so Speaker 300:20:59and balancing that against making sure that the business was sufficiently funded to progress the assets to through the next major milestones. Those were sort of critical decision points in our process. Speaker 600:21:19Great. Thank you very much. And if I could just one quick follow-up. In terms of the final investment decision for SWA, the presentation mentions 2025. Do you believe that would be a first or second half type event? Speaker 100:21:35I'll pass that over to Andy on the project development side. Speaker 200:21:41Yes. Thanks, Robert. Hi, Greg. I mean, Greg, we've got work to do. We've starting this partnership with Equinor. Speaker 200:21:50We have the FEED work to complete as well as putting out the definitive feasibility study. I think one of the key things, as Mike was mentioning, is starting to move through the project finance process, gaining a true and full understanding of what Equinor can bring to the table in terms of their support on the project finance part of the development cycle. So not going to give kind of guidance on timing just yet because there's a lot of work to do. However, we're very comfortable with providing a 2025 timeline for FID. So that's a lot of things to achieve between now and then. Speaker 200:22:32We feel that we're in a great place with Equinor as a partner to get towards a final investment decision in the next calendar year. Speaker 600:22:41Great. Thank you very much. Operator00:22:45Our next question comes from the line of Jeff DOE column Speaker 100:22:57at the DOE column at the demonstration plant and how you can extrapolate the learnings from that plant and all the cycles that you've run to Southwest Arkansas? Speaker 200:23:10Yes, of course. Yes. Thanks for the question, Jess. The purpose of the demonstration plant is multi pronged. What we're aiming to do always is continue to process real brine in real time at the demonstration plant and continually make the learnings to figure out how we can simplify the flow sheet, how we can simplify operations and sort of, as I said earlier on, basically make the project cheaper to build, but also cheaper to operate on a reliable basis. Speaker 200:23:48The commercial column that we put in is it's an 8 foot tall, 4 foot diameter column. The column is exactly the same as what will be deployed at the projects, whether it's at Lanxis or at Southwest Arkansas or eventually into East Texas as well. So we're using the exact same column design that will go into the commercial plants. We have done a lot of work at the plant. Like I said, we've run over 17,000,000 gallons of brine through the system. Speaker 200:24:23We've run over 8,500 cycles of the DLE columns with the Coke technology. So we're just gaining this incredible understanding of how the smacker brines behave when they are continuously processed to extract lithium. The learnings from the column at the demo plant for Southwest Arkansas are really about how can we optimize filtration, what are the lithium extraction data that we can use for the design basis for the front end engineering design work to feed into the final investment decision as sort of talked about just a minute ago? And then also, how does that feed into the overall design and optimization? We have additional work that we are going to complete, Jeff. Speaker 200:25:11So we've got some additional sort of process testing work. So we'll be using real brines from Southwest Arkansas project. We've done we've certainly done work with Southwest Arkansas Brines in the technology before, but it's got additional work that will take place over the summer. And so continually adding into the huge amount of data and understanding that we have. So we're going to be going through that FEED process at Southwest Arkansas with what I believe to be the most robust understanding of DLE in a natural brine resource that there is. Speaker 200:25:46So we're very comfortable moving through that design phase to get towards an investment decision as quickly as we can. Speaker 100:25:54Do the higher concentration do the higher lithium concentrations in the brines significantly lower the cost of the to extract lithium? Speaker 200:26:05Yes. I mean, basically, Jeff, it's with the DOE process, if you sort of think about it and its fundamentals, you are building equipment that is processing brine coming into your plant in 20 fourseven real time basis. And so to make a ton of product, whether it's lithium carbonate or lithium hydroxide, whatever your product is going to be, if the brine grade doubles, then the equipment that you need to process that, it can be smaller and the cost of doing that is also less. So we've put out project economics for LANXESS 1A, which has an average brine grade of around 220 milligrams per liter. And then we put out the project economics for Southwest Arkansas and the PFS study, which went out last year, where the average brine grade was a little over 400, around 4 40 milligrams per liter. Speaker 200:27:04And you can see in those in both of those sort of published reports, the improvement in project economics as you increase the brine grade. So in our experience, lithium grade in the brine is the number one lever that influences project economics. Quite simply, lithium grade improves, so I. E. As it gets higher, if everything else stays the same in the brine, which it does in our case in the smack over. Speaker 200:27:35So as you increase lithium concentration, things get cheaper to build and cheaper to operate. And it's really is that straightforward. Speaker 700:27:43Thank you. Operator00:27:47Our next question comes from Noel Parks with Tuohy Brothers. Please go ahead. Speaker 700:27:56Hi, good morning. I just had a couple. I'm just curious, did Equinor have any investment itself in DLE technology? Had it done an experimentation of its own. Just wondering what steps they might have taken before Speaker 200:28:20looking up with you? Speaker 100:28:23Yes. And Equinor thanks, Bill, for the question. Equinor through their venture capital has invested in direct lithium extraction in a project in Europe, a geothermal project. So they do have and have been paying attention to the sector. So they have intelligence on that. Speaker 100:28:43And just to give you some history before I pass it over to Andy, because our team has worked through many months of due diligence on this. We've been actively working from the get go 2017 when we started Standard Lithium on engaging with strategic partners that could bring skilled capital directly aligned with what we're hoping to build. And that included our initial meetings with Equinor going back as far as 2018. So, continual dialogue and engagement with Equinor and others across the energy space about direct lithium extraction and how it's applied appropriately at the right project can unlock potentially globally significant resources. Andy can dive a little bit deeper into the DLE aspect and the due diligence and all of Speaker 600:29:36the work that we've worked with Equinor on. Speaker 200:29:42Yes. Hi, Noel. It's Andy here. Yes, as Robert says, Equinor have invested in the Cinda front. So it's a GSM project in Northeastern France, sort of a similar jurisdiction in the Rhine area. Speaker 200:29:58They looked at that and they have been working in the DLE space for several years, as Robert mentioned. So they came to our series of projects. They've very carefully vetted and scrutinized the technology that we've been using and which we propose to use at LANXESS Southwest and into East Texas as well. And I think they've been very, very happy with the performance of the Coke technology and its integration into our flow sheet in the demo plan. So as it stands right now, we consider the partnership with Equinor to be highly complementary with our existing relationship with Coke. Speaker 200:30:41And so yes, we're looking forward to continuing and growing that partnership as we move forward through the projects now. Speaker 700:30:50Great, perfect. I was also wondering as far as additional leasing goes, particularly East Texas, is there any sort of area of mutual interest arrangement or anything that sort of govern how much Equinor may participate in the project's expansion? Speaker 200:31:21I'll take that one. Yes, thanks, Nelte. Yes, we did we developed areas of mutual interest for the purposes of co developing these Texas assets. So yes, we've put in place sort of boundaries for where our joint venture contemplates. And so that's these are large areas. Speaker 200:31:44And I think as we sort of mentioned before, we've been working in East Texas now for 3.5 years, almost 4 years. We have a very, very keen understanding of where we want to be. We're already in those locations. And so the recent sort of liquidity injection, as Salar talked about earlier on, that allows us now to really pick up and accelerate that leasing activity. We've already got a very good, very large foothold in the key resource areas in East Texas. Speaker 200:32:19Now we're cementing that position in the region through that sort of AMI concept with Equinor. Speaker 700:32:26Great. That sounds exciting. Thanks a lot. Operator00:32:31Our next question comes from the line of Jeff Robertson with Water Tower Research. Please go ahead. Speaker 100:32:38Thank you. With respect to Equinor, do they bring any new contacts or any new reach to the table as you look to negotiate off take agreements with customers? And I'm thinking in particular, do they open any doors for you in Europe or the EU that you that other partners couldn't have opened for you? I'll start on that one. Thanks, Jeff. Speaker 100:33:03And then I'll pass that over to Mike, who is leading our developments on offtake. There's no lack of interest in offtake from a strong U. S. Project that has great sustainability criteria surrounding it. What Equinor brings is a level of commercial arrangement strategies that will greatly benefit what we're building, but there has been no lack of interest in securing offtake from a U. Speaker 100:33:35S. Asset from both domestic requirements and from Asia and Europe. And when I say Asia, I mean Korea and Japan. But Equinor brings significant commercial expertise that will benefit from. Post the announcement, we received significant amount of congratulations and interest in ongoing follow-up from the parties we're already in discussions with. Speaker 100:33:59But I'll just quickly hand it over to Mike for any further comments. Speaker 300:34:04Thanks, Robert. I think the answer really is we expect it to Jeff. We are getting into those details over the next coming months. Speaker 500:34:18Thank you. Operator00:34:23There are no more questions at this time. Mr. Mintak, back over to you. Speaker 100:34:32Thank you everyone for joining today's call. We truly appreciate your interest in Standard Lithium and value your continued support. For any further information or inquiries, please feel free to contact our Investor Relations team. Thank you once again and have a great day.Read morePowered by Conference Call Audio Live Call not available Earnings Conference CallStandard Lithium Q3 202400:00 / 00:00Speed:1x1.25x1.5x2x Earnings DocumentsInterim report Standard Lithium Earnings HeadlinesThe 5-Minute Investor Podcast, Ep. 8: Dollarama and Standard LithiumApril 28, 2025 | msn.comStandard Lithium price target lowered to $3.40 from $3.60 at Roth MKMMarch 31, 2025 | markets.businessinsider.comSilicon Valley Gold RushA new technology has sparked a modern-day gold rush in Silicon Valley. OpenAI’s Sam Altman invested $375M. Bill Gates has backed four companies in this space. The World Economic Forum calls it “the most exciting human discovery since fire.” Whitney Tilson believes this trend could mint a new class of wealthy investors—and he’s sharing one stock to watch now, for free.May 5, 2025 | Stansberry Research (Ad)SWA Lithium announces is operating a pilot DLE plant at Arkansas ProjectDecember 19, 2024 | markets.businessinsider.comStandard Lithium: SWA Lithium and Koch Technology Solutions Sign License for First Commercial DLE Project in North AmericaOctober 29, 2024 | finanznachrichten.deSWA Lithium, KTS sign license for first commercial DLE project in North AmericaOctober 28, 2024 | markets.businessinsider.comSee More Standard Lithium Headlines Get Earnings Announcements in your inboxWant to stay updated on the latest earnings announcements and upcoming reports for companies like Standard Lithium? Sign up for Earnings360's daily newsletter to receive timely earnings updates on Standard Lithium and other key companies, straight to your email. Email Address About Standard LithiumStandard Lithium (NYSEAMERICAN:SLI) explores for, develops, and processes lithium brine properties in the United States. Its flagship project is the Lanxess project with area of approximately 150,000 acres located in southern Arkansas. The company was formerly known as Patriot Petroleum Corp. and changed its name to Standard Lithium Ltd. in December 2016. Standard Lithium Ltd. was incorporated in 1998 and is headquartered in Vancouver, Canada.View Standard Lithium ProfileRead more More Earnings Resources from MarketBeat Earnings Tools Today's Earnings Tomorrow's Earnings Next Week's Earnings Upcoming Earnings Calls Earnings Newsletter Earnings Call Transcripts Earnings Beats & Misses Corporate Guidance Earnings Screener Earnings By Country U.S. Earnings Reports Canadian Earnings Reports U.K. Earnings Reports Latest Articles Amazon Earnings: 2 Reasons to Love It, 1 Reason to Be CautiousMeta Takes A Bow With Q1 Earnings - Watch For Tariff Impact in Q2Palantir Earnings: 1 Bullish Signal and 1 Area of ConcernVisa Q2 Earnings Top Forecasts, Adds $30B Buyback PlanMicrosoft Crushes Earnings, What’s Next for MSFT Stock?Qualcomm's Earnings: 2 Reasons to Buy, 1 to Stay AwayAMD Stock Signals Strong Buy Ahead of Earnings Upcoming Earnings Advanced Micro Devices (5/6/2025)American Electric Power (5/6/2025)Constellation Energy (5/6/2025)Marriott International (5/6/2025)Energy Transfer (5/6/2025)Mplx (5/6/2025)Brookfield Asset Management (5/6/2025)Arista Networks (5/6/2025)Duke Energy (5/6/2025)Zoetis (5/6/2025) Get 30 Days of MarketBeat All Access for Free Sign up for MarketBeat All Access to gain access to MarketBeat's full suite of research tools. 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There are 8 speakers on the call. Operator00:00:00Ladies and gentlemen, thank you for standing by. Welcome to Standard Lithium's Fiscal Third Quarter Conference Call. All lines have been placed on mute to prevent any background noise. After the speakers' remarks, there will be a question and answer session. It is now my pleasure to turn today's call over to Sala Gamoudi, Chief Financial Officer. Operator00:00:21Sir, please go ahead. Speaker 100:00:27Thank you, and welcome, everyone. Joining me on the call today are Robert Mintak, Director and CEO Andy Robinson, President, Director and COO and Mike Farman, Chief Development Officer. As a reminder, some of the statements made during our call, including any forward expectations, company performance and timing of projects may constitute forward looking statements. Please note the cautionary language about forward looking statements contained in our press release, which also applies to this call. I will now turn the call over to Rob. Speaker 100:01:03Thanks a lot. The start of 2024 coinciding with our fiscal Q3 presented a complex economic environment. Inflationary pressures, rising interest rates and shifting geopolitical dynamics added to the headwinds the lithium sector has faced over this past year. A key factor, as listeners are likely aware, was the retreat in lithium pricing from its all time highs seen in 2022. This coupled with a broader cooling of market sentiment within the EV and Energy Transition space further compounded the challenges. Speaker 100:01:37Over the past fiscal year, we've taken proactive measures to navigate this environment. We strengthened our team with strategic additions at the executive level and implemented the necessary financial tools to balance the continued advancement of our projects and strategic plan, while always cognizant of potential dilution to our shareholders. We are seeing signs of stability returning to the lithium sector with both pricing and investor interest gradually picking up. Our strong projects are in favorable jurisdictions that position us well to capitalize on this improving sentiment. At our Southwest Arkansas project, we engaged the Fenco Engineering and kicked the definitive feasibility study and front end engineering design work. Speaker 100:02:21And working closely with the team at Koch Technology Solutions, we installed a commercial scale direct lithium extraction column at our demonstration plant. I'll leave more of the specifics on these developments to Andy to share as part of his operational update. However, the most significant development for Standard Lithium and the one I'm sure many of you are eager to learn more about happened after the close of Q3. As we have clearly communicated over the past year, we strongly believe in the benefit that strong strategic partnerships bring. The lithium industry is facing significant challenges. Speaker 100:03:01Projects are becoming more expensive, access to capital is becoming harder, and even with funding, the necessary expertise for successful project delivery is rare and solving these challenges requires taking an innovative approach. Only then will the industry be able to deliver the required supply that's necessary for the energy transition. To that end, working closely with our advisors, we conducted a robust process to find an ideal partner that would bring the ingredients we need for success. Last week, we announced a landmark project level strategic investment and partnership with Equinor, a global leader in energy and low carbon solutions. The investment is at our Southwest Arkansas and East Texas projects. Speaker 100:03:55Equinor's backing is a strong endorsement of our strategic direction. We believe this partnership validates the quality of our industry leading DLE flow sheet, the expertise of our team and the world class potential of our resources in Arkansas and Texas. We're confident this partnership will generate long term shareholder value. I'll now hand it over to Andy, who will provide more insights on the transaction, what the partnership means at the project level and an update on operational developments. Speaker 200:04:31Thanks, Robert. As you mentioned, we're extremely excited to be working with the Equinor team to advance our largest and highest grade projects within the Smackover. The joint venture with Equinor validates 1st and foremost the quality of our lithium brine assets in Southwest Arkansas and East Texas. One of the fundamental items that we've learned at the company is that irrespective of lithium chemical pricing and market fluctuations, having large high quality assets with the highest grade will always leave you in a favorable position relative to your competitors. This is as true in lithium as it is in any natural resource project. Speaker 200:05:08The work conducted by Equinor over the last several months has scrutinized these resources and has determined that the Smackover formation is where they want to invest. Another important part of their diligence was related to our DLE knowledge and experience, which we've gained through operating the demo plant for the last 4 years. There's a lot of discussion in the lithium world with respect to DLE. We view DLE as a critical tool, one that allows us to unlock the value in the resource. Our partnership with Coke has been fundamental in building a shared understanding of how DLE works with the Smackover brands. Speaker 200:05:43And the amount of knowledge, data and experience that our shared technical teams have in DLE and brine processing was another reason that supported the investment. Over the past quarter, we announced a successful commissioning of the 1st commercial scale DLE column at our demo plant that was performed in partnership with Koch Technology Solutions. Results to date have exceeded our expectations with lithium recoveries averaging over 97% and the rejection of impurities at the DLE step being greater than 99%. Speaker 300:06:15To the Speaker 200:06:15best of our knowledge, this is the first and only truly commercial scale BLE column in operation in North America. The success of this commercial column is based on the prior year and a half continuous operation of the Coke technology at our demo plant location. Over 8,500 cycles have been completed and 17,000,000 gallons of brine have been processed. And I've said it before, but the only way to know if your flow sheet works is to operate it continuously for long periods of time. We've learned so much from the demo plant and we'll use these fundamental process learnings in the FEED studies for the South West Arkansas project as well as into Langhess and East Texas. Speaker 200:06:56All of the work that we do at the demo plant is to make the flow sheet cheaper to build and cheaper to reliably operate. When that knowledge is combined with the highest grade brine resources in North America, it moves us towards the most advantageous project economics. Project work continues in Arkansas and our Lancaster and Southwest Arkansas projects. New JV with Equinor means that we are fully funded to work as quickly as we can through feed on the Southwest Arkansas project. We'll be adding significantly to our team with key Equinor people. Speaker 200:07:27These additions will significantly bolster the project strength in terms of subsurface and reservoir knowledge, project delivery, project finance, health and safety, sustainability and commercial and offtake relationships. The JV is kicking off a series of work programs for infill drilling, well field development, additional process testing and overall feed design. This new JV project team is being put together as we speak and we're excited to see increased project de risking of the Southwest Arkansas project as we move towards bankable feasibility and the final investment decision. In East Texas, we continue to grow our existing land position in the highest quality and highest grade resource areas. The new JV with Equinor means that we are now fully funded to expand our leasing activities as well as complete additional drilling work to verify the quality of these growing brine resources. Speaker 200:08:20As with the SWA project, we're adding key Equinor people to the project team to allow us to execute more efficiently across all of the project development disciplines. Our first goal in Texas is to produce resource reports for the key project areas. So we're looking forward to completing the work necessary to make that happen. As we mentioned before, the grades that we're seeing in East Texas are excellent. In some places, over 800 milligrams per liter. Speaker 200:08:46These are unparalleled anywhere other than a handful of projects in South America. The work that we've completed on our other projects has demonstrated that when you're looking to use DLE, the lithium grade in the brine is the most significant factor to consider. And so we think that these very large, very high grade lithium brine assets will become significant for both us and our JV partner. And with that, I'll turn the call over to Salar, who will speak to our quarterly results and the impact of the JV on our corporate economics. Speaker 100:09:17Thank you, Andy. For our fiscal Q3 3 9 months ended 2024, we reported a net loss of $10,400,000 or $0.06 per share and $30,300,000 or $0.17 per share respectively. Our net losses for the current periods were primarily driven by expenses at our demonstration plant, where we have continued to invest in improving our flow sheet, refining our technology and have continued to test commercial scale applications with success. Further, expenses related to back office personnel and share based payments make up a significant portion of our operating expenses. These expenses have increased from the prior year as we have expanded our engineering, finance, procurement and accounting functions in order to best serve our upcoming growth. Speaker 100:10:03Further, our non cash share based payments are meant to compensate and align our personnel with the interests of our shareholders. Turning to our balance sheet. Our cash balance remained flat from the 2nd to the 3rd quarter and our working capital remained positive with no term or revolving debt obligations. Subsequent to quarter end, our balance sheet strength has further been bolstered by our Equinor partnership, which provided an immediate $30,000,000 U. S. Speaker 100:10:30Liquidity injection and takes away $60,000,000 in near term capital requirements for our Southwest Arkansas and East Texas projects that Equinor will full fund up to that total amount. This transaction resulted in no parent company level equity dilution. As we have stated previously, our plan of capital formation in order to execute on our projects while minimizing cost of capital was and is an order of importance to 1, secure a strategic partnership 2, secure offtake and potential customer financing 3, secure low cost project debt financing and 4, pursue other forms of financing such as government grants and parent company level equity financing. The Equinor partnership exhibits that we are executing on our plan of delivering value to our shareholders. With that, I'll turn the call over to Robert for closing remarks. Speaker 100:11:29Thank you, Sala. The transaction with Equinor achieved a number of objectives for us. From a financial perspective, it provides Standard Lithium the required capital to 1st, progress the Southwest Arkansas project through DFS and FEED and second, due to work on the ground in East Texas where we see the potential to develop what could be one of the best lithium resources in the world. It's delivering on these projects in a timely way that will determine long term fundamental value for our shareholders and this requires money. In these tough capital markets for lithium and battery materials companies, an equity financing of comparable size to this Equinor transaction would have cost us significantly more if it could have been done at all. Speaker 100:12:14Looking at it slightly differently, that implied what I'll call look through value of standard lithium under the Equinor transaction represents a significant premium to the value the market has ascribed to these projects. Importantly, this is all done without giving up control. I would encourage you to look at the transaction presentation on our website to get a better understanding of this transaction. This is more than just a financing for standard lithium. It comes with benefits that have considerably more value in the long term. Speaker 100:12:47It comes with a partner that has tremendous resources and skills to not only fund the work we need to do now and in the future through its 45% contribution of capital, but also the resources required to build a truly world class U. S.-based sustainable lithium business, a business that will through the development of a portfolio of assets create significant value for our shareholders. And in closing, before I hand it back to the operator, I want to express my sincere gratitude to the entire Standard Lithium team for their continued dedication and hard work that's made this possible. I also want to give a shout out to both Salag Amoudi and Mike Barman. Their additions to our team have been critical to bringing these type of transactions to reality. Speaker 100:13:34And finally, a special thank you to our strategic advisor, David Park, for his invaluable insights and support through this process. Thank you. Operator, back to you. Operator00:13:49Thank you. We will now begin the question and answer Our first question comes from the line of Joseph Reagor with Roth MKM. Please go ahead. Speaker 400:14:44Hey guys, thanks for taking the questions. On the financing side, can you give us kind of an overview of how you see financing the Phase 1a LANXESS project, timing and structure? Speaker 500:15:06Thank you. Judd, this is Alaskamudi. So on the Phase 1a project, the critical path items there are the negotiation of the brine fee with LANXESS as they've determined that they would like to be a supplier. And then as well, we need to establish a royalty rate in Arkansas. When I say we, I mean that's really the AOGC and the local regulators to do. Speaker 500:15:37And so I think on the conclusion of those two processes, we'll have a clear vision on the final economics of the project and also how we would determine for financing for that project. Speaker 400:15:55Okay. Thanks. Can I ask a second follow-up to Ng on financing or yes? I'm sorry, could you repeat the question? I had a follow-up question. Speaker 400:16:11The operator said one question each. I was making sure it's okay. On the Equinor financing, have you guys already received the $30,000,000 or is that still in process? Speaker 500:16:22Yes, we have. We have received that. Speaker 300:16:24Okay. I'll turn it over. Operator00:16:29Our next question comes from the line of Greg Jones with BMO Capital Markets. Please go ahead. Speaker 600:16:36Hi, good morning, Robert and team. In relation to the Equinor deal, firstly, congratulations on the announcement. I was wondering if you could share any color on how you were thinking about structuring as you were going through that process. In relation to SWA, there's a pre feasibility study that provides some parameters around the project. East Texas is at an earlier stage of development. Speaker 600:16:59How did you think about striking the right balance between retained ownership, the qualities that Equinor brings as a partner and your view of what East Texas could become in the future? Speaker 100:17:14Hi, Greg. Thank you. I'm going to utilize my team members that are on the call today because we have a strategy that has been well communicated that from the get go of kicking off Standard Lithium, building these projects benefits from having strong partners that are aligned. The Southwest Arkansas project is an extremely valuable opportunity for the scale and the existing regulatory environment in Arkansas. The preliminary feasibility study that we concluded in Q3 of last year influenced how we would move that project forward and the brine grade results were exceptional. Speaker 100:18:01And the opportunity to develop that large of a scale project became more and more important. The expertise that was going to be required to keep it moving forward in a timely manner required subsurface expertise, the project development excellence that an oil and gas major could bring. And we've seen in the last year that interest in this region by super majors taking a smack over. So that really opened additional doors that we had been pursuing, but really moved the needle on the opportunity that presented itself. The timing of the work that we have done in East Texas aligned exceptionally well with that. Speaker 100:18:47The challenge has been in the market with the lithium pricing cycles that we've gone through from the roller coaster ride, but having a strong asset made these extremely attractive. We always wanted to maintain majority control on these projects and bring the values and the required capital to move them towards a final investment decision. So that aligns with our strategy, maintaining control, getting the adequate capital to get to the next stage where we believe we would create additional shareholder value before we would have to tap the markets to build any further on this. But on the larger strategy, the additions of Salah and Mike this year have allowed us to really engage at that level. So I'm going to bring Mike Barman onto the call now, our Chief Development Officer, on how we executed on the strategy. Speaker 100:19:42Mike, if you're ready to jump on? Speaker 300:19:45Yes. Thanks, Robert. So in answering your question, Greg, there were a number of things, just to add to what Robert said. In selecting the partner, I mean, so I think we were pretty clear that we were looking for a partner. We were focused on the oil and gas space given the complementary skill sets to what we're looking to achieve with this project. Speaker 300:20:10At the end of the day, what we're really trying to do is take as much risk out of the projects as possible through this process. And so we did want to give a meaningful ownership. We did want this to be a true partnership. Retention of operatorship and control was important to us. We did want a partner that was and is has a demonstrated track record of sustainability and ESG is a priority, which is sometimes mixed in terms of views when it relates to the oil and gas industry. Speaker 300:20:48And then we wanted to make sure that we gave enough ownership that there was in fact a true partnership that everybody had a meaningful stake in success here. And Speaker 600:20:57so Speaker 300:20:59and balancing that against making sure that the business was sufficiently funded to progress the assets to through the next major milestones. Those were sort of critical decision points in our process. Speaker 600:21:19Great. Thank you very much. And if I could just one quick follow-up. In terms of the final investment decision for SWA, the presentation mentions 2025. Do you believe that would be a first or second half type event? Speaker 100:21:35I'll pass that over to Andy on the project development side. Speaker 200:21:41Yes. Thanks, Robert. Hi, Greg. I mean, Greg, we've got work to do. We've starting this partnership with Equinor. Speaker 200:21:50We have the FEED work to complete as well as putting out the definitive feasibility study. I think one of the key things, as Mike was mentioning, is starting to move through the project finance process, gaining a true and full understanding of what Equinor can bring to the table in terms of their support on the project finance part of the development cycle. So not going to give kind of guidance on timing just yet because there's a lot of work to do. However, we're very comfortable with providing a 2025 timeline for FID. So that's a lot of things to achieve between now and then. Speaker 200:22:32We feel that we're in a great place with Equinor as a partner to get towards a final investment decision in the next calendar year. Speaker 600:22:41Great. Thank you very much. Operator00:22:45Our next question comes from the line of Jeff DOE column Speaker 100:22:57at the DOE column at the demonstration plant and how you can extrapolate the learnings from that plant and all the cycles that you've run to Southwest Arkansas? Speaker 200:23:10Yes, of course. Yes. Thanks for the question, Jess. The purpose of the demonstration plant is multi pronged. What we're aiming to do always is continue to process real brine in real time at the demonstration plant and continually make the learnings to figure out how we can simplify the flow sheet, how we can simplify operations and sort of, as I said earlier on, basically make the project cheaper to build, but also cheaper to operate on a reliable basis. Speaker 200:23:48The commercial column that we put in is it's an 8 foot tall, 4 foot diameter column. The column is exactly the same as what will be deployed at the projects, whether it's at Lanxis or at Southwest Arkansas or eventually into East Texas as well. So we're using the exact same column design that will go into the commercial plants. We have done a lot of work at the plant. Like I said, we've run over 17,000,000 gallons of brine through the system. Speaker 200:24:23We've run over 8,500 cycles of the DLE columns with the Coke technology. So we're just gaining this incredible understanding of how the smacker brines behave when they are continuously processed to extract lithium. The learnings from the column at the demo plant for Southwest Arkansas are really about how can we optimize filtration, what are the lithium extraction data that we can use for the design basis for the front end engineering design work to feed into the final investment decision as sort of talked about just a minute ago? And then also, how does that feed into the overall design and optimization? We have additional work that we are going to complete, Jeff. Speaker 200:25:11So we've got some additional sort of process testing work. So we'll be using real brines from Southwest Arkansas project. We've done we've certainly done work with Southwest Arkansas Brines in the technology before, but it's got additional work that will take place over the summer. And so continually adding into the huge amount of data and understanding that we have. So we're going to be going through that FEED process at Southwest Arkansas with what I believe to be the most robust understanding of DLE in a natural brine resource that there is. Speaker 200:25:46So we're very comfortable moving through that design phase to get towards an investment decision as quickly as we can. Speaker 100:25:54Do the higher concentration do the higher lithium concentrations in the brines significantly lower the cost of the to extract lithium? Speaker 200:26:05Yes. I mean, basically, Jeff, it's with the DOE process, if you sort of think about it and its fundamentals, you are building equipment that is processing brine coming into your plant in 20 fourseven real time basis. And so to make a ton of product, whether it's lithium carbonate or lithium hydroxide, whatever your product is going to be, if the brine grade doubles, then the equipment that you need to process that, it can be smaller and the cost of doing that is also less. So we've put out project economics for LANXESS 1A, which has an average brine grade of around 220 milligrams per liter. And then we put out the project economics for Southwest Arkansas and the PFS study, which went out last year, where the average brine grade was a little over 400, around 4 40 milligrams per liter. Speaker 200:27:04And you can see in those in both of those sort of published reports, the improvement in project economics as you increase the brine grade. So in our experience, lithium grade in the brine is the number one lever that influences project economics. Quite simply, lithium grade improves, so I. E. As it gets higher, if everything else stays the same in the brine, which it does in our case in the smack over. Speaker 200:27:35So as you increase lithium concentration, things get cheaper to build and cheaper to operate. And it's really is that straightforward. Speaker 700:27:43Thank you. Operator00:27:47Our next question comes from Noel Parks with Tuohy Brothers. Please go ahead. Speaker 700:27:56Hi, good morning. I just had a couple. I'm just curious, did Equinor have any investment itself in DLE technology? Had it done an experimentation of its own. Just wondering what steps they might have taken before Speaker 200:28:20looking up with you? Speaker 100:28:23Yes. And Equinor thanks, Bill, for the question. Equinor through their venture capital has invested in direct lithium extraction in a project in Europe, a geothermal project. So they do have and have been paying attention to the sector. So they have intelligence on that. Speaker 100:28:43And just to give you some history before I pass it over to Andy, because our team has worked through many months of due diligence on this. We've been actively working from the get go 2017 when we started Standard Lithium on engaging with strategic partners that could bring skilled capital directly aligned with what we're hoping to build. And that included our initial meetings with Equinor going back as far as 2018. So, continual dialogue and engagement with Equinor and others across the energy space about direct lithium extraction and how it's applied appropriately at the right project can unlock potentially globally significant resources. Andy can dive a little bit deeper into the DLE aspect and the due diligence and all of Speaker 600:29:36the work that we've worked with Equinor on. Speaker 200:29:42Yes. Hi, Noel. It's Andy here. Yes, as Robert says, Equinor have invested in the Cinda front. So it's a GSM project in Northeastern France, sort of a similar jurisdiction in the Rhine area. Speaker 200:29:58They looked at that and they have been working in the DLE space for several years, as Robert mentioned. So they came to our series of projects. They've very carefully vetted and scrutinized the technology that we've been using and which we propose to use at LANXESS Southwest and into East Texas as well. And I think they've been very, very happy with the performance of the Coke technology and its integration into our flow sheet in the demo plan. So as it stands right now, we consider the partnership with Equinor to be highly complementary with our existing relationship with Coke. Speaker 200:30:41And so yes, we're looking forward to continuing and growing that partnership as we move forward through the projects now. Speaker 700:30:50Great, perfect. I was also wondering as far as additional leasing goes, particularly East Texas, is there any sort of area of mutual interest arrangement or anything that sort of govern how much Equinor may participate in the project's expansion? Speaker 200:31:21I'll take that one. Yes, thanks, Nelte. Yes, we did we developed areas of mutual interest for the purposes of co developing these Texas assets. So yes, we've put in place sort of boundaries for where our joint venture contemplates. And so that's these are large areas. Speaker 200:31:44And I think as we sort of mentioned before, we've been working in East Texas now for 3.5 years, almost 4 years. We have a very, very keen understanding of where we want to be. We're already in those locations. And so the recent sort of liquidity injection, as Salar talked about earlier on, that allows us now to really pick up and accelerate that leasing activity. We've already got a very good, very large foothold in the key resource areas in East Texas. Speaker 200:32:19Now we're cementing that position in the region through that sort of AMI concept with Equinor. Speaker 700:32:26Great. That sounds exciting. Thanks a lot. Operator00:32:31Our next question comes from the line of Jeff Robertson with Water Tower Research. Please go ahead. Speaker 100:32:38Thank you. With respect to Equinor, do they bring any new contacts or any new reach to the table as you look to negotiate off take agreements with customers? And I'm thinking in particular, do they open any doors for you in Europe or the EU that you that other partners couldn't have opened for you? I'll start on that one. Thanks, Jeff. Speaker 100:33:03And then I'll pass that over to Mike, who is leading our developments on offtake. There's no lack of interest in offtake from a strong U. S. Project that has great sustainability criteria surrounding it. What Equinor brings is a level of commercial arrangement strategies that will greatly benefit what we're building, but there has been no lack of interest in securing offtake from a U. Speaker 100:33:35S. Asset from both domestic requirements and from Asia and Europe. And when I say Asia, I mean Korea and Japan. But Equinor brings significant commercial expertise that will benefit from. Post the announcement, we received significant amount of congratulations and interest in ongoing follow-up from the parties we're already in discussions with. Speaker 100:33:59But I'll just quickly hand it over to Mike for any further comments. Speaker 300:34:04Thanks, Robert. I think the answer really is we expect it to Jeff. We are getting into those details over the next coming months. Speaker 500:34:18Thank you. Operator00:34:23There are no more questions at this time. Mr. Mintak, back over to you. Speaker 100:34:32Thank you everyone for joining today's call. We truly appreciate your interest in Standard Lithium and value your continued support. For any further information or inquiries, please feel free to contact our Investor Relations team. Thank you once again and have a great day.Read morePowered by