Martin Midstream Partners L.P.

Q2 2022 Earnings Conference Call

7/21/2022

spk05: Good morning. My name is Chris, and I'll be your conference operator today. At this time, I'd like to welcome everyone to the MMLP Q2 2022 earnings call. All lines have been placed on mute to prevent any background noise. After the speaker's remarks, there will be a question and answer session. If you would like to ask a question during this time, simply press star, then the number one on your telephone keypad. To withdraw your question, please press star one again.
spk02: Thank you. Sharon Taylor, Chief Financial Officer, You may begin.
spk00: Thank you, Operator, and good morning, everyone. With me on the call today are Bob Bondurant, CEO, Randy Tauscher, COO, David Cannon, Controller, and Danny Cabin, Director of FP&A. Before we get started with our comments, I'll remind you that management may be making forward-looking statements as defined by the SEC. Such statements are based on our current judgments regarding the factors that could impact the future performance of Martin, including facts and assumptions related to the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic, but actual outcomes could be materially different. You should review the risk factors and other information discussed in our SEC filings and form your own opinions about Martin's future performance. We will discuss non-GAAP financial measures on today's call. Please refer to the table in our earnings press release posted in the investor relations section of our website to find information regarding those non-GAAP financial measures, including a reconciliation of historical non-GAAP financial measures referenced in today's call to their corresponding GAAP measures. And now I will turn the call over to Bob for his remarks on our second quarter 2022 results. Bob. Thanks, Sharon.
spk04: For the sixth consecutive quarter, Martin Ministry and Partners exceeded its EBITDA forecast as our second quarter 2022 adjusted EBITDA was 38.3 million compared to our published forecast guidance range of 23 to 25 million. While all four of our business segments beat our forecast in the second quarter, the significant majority of our outperformance came from our transportation and sulfur segments, which I will discuss shortly in more detail. We believe the fundamentals in several of our business lines continue to remain strong in spite of the current inflation rate and current recessionary fears. Based on our revised outlook, we have increased guidance for the remainder of the year. Our new guidance range for 2022 is now $126 million to $135 million. Now I would like to discuss our second quarter performance in more detail by business segments. Overall in the second quarter, as I mentioned earlier, our adjusted EBITDA was $38.3 million compared to adjusted EBITDA of $22.5 million in the second quarter of 2021. For the first six months of 2022, our adjusted EBITDA was $78.3 million compared to $53.4 million for the first six months of 2021. For the second quarter, our largest cash flow contributor was our transportation segment, which had adjusted EBITDA of $14.6 million compared to $5 million a year ago. The land transportation portion of this segment continues to improve its performance as adjusted EBITDA was $12.4 million compared to $5.5 million a year ago. During the second quarter, our daily load count averaged 475 loads per day compared to 401 a year ago. We have also increased our driver count 13% from a year ago. This growth has been driven by strong demand from our refinery and lubricant customers. Also, we have expanded our trucking operations into central Florida in order to service growing fertilizer demand. Overall, on a macro scale, truck transportation services remain tight, so we believe this business will continue to be a strong performer for the remainder of the year. Our marine transportation business also saw significant improvement as it had adjusted EBITDA of $2.2 million in the second quarter compared to negative $0.5 million a year ago. Compared to a year ago, our marine transportation asset utilization improved 24% as Pad 3 refinery utilization averaged greater than 95% during the quarter. There is currently tightness in the inland tank barge transportation market, which has not only helped improve our asset utilization, but has also allowed us to increase our day rates by an average of 14% compared to a year ago. These two factors have driven our improved marine transportation cash flow performance. Looking toward the remainder of the year, we see continued tightness in the inland tank barge market based on the current refinery utilization rates. This means we should have marine transportation quarterly cash flows for the remainder of the year to be similar to the second quarter. Our second largest cash flow generator was our sulfur services segment, which had adjusted EBITDA of $13.9 million in the second quarter compared to $8.9 million a year ago. In this segment, our fertilizer business had adjusted EBITDA of $10 million compared to $6.9 million a year ago. Compared to a year ago, we did see a reduction of our sales volume, but that was offset by stronger fertilizer margins. Looking toward the remainder of the year in our fertilizer business, we will see the normal seasonal weakness in the third quarter as demand from our customers slows significantly. We will also perform our annual seasonal turnaround projects at our fertilizer production facilities during the third quarter. We would then expect to see a performance rebound in the fourth quarter as customer demand should begin to return and our fertilizer production facilities come back into full service. Our pure sulfur side of our sulfur services segment had adjusted if it dialed 3.9 million in the second quarter compared to 2 million a year ago. In the Beaumont sulfur market, we handled approximately 3,400 tons per day in the second quarter compared to approximately 2,900 tons per day a year ago. This 17% volume increase was a result of increased refinery utilization compared to last year and was the main driver of our improved performance. Looking toward the remainder of the year, we continue to project strong refinery utilization in Pad 3, which should allow us to have a more consistent pure sulfur cash flow than what we experienced last year. Our third largest cash flow contributor in the second quarter was our termling and storage segment, which had adjusted EBITDA of 12.9 million compared to 10.6 million a year ago. The growth in cash flow came from our margin-based packaged lubricant and grease business, which had adjusted EBITDA of 6.1 million in the second quarter compared to 3.4 million a year ago. Compared to a year ago, we experienced increased lubricant and grease sales volume and margins due to strong fundamentals in both these businesses. Supply continues to remain tight, leading to stronger actual and forecasted margins than a year ago. Looking toward the remainder of the year, we continue to see strength in our margin-based packaged lubricant and grease business and consistent cash flow from our fee-based terminal assets. Our final business segment to discuss is our natural gas liquid segment, which had adjusted EBITDA of 1.3 million in the second quarter compared to 1.7 million a year ago. Both the second and third quarters are seasonally weak cash flow quarters for natural gas liquids as demand for butane significantly decreases. This is a result of seasonal gasoline blending vapor pressure rule changes that force refiners to produce excess butane supply. We purchase and store this excess butane production from April through September in order to sell back to our refinery customers in the winter when seasonal rule changes allow them to blend butane back into their gasoline pool. This process also drives a growth in our stored butane inventory throughout our summer buying season. This inventory growth also has a corresponding increase in short-term working capital debt throughout the summer. This butane inventory will be liquidated in the fourth and first quarter, and we will have a corresponding decrease in short-term working capital debt throughout the winter selling season. Based on the seasonal flow of our butane logistics business model, we expect minimal cash flow in the third quarter, followed by seasonal improvement beginning in the fourth quarter. However, we have forecasted fourth quarter margins to be less this year than the fourth quarter of 2021. This concludes my operating performance discussion for the second quarter and outlook for the remainder of the year. Now I would like to turn the call over to Sharon to discuss our balance sheet, leverage, capital resources, and changes in our 2022 financial guidance.
spk00: Thanks, Bob. First, let's walk through the debt components of our balance sheet and bank ratios. At June 30, 2022, the total of our long-term debt outstanding was $494 million, a slight increase of $5 million from $489 million at the end of the first quarter. This increase was expected as we entered into the butane inventory storage season in earnest, thus increasing our working capital needs. The components of the $494 million in outstanding debt were $149 million drawn under the revolving credit facility, $54 million of secured one and a half lien notes due 2024, and $291 million of secured second lien notes due 2025. Total available liquidity was approximately $87 million under our revolving credit facility. At quarter end, our adjusted leverage ratio was 3.46 times, and our first lien leverage ratio was 0.99 times. Both of these leverage calculations include our working capital sublimit carve-out, which excludes certain debt attributed to our seasonal NGL inventory build when the inventory has been either forward sold or hedged. At June 30th, the total debt related to the carve-out and therefore excluded from the adjusted leverage and first lien leverage calculations, was approximately $11 million. Looking forward, leverage in the third quarter may increase as we continue to purchase and store butane for the winter blending season. The partnership's interest coverage ratio was 2.81 times at the end of the quarter, and we were in full compliance with all covenants, banking or otherwise. Now I will address capital spending. Maintenance capital for the second quarter totaled $3.3 million, which was below our estimate for the quarter of $7 million, the majority of the shortfall being from project timing differences. However, we still expect our full-year maintenance capital spending to be approximately $25 million. As far as growth capital expenditures, Q2 expenditures were approximately $1.5 million for the quarter, a total of $4.6 million year-to-date. Growth CapEx is also running slightly behind guidance due to timing of projects, but we maintain our four-year forecast of approximately $8 million. Finally, I'll walk through our revised 2022 guidance, which can be found on slide five of the latest presentation posted to the investor relations section of our website. When we revised guidance last quarter, we believed there was more upside potential than downside risk to the projections. but elected to remain conservative around our assumptions regarding management of supply chain issues and the impact inflation could have on demand for our products and services in the second half of 2022. And while those risks remain, with the strength of our second quarter earnings and robust demand for our transportation services, we are increasing our adjusted EBITDA guidance to between 126 and 135 million. The increase to adjusted EBITDA guidance, along with no change in our capital expenditure projections, results in a full year forecast of between $53 and $62 million in distributable cash flow and between $44 and $53 million of adjusted free cash flow. I will now turn the call back to the operator for Q&A.
spk05: Thank you. As a reminder, if you would like to ask a question, please press star, then 1 on your telephone keypad. Our first question is from Salman Akyol with Stiefel. Your line is open.
spk06: Thank you. Congratulations on a very nice quarter. Thank you. Yes, let me just start off on the transportation side. I mean, clearly we've seen... Refinery utilization continued to tick up here early in the third quarter. I think most recently we were around 98%. So when you look forward and you noted your stronger transportation outlook, what are you assuming for turnarounds in there for refineries?
spk03: Yes, this is Randy. Thank you for the question. We have spoken with our customers for the expectations for the remainder of the year, and they continue to expect to operate at a very high level for the foreseeable future. The markets are demanding products, so we've been 95% to 98% too much of the second quarter. I think it would be difficult to maintain that utilization, but it should be strong relative to normal. When you think about the turnarounds, there has been one major refinery or one major refining company that has a large refinery in Louisiana and one in Texas that has noted in their release that they're going to have extended maintenance in the second half of this year. That would impact us to a very minor extent. because we just primarily provide a little trucking out of that refinery, and then you have the four refineries in the Beaumont, Port Arthur area that we're so integrated with, particularly from a trucking and sulfur perspective. Only one of those, to our knowledge today, has planned maintenance, and that would be four to six weeks, sometime late in the third quarter. So the impacts on us, I think, would be very moderate. A lot of it would be trucking, but we're having no problem today redeploying those truck drivers to other work when a refinery would take some maintenance.
spk06: Got it. And then I think previously you'd said you'd added 20 drivers. Can you just say where that count is, I guess, year-to-date?
spk04: Year-to-date, we're running about in the 460 to 470 driver range. I think it's at the higher end of that. And we continue to have a large number in training. When I say large, anywhere on a particular week, 20 to 30, up to sometimes 40. So we're very bullish on continuing to grow our driver count. A lot of that growth has been in our Florida market. We've expanded there, really leveraging on... large fertilizer customer that we've had, uh, a long time sulfur relationship with. And, uh, so we've had the ability to grow that business and, uh, it's helped our, our positioning in the trucking market in central Florida because of that relationship.
spk03: The only thing I would add to that is the 470. That's, that's what we're currently at. And then we began the year at about 420. So we're up about 50 drivers over the course of the year.
spk06: Very helpful. Um, And then I guess just thinking about marine, are you at a point where you're seeing enough strength where you can term things out and get sort of year-long, two-year-long kind of contracts?
spk02: Most of the business continues to be on a spot basis.
spk03: When somebody comes with term, that's generally so far under the spot market. that we're not interested in participating in that at this point in time. So the rates are continuing to escalate in that business, even this month as we speak. You know, at the end of the first quarter, we were in the sixes, and then we were kind of 7,500, 8,500 a day as we worked our way through the second quarter. And today, as we speak, half of our spot fleet is over the 8,500 range. per day as a day rate. So the market, particularly for the heated barges, continues to tighten. Rates continue to escalate. And no, we haven't put any on term yet. It's continued to be on spot.
spk06: Gotcha. And you're still having 95% to 100% utilization at those higher rates?
spk03: Yeah, fleet utilization is in the mid-90s. That's correct. Got it.
spk06: Okay. Very helpful. And then as I think about the sulfur segment, it seems like margins were very strong for fertilizer. Any comment there, anything? And I know you created everything from that standpoint, but I was just surprised to see how strong the margins were there. Is there anything I should be thinking about? And I get volumes coming down, but for whatever little volume there is, Do you still expect strong margins in the back half of the year?
spk03: That's a good question. There's a lot to that question. Yes, the volumes in the second quarter were less than we've historically done and less than what we anticipated by about 30%. The margins, depending upon which fertilizer product you're talking about, were good. 33% to greater than 100% higher than we would typically anticipate in the fertilizer business. But that wasn't unusual for the entire fertilizer business. We didn't see anything that just wasn't market-driven. And so, you know, right now the margins have narrowed in a little bit from where we were in the second quarter, but they're still strong. And we think the macro environment is such that that as we enter into the winter season, they're going to continue to be strong in the winter season.
spk06: Got it. Helpful. And then as I think about sort of the butane business up top, I mean, can you just sort of say what your demand is or how you think things are going to break out between Q1 and Q4?
spk02: Sure.
spk03: So typically Q4, we're going to bill to somewhere about a million and a half barrels of inventory, which is slightly less than we typically have. And we typically think about a Q4, we get 60% of our sales, and then Q1 will take about 40% at that time. And we do not anticipate, given the market, having a problem moving the inventory this year.
spk06: Got it. Helpful. And then I guess just real quickly on terminaling, your fee-based business, you would continue to expect to be there. And then it sounds like the lubricants, that should continue to be strong going into Q3 and Q4 as well. I mean, it sounds like prices continue to still be high or margins pretty strong there off of the non-fee-based business.
spk03: Yes, everything you said, we agree with. That's all correct. We expect strong margins in the lubricants packaging and the grease business through the rest of the year.
spk04: And I'll add one small comment there. Typically in the fourth quarter, we do see a slowing of volume from Thanksgiving through New Year's. We didn't really experience that last year. So that may or may not happen. I don't know that we have the full visibility on that, but there could be a slight tick down in cash flow in Q4 relative to Q3 if that phenomenon happens as normal. Gotcha.
spk06: Okay. And I guess pitching more over to the balance sheet, I guess originally you had talked about trying to do some refinancing on the notes. Can you just talk about that? what your plan is now and where you think the market is?
spk00: Yeah, so as you know, our 2L notes will be callable at PAR sometime mid-August. So what we have done and what we've spoken to is that we're going to be opportunistic around refinancing those notes if the market is there. We want to be prepared to go out and reduce our interest rate. Those are currently at 11.5, we think, based on our earnings and based on the strengthening of our balance sheet through the last, call it, 18 months. We should be able to bring that interest rate down when we reissue those notes. So we're on the sidelines. We're watching the market. It's not there right now, so we'll continue to keep a watch on that.
spk02: Gotcha.
spk06: Give me one second here. And then I guess just in terms of your hedging, just remind me, are you actually directly hedging butane or are you using another commodity to do the hedge?
spk00: We directly hedge butane the majority of the time.
spk06: All right. Okay. That's all I got. Thank you once again. Congrats.
spk00: Thank you, Selman. Thanks, Selman.
spk02: Again, as a reminder, if you'd like to ask a question, please press star then 1 on your telephone keypad. And it appears that we have no further questions.
spk05: I'll turn it over to Bob Bondurant for any closing remarks.
spk04: Thank you, Chris. I'd like to thank everyone on the call for your interest in Martin Midstream. In closing, I have a few comments on our unit price. For several years, our partnership has traded at a discount in multiple relative to our peers. As an example, today the median enterprise value divided by EBITDA multiple for the midstream sector is around 8.3 times, whereas our trading multiple is currently approximately five times. And while capital flows in the energy space are still challenged relative to years past, I believe the moves we have made in the last few years, including the sale of non-core assets, meaningful debt reduction, and a significant improvement in earnings, should soon be recognized and begin to have a positive impact on our unit price. Our leadership team and our business leaders can only control what they can control, which is the operating performance of our company. As long as we all continue to focus on performance and execute our strategic plan, I believe the equity markets will ultimately value our company more in line with our peers. Thanks to all again.
spk02: Ladies and gentlemen, this concludes today's conference call. Thank you for participating. You may now disconnect.
Disclaimer

This conference call transcript was computer generated and almost certianly contains errors. This transcript is provided for information purposes only.EarningsCall, LLC makes no representation about the accuracy of the aforementioned transcript, and you are cautioned not to place undue reliance on the information provided by the transcript.

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