Keefer M. Lehner
Thanks, Chris. Good morning, everyone. As Chris mentioned, Q2 2025 revenue was $159 million, a 3% sequential increase. Consolidated adjusted EBITDA was $18.5 million with a 12% margin, up from 9% in Q1 2025, demonstrating strong cost discipline and improved utilization and was in line with last quarter's guidance. Total SG&A expense for Q2 was $18 million. Backing out nonrecurring items, adjusted SG&A expense would have been $15.1 million, a 12% reduction versus prior year Q2 and an 8% reduction versus Q1 2025, reflecting the full benefit of the cost structure changes we executed in early 2024 plus some additional savings in the first half of 2025. We have remained lean from an overhead perspective and expect adjusted SG&A expense to hover in the 9% to 10% of revenue range for 2025. Moving to our segment results. The Rockies posted a strong sequential rebound with second quarter revenue of $54.1 million, operating income of $3.3 million and adjusted EBITDA of $10.4 million. Sequential revenue and adjusted EBITDA increased 13% and 55%, respectively, driven by a return to normalized seasonal operating levels and a favorable revenue mix that combined to drive a 500 basis point increase in segment margin sequentially. In the Southwest, revenue, operating loss and adjusted EBITDA were $58.8 million, negative $1.7 million and $7.2 million, respectively. On a quarterly basis, Q2 revenue decreased 10% sequentially with EBITDA down 38%. Permian rig count decline led the U.S. onshore market lower, declining 9% sequentially. Permian customers reduced activity and took extended completion holidays, which drove lower utilization and increased white space versus the first quarter. Additionally, start-up costs and some transitional friction weighed on the quarter as we work to expand activity within certain completion PSLs. For the Northeast/Mid-Con segment, revenue was $46.1 million, operating loss was $1.3 million and adjusted EBITDA was $7.2 million. The sequential increase in revenue of 12% and adjusted EBITDA of 167% were largely driven by higher utilization across the vast majority of our completion PSLs, corresponding reduced white space and targeted expense management across the geo segment. All of this combined to drive a 900 basis point increase in segment adjusted EBITDA margin, and we expect further margin improvement into the third quarter. At Corporate, our operating loss and adjusted EBITDA loss for the quarter were $9 million and $6.3 million, respectively, which improved 27% and 14%, respectively, from last quarter as we've continued to reduce overhead and fixed costs. Now turning to our balance sheet, cash flow and capitalization. We ended Q2 with $16.7 million of cash on hand and reduced restricted cash from $8.1 million in Q1 to only $600,000 as of June 30. Restricted cash is currently being reduced further to $55,000 in Q3. We ended Q2 with approximately $65 million in liquidity, an increase of 13% from Q1, including $16.7 million of cash and cash equivalents and $49 million of availability on our revolving credit facility, including $5 million on an undrawn FILO facility. Total debt as of June 30 was $259 million, including $213.7 million in notes and $45 million in ABL and represents a 1% decrease compared to Q1 levels. We are in compliance with both our net leverage ratio and CapEx covenants as of Q2. Our bonds require a 2% annual mandatory redemption paid quarterly, and we continue to make these payments, but we did pick $7.1 million of interest in Q2, and we will evaluate future PIK versus cash pay decisions based on market conditions and company leverage and liquidity. And just last week, we elected to pay a portion of Q3 interest in cash. Even with the PIK interest in Q2, we were able to reduce total debt by $2.3 million versus the prior quarter. Moving to working capital. As of June 30, we had $46 million in net working capital, which decreased almost $14 million sequentially, and our DSO and DPO normalized to 61 days and 51 days, respectively, both in line with longer-term historical averages. We will continue to proactively and prudently manage working capital as we navigate the current market. CapEx for Q2 was $12.7 million gross and $11.1 million net of asset sales. Spending was focused on maintenance of our pressure pumping, coiled tubing and accommodation fleets. As of June 30, we had accrued CapEx of approximately $12 million and $2.2 million of assets held for sale, including a property sale for $1.8 million that closed in early August. Looking ahead, we have taken measures to curtail second half spending, and we expect gross CapEx for 2025 in the range of $40 million to $50 million and net CapEx between $30 million to $40 million. To reiterate our financial objectives, as we advance through 2025, we expect cash and liquidity to improve, supported by our ongoing focus on efficient capital allocation, strategic asset deployment and proactively managing our debt levels to minimize cash interest costs. Our team's deep experience navigating sector cyclicality enables us to proactively identify and implement additional measures aimed at continuous cost structure refinement, optimizing our asset footprint, generating sustainable free cash flow and maximizing financial flexibility. I'll now hand the call back to Chris for his concluding remarks and more color on our outlook.