D. Bradley Childers
Thank you, Megan, and good morning, everyone. Archrock's second quarter performance was outstanding. While global macro uncertainty and stock market volatility continued during the second quarter, solid demand for natural gas and compression persisted. Our operational and financial execution continued to stand out and included several quarterly records for the company. This reflected strong underlying business performance and robust earnings power from 2 accretive acquisitions over the last 4 quarters. We recorded record adjusted EPS and adjusted EBITDA during the quarter. Compared to the second quarter of 2024, we increased our adjusted EPS by nearly 70% and adjusted EBITDA by more than 60%. Our fleet remains fully utilized at 96% and on a sequential basis, we increased our contract compression operating fleet by more than 368,000 horsepower. This growth was driven by the addition of the NGCS fleet that closed on May 1 as well as high return organic investments in newbuild horsepower. Notwithstanding the funding of $297 million for the NGCS acquisition, we maintained our sector-leading financial position, including a low quarter end leverage ratio of 3.3x, driven by the stability of our cashless and prudent acquisition financing. And we raised our quarterly dividend per share by 11% compared to the prior quarter and 27% compared to a year ago, all while maintaining robust dividend coverage of 3.4x. We also accelerated the repurchase of shares under our buyback authorization, given what we believe is a dislocation between our stock performance and the strength of our current business fundamentals and future expectations. Since the inception of our share repurchase program in April of 2023, we've repurchased 2.7 million shares of common stock at an average price of $18.84 per share for an aggregate of more than $51 million. I want to be clear, based on what we are experiencing in the market today in both our overall activity and bookings. We expect to grow our business and our profits through the rest of 2025, in 2026 and beyond. In short, we have confidence in what we're seeing in the market, confidence in our strategy and confidence in our operations and execution. Let me unpack each of these a bit. Confidence in the market. We expect growing LNG exports and power generation needs to create a significant demand pull for U.S. natural gas production and midstream infrastructure, including natural gas compression, across all major oil and gas basins. More to come on that in a bit. Confidence in our strategy. We've solidified our position as the compression partner of choice with our customers. We've built a modern, scalable and geographically diverse fleets, positioning us to meet this robust customer demand. Confidence in our operations and execution. Beyond our assets, we've invested in the right people, training and development, and processes and technology to deliver sustainable and attractive growth in earnings, free cash flow and returns to our shareholders. Next, I want to dive more into the market. Fundamentals for compression are strong, and the outlook supports our expectation for continued high levels of utilization of our existing fleets and growth opportunities for new build equipment. We expect strength and durability of natural gas demand growth, will provide a significant tailwind for our business well beyond 2025. LNG demand, exports to Mexico, power generation and the emerging opportunity presented by the onshoring of AI data centers are expected to require a significant call on U.S. natural gas production to the tune of an incremental 20 to 30 Bcf a day by 2030, depending upon the forecast. Simply put, we need all the gas we can get and to support this production, the U.S. will need to make substantial and broad-based investments to expand the natural gas transportation infrastructure. I want to expand a bit on the Permian, which is top of mind for many today. We operate more than 2.6 million horsepower in the Permian. Even in the most recent monthly forecast by Enverus, gas production volumes are anticipated to grow by more than 30% by 2030. This growth in excess of 30% compares to oil volume growth of 15% over the same time period. This dynamic of natural gas production outpacing oil production is one that is consistent with historical trends in other more mature associated gas plays like the Eagle Ford and the Bakken. We're rising GORs have led to natural gas volume growth long after oil volume peaks. The magnitude of the demand pool on gas production and midstream infrastructure, including gathering systems, processing plants, pipelines and compression cannot be satisfied by the Permian alone and will require investment across other major oil and gas shale basins. Against this backdrop, I believe Archrock's scale, broad geographic footprint and modern fleet are best positioned to meet this customer demand. This diverse and formidable foothold has taken decades to establish and build. A few highlights worth noting include that Archrock is the largest contract compression provider in the Eagle Ford. Archrock provides compression for some of the largest midstream companies in the Haynesville. And Archrock has a meaningful presence in the Marcellus and the Rockies. And now moving to our segments. Our contract operations fleet was fully utilized during the quarter, with utilization exiting the quarter at a rate of 96%. Based on what we see in the market today, we expect to be able to maintain a high utilization for the foreseeable future. Stop activity year-to-date has been at historically low levels and our compressors are staying on location longer. Based on our latest data from 2024, the average time in Archrock compressor stays on location is more than 6 years, representing a 52% improvement since 2021. This, we believe, is driven by a couple of factors. First, like the oil and gas business overall, the compression market is more stable and continues to be reinforced by capital discipline by our customers, by Archrock and by others. Second and more importantly, we standardized and high-graded our fleets. This includes the divestiture of horsepower that is nonstrategic or in nongrowth plays and our investments in large midstream horsepower and electric motor drive compression. As part of our ongoing asset management practices, on August 1, we completed the sale of approximately 155 compressors, comprising about 47,000 horsepower to Flowco for $71 million. This transaction is a win for both companies. The horsepower is deployed primarily in high-pressure gas lift applications a type of artificial lift used in the early stage of a well's life cycle and an area of expertise for Flowco. For Archrock, we acquired these assets as part of the TOPS transaction. Proceeds from the sale will help fund our new build equipment investments and reduce our net CapEx for the year. At quarter end, we had 4.7 million operating horsepower up from $4.3 million last quarter or up by 368,000 horsepower. Excluding active asset sales and the NGCS horsepower addition, we grew horsepower organically by approximately 47,000 horsepower in the quarter. As we look ahead, we have a substantial contracted backlog for the second half of 2025, and we are booking units for 2026 delivery to meet continued strong customer demand, including the Permian. For the 15th straight quarter, monthly revenue per horsepower moved higher to $23.75 during the second quarter of 2025, a new company record. And we achieved a quarterly adjusted gross margin percentage of 70% for the third quarter in a row. In the aftermarket services segment, we reported quarterly revenue of more than $60 million, a level we haven't achieved since 2018. This reflected high demand for service work and an increase in contract maintenance work as exceptional customer service is driving repeat business. In addition, we had a large engine sell order in our parts business. Second quarter AMS gross margin percentage remained at impressive levels, but was down sequentially given this higher mix of part sales during the quarter. Shifting to our capital allocation framework for 2025. We are committed to our prudent and returns-based approach. Yesterday, we narrowed our guidance for 2025 growth capital to between $340 million to $360 million of investment in our fleet from previously $330 million to $370 million. As a reminder, these investments are underpinned by multiyear contracts with blue chip customers. Beyond 2025, we see a continuation of attractive growth and the IRRs at which we expect to invest new build capital remain robust. Based on the continuation of the consistent and strong customer demand we see today, we expect 2026 growth CapEx to be not less than $250 million and within the range of investment levels that we have made annually since 2023 to support the infrastructure build- out we are experiencing in the U.S. in order to satisfy the growing demand for natural gas described earlier. As we invest in these compelling opportunities, we're committed to maintaining an industry-leading balance sheet. We plan to maintain a leverage ratio of between 3 to 3.5x. This underpins our ability to execute on our plans and opportunistically adapt to market conditions. At this level of capital expenditures, we anticipate continued growth in our earnings and free cash flow, both before and after dividends. We expect to continue to grow our dividends over time along with this growth in our profits and we will continue to use share buybacks as an additional tool for value creation for our shareholders. In summary, another quarter in the books reinforces our confidence in the near- and long-term outlook for Archrock. High confidence in our outlook underscore the decision to raise our 2025 adjusted EBITDA guidance, increase our quarterly cash dividend per share and accelerate share repurchases. And we believe the best is still ahead of us. With that, I'd like to turn the call over to Doug for a review of our second quarter performance and to provide additional color on our updated 2025 guidance.