Jose A. Bayardo
Thank you, Rodney. As we respond to a softening global marketplace, we remain focused on positioning the company to capitalize on three longer-term trends that we believe will drive the industry over the next decade. One, offshore production supplanting U.S. unconventional resources as the dominant incremental source of global oil supply; two, accelerating demand for natural gas, driving meaningful growth from global unconventional gas resources; and three, the application of modern technologies to drive additional efficiencies in oilfield operations. Today, uncertainty is driving extreme fiscal austerity and a greater emphasis on operational efficiencies. Customers are pushing their procurement teams to negotiate better pricing, but are also looking to and willing to invest in solutions that improve recovery rates, lower costs, improve safety and reduce environmental footprint. In offshore markets, IOC and NOC customers remain confident in the mid- to longer-term outlook due to plateauing North American production, offshore breakeven that are sub-$50 per barrel and growing demand for cost-effective secure and reliable sources of energy. Existing projects continue to move forward at a healthy rate and as Rodney mentioned, our businesses are executing exceptionally well on our healthy backlog of offshore production-related projects, driving a 9% sequential and 6% year-over-year increase in revenues from offshore markets. Entering 2025, our customers had ambitious expectations regarding offshore FIDs, and we're planning to advance 13 FPSOs during the year. Supply constraints, including long lead times for gas turbines and compressors, congestion in shipyards, inflation and macroeconomic uncertainties have caused customers to delay certain FIDs. We are collaboratively sharpening our pencils to help offset project costs that have increased 10% to 15% through more standardization and better coordination of order timing. These actions would allow us to build the same structures for multiple projects on one production run, improving efficiencies, throughput and cost. While we've seen FIDs push to the right, to our knowledge none have been canceled and the mid- to longer-term outlook remains bright. Industry forecasts call for more offshore FIDs this year and see the potential for up to 50 FPSOs through the end of the decade. Additionally, demand related to LNG products remain solid as evidenced by a sizable award NOV received during the second quarter for a large submerged swivel and yoke system for a floating LNG project in Argentina. Delays of offshore production vessel deliveries continue to have knock-on effects in the drilling space, resulting in the near-term white space utilization challenge that our customers face over the next couple of quarters. As Rodney mentioned, our aftermarket business experienced a double-digit percent decrease in revenues, driven by a sharp reduction in spare part bookings during the second quarter. Customers tap the brakes while digesting the macroeconomic and geopolitical volatility and after some of them gave themselves a little breathing room after making extra purchases in the first quarter to get in front of higher tariff costs. While this pullback was sharper than anticipated, we expect a slight rebound in the third and fourth quarters. For the full year, we now expect our drilling equipment aftermarket businesses revenue will decline in the mid-teens. While near-term expectations have been tempered, our offshore drilling contractor customers remain confident in a meaningful recovery beginning in the second half of 2026 which would spur additional demand for spare parts, upgrades and other projects as rigs prepare to move on to new contracts. We're already seeing some signs of this through a growing number of projects we are planning to execute in the second half of the year. Consistent with the themes I previously mentioned, customers are investing in enhanced capabilities that drive operational efficiencies such as increasing hook load capacity and automation. There's a strong demand for deepwater rigs that have 7th-gen high- spec capabilities, including hook load capabilities of 1,400 tons or more and enhanced automation. We've had quite a few inquiries regarding additional hook load upgrades, and we recently commissioned four automation packages, including one with our robotic system that allows for completely hands-free tripping. We now have robotic systems active on 4 rigs with another 11 in the pipeline, and we continue to see growing interest from our customer base. International land markets remain mixed. In the Middle East, growing activity in the UAE, Qatar and Oman, along with demand for investments in infrastructure and capital equipment for the emerging unconventional basins are offsetting a stronger-than-anticipated deceleration in Saudi Arabia. The increasing number of rig suspensions in Saudi have led to a sharp decline in revenues for our shorter-cycle Energy Products and Services segment in the Kingdom. Similar to other markets, customers across the Middle East are looking for ways to become more efficient. While procurement groups are pushing on pricing through competitive tenders, they are more open to direct awards related to differentiated solutions that drive operational efficiencies such as the order we received for several surface automation systems that use our NOVOS Multi-Machine Control system and Kaizen drilling optimizer. Additionally, while NOCs are increasingly leaning on major OFS companies for lump sum turnkey work, those OFS companies are increasingly turning to NOV for access to our technology to lower their R&D expense and reduce investments in their asset base. Demand for capital equipment in the Middle East remains resilient as customers continue to invest in upgrading and modernizing drilling and completion equipment needed to efficiently develop unconventional resources. Investment in production infrastructure needed for future development also remains strong, driving healthy demand for our composite pipes and our chokes. Despite the potential for additional rig suspensions, continued investments in equipment and infrastructure, along with some early discussions related to upcoming tendering leave us optimistic for a potential rebound in activity by mid-2026. Similar to the Middle East, conditions in Latin America are also mixed. Mexico, Colombia and Ecuador remain challenged. In Argentina, we are seeing a slowdown in the mature conventional Comodoro field and a shift to the unconventional resources of the Vaca Muerta in the Neuquén Basin, which as Rodney touched on, required us to incur some charges as we repositioned our operations in the country. While the slowdown in the Comodoro has had a negative effect on our business over the past year, the longer-term outlook in Argentina remains very promising. We continue to see solid demand for our completion equipment and our downhole tools that drive efficiencies in extended lateral wells, which recently enabled our customer to achieve multiple drilling and completion records in Vaca Muerta. In North America, operators have moved decisively to curtail oil-directed activity, only partially offset by an increase in gas-directed drilling. Our business has outperformed changes in activity levels through continued market share gains but the environment is becoming more challenging with many North American service companies and operators implementing restructuring and cost savings programs. Land-focused oilfield service customers are limiting capital equipment purchases while running equipment extremely hard and cannibalizing stacked equipment as a source of spare parts, potentially setting up an inevitable replacement cycle. E&Ps are shrinking capital plans and are seeking pricing concessions, but they continue to prefer best-in-class products that drive efficiencies. They are designing well construction plans to achieve the lowest possible cost per foot. We've recently seen a push by multiple operators to reduce hole sizes and clearances to optimize hydraulics, drill faster, lower material costs and reduce environmental impact. This shift created opportunities for us to gain share with several customers who took the time to reassess the effectiveness of the components in their bottomhole assemblies. They recognize the superior performance of NOV's offerings and ultimately standardized on our kit. Customers are also looking to gain an edge through the use of better digital solutions. During the quarter, a major land drilling contractor decided to standardize on NOV's next-generation Electronic Drilling Recorder and Remote Drilling Monitoring applications powered by our Max platform, which will enable the customer to reduce complexity and offer advanced digital capabilities to its customers. As mentioned, the decline in oil activity in the U.S. has been partially offset by an increase in gas-directed drilling. As operators target deeper, higher-pressure wells with higher bottomhole temperatures, particularly in the Haynesville and Eagle Ford, we're seeing increasing adoption of our Drakon thermal insulated pipe coating and our Tundra Max mud chillers, each of which significantly enhanced performance and longevity of bottomhole assemblies. While our latest generation of performance-enhancing technologies are commanding solid demand with accretive margins, the market environment has grown more price competitive. Over time, our better technologies have taken share from competitors, and some are now using price concessions to try to win back work in a market where tariffs are increasing product costs. Our team has done an outstanding job managing through the complexities of the continuously changing tariff policies, and we continue to do all we can to mitigate as much of the roughly $300 million in annual tariff costs that we would incur if we sat still. As Rodney mentioned, we recognized a total of $11 million in tariff expense during the second quarter with roughly 70% of this expense hitting our Energy Products and Services segment. We expect tariff expense to step up over the next 2 quarters and level off between $25 million to $30 million during the fourth quarter. We'll continue to identify additional measures to mitigate these costs or pass them on to our customers, but this will continue to be challenging given the current market dynamics. In order to offset these margin pressures, we're ramping up efforts to drive internal efficiencies and reduce costs across NOV. We've identified over $100 million of savings that we expect to capture by the end of 2026 through: one, simplifying, standardizing and centralizing business processes. Since late last year, we have been developing plans to redesign certain business processes across NOV with a goal of lowering costs, reducing time and further improving our customers' experience doing business with NOV. This will be a multiyear effort, but we have begun executing process changes and expect to begin realizing savings from this initiative later this year. Two, strategic sourcing. Tied into the efforts to standardize our processes, we are working to further leverage our spend across the organization to maximize our economies of scale through high-quality, low-cost sourcing, which is shifting under evolving trade policies. Three, business and facility consolidations. During the second quarter, we began consolidating our completion tools operation into our Downhole Tools business, and we merged our Grant Prideco and XL Systems conductor pipe casing and connector businesses into a new unit called Tubular Products. The consolidations allow us to better share resources between product lines and drive efficiencies and cost savings. Within other business units, we're consolidating facilities to unlock further efficiencies from lower overhead, rent and utilities and better utilization of our asset base. Four, exiting product lines in certain markets. We're exiting product lines in markets in which we do not see a near-term path to generating an appropriate rate of return. While exiting markets will reduce total revenue and EBITDA, these actions will be accretive to NOV's margins and return on capital. We also continue to work on plant-level operational efficiencies with a relentless focus on operational excellence. For example, in one of our plants, we're investing in an initiative where we expect to take our manufacturing cycle time down from 60 days to less than 20, which should lower our cost, free up working capital and allow us to be more responsive to demand. Near term, it will be difficult for these actions to outpace the effect of lower activity, higher tariffs and other inflationary costs, but over time, our efforts to better harness the power of NOV's platform will drive higher profitability, allow us to continue to generate significant levels of free cash flow and further improve responsiveness to our customers. Technology and innovation remain core to NOV and the actions we are taking will increase collaboration across our businesses, enabling us to better leverage the unique combination of capabilities and data which reside under NOV's roof. I'm confident our efforts will accelerate innovation and pioneer technologies to address the most pressing needs of our customers. As Clay mentioned, NOV's future is compelling. The incredibly smart, talented and dedicated people of NOV are continuously driving improvements across the organization, positioning us exceptionally well to capitalize on longer-term trends that will require more of NOV's technology and services to develop affordable, secure, reliable and cleaner sources of energy to power the world. With that, we'll open the call to questions.