Richard F. Ambury
Thanks, Jeff, and good morning, everyone. For the third quarter, our home heating oil and propane volume decreased by 1.5 million gallons or 3.8% to 36 million gallons as the additional volume provided from acquisitions was more than offset by warmer weather, net customer attrition and other factors. In terms of weather conditions, temperatures for the fiscal 2025 third quarter were 2% warmer than last year and almost 20% warmer than normal during this non-heating season period. Our product gross profit decreased by $3 million or 4% to $72 million due to both a lower home heating oil and propane volumes sold as well as lower per gallon margins driven in part by the mix of volume associated with recent acquisitions. We realized a combined gross profit from service and installation of $14 million or $600,000 higher than the prior year's comparable quarter as we continued to focus on improving service and controlling expenses. Delivery, branch and G&A expenses increased by $4.3 million year-over-year, reflecting additional operating costs associated with acquisitions of $5.8 million, partially offset by lower costs in the base business of $1.5 million or approximately 1.6%. Depreciation and amortization rose by $2 million, and net interest expense increased by about $1 million year-over-year. These changes were largely due to the impact of recent acquisitions. We posted a net loss of $16.6 million in the third quarter of fiscal 2025 or $5.6 million more than the prior year period, reflecting a $6.5 million increase in our adjusted EBITDA loss, higher depreciation and amortization expense of $2 million and higher acquisition- related financing costs of $1 million, partially offset by a $2.3 million greater income tax benefit and a noncash favorable change in the fair value of derivative instruments of $1.6 million. The adjusted EBITDA loss increased by $6.5 million to $10.6 million as the additional positive adjusted EBITDA from acquisitions and lower operating costs in the base business was more than offset by lower home heating oil and propane volumes in the base business and slightly lower per gallon home heating oil and propane per gallon margins. The positive adjusted EBITDA realized from acquisitions during this historical loss quarter was due in part to our recent propane acquisitions. Now turning to the results for the first 9 months of fiscal 2025. Our home heating oil and propane volume increased by 28 million gallons or 12% to 263 million gallons, reflecting colder temperatures and the additional volume provided from acquisitions more than offsetting net customer attrition and other factors. Temperatures in our geographic areas of operation fiscal year-to-date were 8% colder than the prior year period, but still 8% warmer than normal. Our product gross profit rose by $55 million or 13% to $480 million due to an increase in the volume of home heating oil and propane sold, higher home heating oil and propane per gallon margins and a slight increase in gross profit from other petroleum products. As previously mentioned on prior calls, we've successfully improved our service and installation business, which contributed to an increase in gross profit of $4.8 million year-to-date with $2.7 million attributable to acquisitions and $2.1 million due to initiatives in the base business. Delivery, branch and G&A expenses rose by $31.5 million year-over-year, of which $10.6 million was attributable to our weather hedging program. As a reminder, in fiscal 2025, we recorded an expense of $3.1 million under our weather hedge compared to a benefit of $7.5 million recorded in fiscal 2024, reflecting weather conditions in both periods. Aside from this, recent acquisitions accounted for an increase in expenses of $18.7 million year-over-year while expenses in the base business rose by just $2.2 million or 0.7%. Depreciation and amortization rose by $2.6 million, and net interest expense increased by $1.4 million. These changes were largely attributable to the impact of recent acquisitions. We posted net income of $102 million year-to-date or $32 million more than the prior year period, largely due to an increase in offsetting higher income tax expense of $12 million and other factors. Adjusted EBITDA rose by $28 million to $170 million, primarily due to a $21 million increase in adjusted EBITDA in the base business and a $17 million increase in adjusted EBITDA from acquisitions, partially offsetting a $10.6 million increase in expense relating to the company's weather hedge contracts, which apply to both the base business and the recent acquisitions, as I just previously discussed. And with that, I'd like to turn the call back to Jeff.