Brady M. Murphy
Thank you, Kurt. Good morning, everyone, and welcome to TETRA's Second Quarter 2025 Earnings Call. Ill summarize some highlights for the quarter and provide an update on our strategic initiatives before turning the call over to Elijio to provide more details on our segments and update on our cash flow and balance sheet. Our employees delivered an exceptional second quarter. And across our current business reporting segments, a record-setting adjusted EBITDA for the first 6 months of 2025. For the quarter, we achieved an adjusted EBITDA of $35.9 million, with adjusted EBITDA margins of 20.6% and base business free cash flow of $37.4 million, all above our expectations. The $68.1 million adjusted EBITDA for the first 6 months of 2025 is a record for our current segments and $3.1 million above the upper range of guidance we provided in our first quarter 2025 earnings. This was largely driven by a record level of deepwater activity for TETRA in the first half of 2025, including 25 deepwater jobs in the first quarter alone and the completion of the 3-well Neptune project in the second quarter. The team delivered an 11% sequential increase in revenue, which included another strong Northern Europe industrial chemical season. Year-over-year, total revenue was up 1% but adjusted EBITDA increased by $5.2 million or 17%. This performance was achieved despite a 16-month decline in the U.S. rig count and lower oil prices, which is due to overall market uncertainty. Compared to the first quarter of 2025, Completion Fluids & Products adjusted EBITDA margins increased by 100 basis points to 36.7% for 35.7%, supported by the CS Neptune jobs previously mentioned. Year-over-year, Industrial Chemicals grew by 5.5% as it continues to outgrow both U.S. and the global GDP. The long-term outlook for Completion Fluids & Products business remains strong, driven by our solid deepwater market positions in key areas such as Gulf of America, Brazil and the North Sea, along with continued exceptional performance in our industrial chemicals business reaching a new high for the tenth consecutive quarter. The strength of our market position is further demonstrated by a new multi-well, multiyear ultra-deepwater 20K completions award in the Gulf of America. Although the pace of deepwater well completions can vary quarter-to-quarter, the overall annual trend is upward, as shown by a projected 10-year revenue high for this segment in 2025. Revenue for water and flowback services remained flat compared to the first quarter and decreased 10% year-over-year outperforming U.S. frac activity, which declined 14% quarter- over-quarter and 26% year-over-year. Despite declining U.S. land activity, our automated technology fleet included automated sandstorm and automated drill out is effectively fully utilized and is being recognized for reducing manpower and removing employees from the well-site red zone. Although U.S. land drilling and completion activity has been declining, produced water volumes continue to increase and is expected to increase well into the future. TETRA achieved an important milestone for the quarter, recording our first revenue for Permian Basin produced water desalination from our commercial Grasslands pilot operation. Although a small contribution for the quarter it represents the successful execution of our TETRA Oasis solution. Water & Flowback adjusted EBITDA margins of 10% declined from 13% in the first quarter, however, this result included nearly $2 million of costs not expected to recur in the third quarter, such as inventory write-offs and trailing exit costs for a small subsegment of the business. Adjusting for the nonrecurring cost, adjusted EBITDA margins would have been flat from the first quarter. We'll continue to adjust our cost structure and close underperforming service lines in the U.S. onshore business to protect our margins and maximize free cash flow. Going forward, there remains some uncertainty in U.S. completion activity. But the demand for our automated technology, the focus on produced water treatment and recycling and a favorable mix of super majors and large independent operators will help improve margins for the rest of the year. Moving to our strategic growth initiatives. We continue to make significant progress throughout the second quarter. On the electrolyte front, energy storage power capacity is expected to surpass 45 gigawatts by 2025, representing a 76% increase from 2024 levels and growing by 25% annually over the next decade according to the U.S. Energy Information Administration. This growth highlights the vital role that utility-scale energy storage will play an improving grid stability as the exponential rise in overall demand strains our systems.