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Industrials - Industrial - Machinery - NYSE - US
$ 13.4747
-2.13 %
$ 167 M
Market Cap
47.11
P/E
EARNINGS CALL TRANSCRIPT
EARNINGS CALL TRANSCRIPT 2021 - Q1
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Operator

Good day and thank you for standing by. Welcome to the Babcock & Wilcox Q1 2021 Earnings Conference Call. I would now like to hand the conference over to your speaker today, Megan Wilson, Vice President of Investor Relations. Please go ahead..

Megan Wilson

Thank you, Cindy and good morning everyone. Welcome to Babcock & Wilcox Enterprises’ first quarter 2021 earnings conference call. I am Megan Wilson, Vice President of Investor Relations at B&W.

Joining me this morning are Kenny Young, B&W’s Chairman and Chief Executive Officer and Lou Salamone, Chief Financial Officer, to discuss our first quarter results..

Kenny Young

Thank you, Megan. Good morning, everyone and thanks for joining our call. Our results for the first quarter of 2021 really reflect the ongoing drive, commitment and dedication by our employees, the strength of this management team and our turnaround efforts, including cost reductions and growth strategies.

All segments generated positive adjusted EBITDA and we ended the first quarter well despite continued adverse effects of COVID across each of the segments.

With our strategic growth initiatives over the last year, which included launching new segments, expanding our sales and service presence internationally, implementing additional cost saving and overhead reduction initiatives, significantly reducing our secured debt and our continued focus on smaller projects, we have positioned this company to successfully leverage the global demands while preserving cost structure flexibility.

Notably, we booked $645 million of new work in 2020 and continue this momentum with $170 million in bookings in the first quarter of 2021. We ended the first quarter strong with $535 million in backlog. And importantly, keep in mind that generally speaking, our backlog does not include shorter lead time parts and services.

As we have previously stated, we are reiterating our target of $70 million to $80 million of adjusted EBITDA in 2021 based on our current visit fleet.

Our first quarter performance puts us in a strong position to achieve our EBITDA objectives with consolidated adjusted EBITDA of $8.5 million, which is ahead of our internal plan and still takes into account the seasonal impacts of cold weather and customers’ reduced maintenance outages that generally impact the first quarter performance.

Our normal cyclical performance typically shows increasing profitability from Q1 to Q4 each year..

Lou Salamone Executive Vice President, Chief Financial Officer & Chief Accounting Officer

Thanks, Kenny. Our first quarter consolidated revenues were $168.2 million, that’s a 13% improvement compared to the first quarter of 2020. This is primarily due to a higher level of construction activity in the 2021 quarter.

Revenues in all segments were adversely impacted by COVID-19 as customers still delayed projects and travel restrictions, which limited the ability of our company’s workforce to be at job sites.

Our GAAP operating loss in the first quarter of 2021 improved to an operating loss of $6.5 million, which is inclusive of restructuring and settlement costs and advisory fees of $4.3 million. This is compared to an operating loss of $10.3 million in the first quarter of 2020.

Adjusted EBITDA was a positive $8.5 million compared to $1 million in the first quarter of 2020. The improvement was primarily due to higher construction volume, improved project execution and further positive impacts of the benefits of our overhead and G&A reductions as well as other cost savings and restructuring initiatives.

Turning to our cash flow, balance sheet and liquidity, cash flow from operations in the first quarter of 2021 was a use of $54 million, primarily as a result of the full repayment of our revolver using the proceeds of the equity and debt offerings, which I will discuss more fully.

As previously disclosed on February 12, we successfully closed the public common stock and senior notes offering. The offering included 29.5 million shares of common stock sold at a price of $5.85 per share for gross proceeds of approximately $173 million.

We also closed the senior notes offering of $125 million at an interest rate of 8.125%, which is due in 2026..

Kenny Young

Lou thanks. Well in closing, our ongoing turnaround efforts and strategic actions, including launching new segments, expanding internationally, implementing additional cost saving initiatives and significantly reducing our secured debt have provided a strong foundation for the continued execution of our growth strategy.

We ended the first quarter of 2021 well and ahead of our internal plan, giving us further confidence in our ability to achieve our adjusted EBITDA targets. Our strengthened balance sheet puts us in a favorable position to compete globally on mature and emerging technologies through both organic and inorganic opportunities.

We have leading edge decarbonization technologies and are seeing stronger opportunities emerging across our Renewable and Environmental segments. And looking forward, our focus is creating stronger shareholder returns as we continue executing our long-term plans to profitably grow our Renewable, Environmental and Thermal segments.

With that, I will turn the call back over to Cindy, who can assist for a few questions. Thanks..

Operator

Your first question comes from Rob Brown with Lake Street Capital..

Rob Brown

Good morning..

Kenny Young

Hi, Rob. Good morning..

Rob Brown

My first question is really on the pipeline of activity in, I guess, particularly the Renewable, Environmental.

How is that pipeline developing for the year? And have you seen that start to open up as the COVID restrictions lift? And I guess how do the projects sort of flow for the next sort of 12 months?.

Kenny Young

Yes. We are seeing – so as we often talk about 2 things; one, our activities on proposals and other presale activities have increased significantly over the past several months and continues to move in a very positive direction, which means those are follow-on proposals, those will follow on into bookings at a later date.

But we are seeing now that COVID is becoming either a little bit more neutralized or is – we are seeing a shift back towards normalization.

We are clearly not there yet, but we do see a number of projects that we had been working on last year emerging again and starting to come back up to the levels of proposal and legal activities and negotiations and the like.

So, we are seeing some positive movements globally on a lot of projects that we were working on previously that were delayed due to COVID that are now emerging. And those will be projects we look forward to booking later this year or into next year. As well as we are putting out aside, we are seeing, I would say, renew efforts on in the U.S.

now as well as internationally on interest in developing new waste energy or renewable energy technologies. And those range from bio-diesel type facilities to waste-to-energy type facilities for – or to steam generation facilities, but we are seeing a level increase in interest in developing further projects around the world.

And on top of that, maybe just to add, we are also seeing interest in the decarbonization aspect even of existing facilities and plants, both in the renewable and in thermal. But adding some sort of decarbonization technology that would capture the carbon from those facilities, we are starting to see interest there as well.

And we are in engineering discussions with several of our customers around the processes and procedures and technologies required to be able to do that. So, we have seen an increased interest in – globally in these areas, some of that because of COVID now lifting or some of the restrictions on COVID starting to lift.

We are also, I think, seeing some of that demand come from just renewed interest in renewable energies and obviously, carbon capture technologies from an environmental standpoint..

Rob Brown

Okay. Thank you.

And then you talked on the inorganic growth opportunities and you named some verticals, but could you give us a sense of sort of the verticals that you see with the most potential there and how that could impact the business?.

Kenny Young

Yes.

The best way for me to describe that as we mentioned in the presentation here this morning is we are looking at opportunities that both have maybe on smaller sized companies that have some very unique technologies to complement some of our core capabilities, whether that be in Renewable segment around the creation of different bio-fuels or syngases, which we think is interesting out there and seeing more and more of or technologies that, from a carbon capture perspective, that can complement technologies that we have created in that particular area that may be of interest that provide some unique capabilities to help drive a pure stream of CO2 from a sequestration standpoint and so on and so forth.

So, we were looking at a number of technologies. Some of those are smaller scale that we believe we can scale up in the marketplace. At the same time, we are looking to further some of the services and obviously, companies that may be a little bit more mature and sizable but that can broaden either internationally or globally as well as in the U.S.

Parts and services, and there are higher margin cash flow driven type capabilities and that can leverage our distribution and the management team that we put in place.

So, we are excited about some of those that can bolster revenues and top line and create cash flows and have immediate synergies and accretive to the bottom line as well as some of the smaller ones that are unique technologies that are in the leading edge, but we see a long-term capability to scale those and bring those to the international markets as well as the U.S..

Rob Brown

Thank you. I will turn over..

Operator

Your next question comes from Zane Karimi with D.A. Davidson..

Zane Karimi

Good morning gentlemen. Thanks for taking my question..

Kenny Young

Good morning Zane..

Zane Karimi

So first off here, you kind of commented on it earlier, but regarding the growth you are seeing in backlog, that segments or markets in particular, are you seeing the most upside opportunities from here in? And I know you don’t usually include services and parts that now you should typically capture in your backlog.

But could you provide an update around those markets in particular as well?.

Kenny Young

Yes, sure. Well, let me start with the latter, if I can, and then we can go to the former. But our parts and services business, which we – we often talk about publicly is a high margin business for us.

It’s usually a 30% to 35% gross margin platform for us during – obviously, during COVID, because a lot of the plants, whether they were industrial utility, a lot of those limited the amount of enhancements, maintenance outages and so on and so forth during that particular period.

But we have seen a return starting a little bit late in the fall last year. But as we got into Q1, we have seen a return of the parts business start to come back towards normal levels, if you will, which is very much a positive.

There was a little bit of delay on some parts in the early part of Q1 with some of the heavy weather outages that occurred where a lot of the plants had to obviously provide electricity and backfill for some of the Texas outages.

So, lot of the utility customers elected to hold off just a little bit longer, because of the need to have those plants running on that, but we have seen the pickup since returning closer to our normal levels.

The good news for us and we put this out in press releases as well too, is we talked about expanding our presence internationally in the Asia-Pacific region or the Mid East furthering in Europe and other aspects is we are starting to see stronger and stronger parts revenues coming in from those international operations as well that augment overall our revenues in the parts and services business.

So we have a very, very strong management team that runs that organization.

And as we mentioned, from the potential M&A standpoint, we are always on the lookout for companies or products or solutions that we think can complement our distribution infrastructure and that we can leverage to broaden and further those revenues as with typically very strong margins and strong cash flows.

It’s a 30-day process and typically or less on purchase order to cash on those. So, it’s a strong area for us to make sure that we keep our focus on. On the – as far as the backlog goes, again, as I mentioned, we are – what you see really around the world is this trend towards wanting to move into more renewable type fuels and renewable segments.

And these – as we talk about a lot, this is – the whole premise of this is looking at how the world responds to the greenhouse gas aspects, and a lot of that is derived from the fact that methane from waste or methane from landfills is a huge issue not only in the U.S. but also internationally.

Europe took a fairly strong position a few years back to set regulatory policy to basically eliminate most, if not all, landfill usage. And so there has been a drive as a result of trying to curb the methane coming from landfills.

And just to reiterate, and we talk about this, but I think it’s a very important point that methane from landfills is 80x worse on the greenhouse gas effect than CO2 is. So if we are going to, as a world address greenhouse gases and not address methane from landfills, we have completely missed the mark. We are not even playing in the game.

So there has been a big drive on that. We are starting to see in the U.S. more and more interest in looking at different ways to create different types of fuels, what are different types of outputs from waste, whether that be waste to energy or it could be waste biofuels or waste of various gases as well.

Some of that could be in biomass, some of that could be elsewhere. But we are starting to see those opportunities and developers are now looking more into the U.S. to be able to invest in this market as it relates to creating needs, different types of energy production. So we are seeing that lift here in the U.S. now on opportunities.

And those are – those developed – they are in early development phases. So those are years out from actually being implemented, but we are seeing that as well starting to occur. Internationally, as I said, Europe and the UK are very strong. We continue to see our backlog – our pipeline grow in those particular markets as well as in Southeast Asia.

If you look at Indonesia, Australia, even other parts of that region, China included, Japan, Korea, Vietnam are all looking more and more at waste-to-energy type technologies to fill the void on base load generation from a reduction of CO2 aspect as well as reducing the methane coming from landfills, which has a much bigger impact on the environment.

So we are seeing a lot of activities in all of those areas. And again, it leverages the fact that we – that built up a pretty solid expansion in those particular areas. And so we are seeing a lot of those opportunities come. Mid East is the same. Mid East, we are seeing a large increase in opportunities there.

There is – this is all public out there, you can find it. But UAE obviously has eyes to build one of the largest waste-to-energy facilities in the world. Obviously, in South, the largest one right now is in Southeast Asia on that front. But you are starting to see that kind of thought process on waste-to-energy.

Bio-fuels doesn’t scale that big, but we see an increase in winning bio-fuels from waste, which is a smaller scale application, but still equally as important. So we are looking at obviously all those areas, but we are starting to see a lot of opportunities grow worldwide as well as the U.S..

Zane Karimi

Thank you. That’s helpful for sure.

And then a little bit talking about COVID now and the implications that it’s passed for you guys? When you think of the COVID delays and disruptions, have you or do you quantify what you believe the impact had been so far? And are any of these segments more or less likely to see a rebound faster coming out of COVID?.

Kenny Young

We haven’t calculated specific numbers on the impact of COVID, because it’s so wide and so variable and some of its tangible and some of its not tangible in its description. And what I mean by that is, for example, some projects, as we talked about new projects, were delayed.

If you go back historically, they were delayed initially because the whole world shutdown, right, during COVID, and it was – people just were putting everything on hold. Everyone was trying to figure out the economy, trying to figure out what was happening. Borders were closed and the like.

So you had – worldwide, you had projects and other aspects that just were put on hold. As the summer progressed last year and moving into the fall, you started to see some of those like reengage and some of those new projects and bookings.

But just to give you an example, something that might take normally 2 weeks or 3 weeks to get a permit through, now it takes 3 months, something that where we or our client or the customer needed to send out various engineers into a country to do various drawings for the mechanical drawings or mechanical engineering aspect around the plant or they are a civil partner construction company, whoever that may be needed to go out and do the drawing.

It was impossible to get people in cross borders, even on country to country. Locally, those took weeks to get accomplished. So all of those processes just out of time, and it also extended out, obviously, the timing of those bookings and new projects. We also – we clearly saw projects that were deferred.

So projects that we were currently working on where a customer wanted to delay or defer those, some of those went into a shrink mode where, basically, the customer was saying, hey, we’re going to continue doing the work, but we’re going to do it on smaller groups, smaller numbers of people, so to try to limit the impact of COVID on the site.

But they can keep the project moving along." Others deferred those out. Other customers delayed their maintenance outages from a utility perspective. So we had a myriad of tangible and intangible impacts on COVID.

And as we’ve talked about publicly, coming out of it now or at least we’re starting to feel like we’re moving towards that direction globally, we’re seeing those – obviously, a lot of the projects return to normal levels. We still have several that are in COVID type separation where we’ve got to keep people separated.

We’ve got limited numbers of people that could be on elevators and so on and so forth. So those just add to more time and delays and revenues get delayed a little bit as well throughout those projects. But you’re starting to see things return.

You’re also seeing the customers plan outages by parts that they would normally do to prepare for those outages both this year and in the fall and then going into next year as well.

And then you’re starting to see a robust pipeline being built where a lot of our clients or customers now are developing – are making plans to upgrade or enhance their technology.

And with the construct that there is now a mounting environmental pressures worldwide on decarbonization, we’re seeing more and more activities as it relates to our customers that are looking at ways to upgrade the technology, looking at that possible replacement of technology and leverage as much as it can some of the decarbonization.

So we are just seeing that now. And some of that is in a post-COVID world. Some of that is in a new regulatory world that’s happening as we speak as well. So, just all those influences are out on our business. But as we said, we’ve got really good visibility now on the parts business.

Obviously, what projects that we’re working on and delivering this year from a revenue standpoint.

And we – this management team has done a great job of actually cutting costs and building up cost to – or not building up but cutting costs to actually leverage and be closer to known revenue, so that we can – we’re actually bringing more to the bottom line.

So both through the abilities to know what business that we’re highly confident that we’re going to book and is out there, knowing that we’ve cut the cost and overhead of the company, all of those things give us confidence and visibility into our projections and where we’re going to be..

Zane Karimi

Thank you very much for that..

Operator

And your next question comes from Alex Rygiel with B. Riley..

Alex Rygiel

Thank you. Good morning, gentlemen and very good quarter congratulations..

Kenny Young

Thanks, Alex..

Alex Rygiel

Couple quick questions here. Revenue was ahead in the first quarter.

Was any of this pull forward or is it all sort of mostly underlying demand and just kind of a return back to normal?.

Kenny Young

Not pull forward. It’s just return back to normal, where we had several projects that I think Lou mentioned in his remarks on – in construction in the U.S., a few that were performing stronger for us through better project management controls, which helps improve margins.

But the revenues and other aspects here were – none of them were pulled forward or from that standpoint. So better visibility as the parts business begin to pick back up a little bit, as we mentioned as well, too, right after the cold weather impacts of Texas, the parts business started to increase as well.

So we just – we had stronger revenue performance based on increased demand over where we thought we’re going to be..

Alex Rygiel

And as you look at your backlog, and you kind of answered this a little bit earlier on, but as you look at just your backlog today, how much confidence do you have in the time line of executing on this backlog and the profit forecast that’s embedded in that backlog?.

Kenny Young

It’s a great question, Alex. We have a lot of confidence now in looking at that visibility and the timing of it. There is always plus and minuses as we begin to perform the work related to that backlog that happened out there.

We think we’re getting better as a company internally, looking at our own forecasting elements and being able to look at each of those projects and how much cost will incur and how much of the revenues will recognize each month.

And the team does a really good job that outline that and trying to anticipate any – anything or activities that may delay us to 2 weeks here or a week there, that could be from – not our fault, could be customer’s issue, could be a third-party company issue or whatever the case may be.

But we try to factor those in into our revenues and forecast as well in our visibility, so that we’re looking at it from a more disciplined standpoint and not just a complete – well, we will recognize all that revenue in the third quarter without any material facts behind it.

So there is a tremendous amount of scrutiny that goes into those numbers, and there is a lot of people that review each of these projects on a weekly and monthly basis to analyze the forecast and the costs associated with those projects to give us better visibility as well as even on the parts side, which is not in the backlog, but a lot of scrutiny goes into that as well, too, as we’re looking at each of the forecast on a quarterly basis and how we’re performing on a daily basis on our parts and services aspect.

So there is a lot of work that goes into that to make sure that we’ve got good visibility into those numbers. There is always going to be pluses and minuses and positive and negatives that occur on the projects. And obviously, the more that we can eliminate or stop the negative aspects and increase the positive it’s a win for everyone.

But we managed that pretty tightly so that we’ve got all of that accounted for as it relates to our internal projections. And then obviously, that flows in how we’re going to manage cash flows or our cost side as well, so..

Alex Rygiel

Sure. And then turning over to M&A, you’re looking at some really attractive markets here and many others are looking at these as well.

Can you comment on seller expectations for valuation? And what your sort of value proposition is to execute on accretive deals here?.

Kenny Young

Well, I think there is a lot – there is a lot of opportunities out there. And again, as we talk about, we look at a twofold on that in that we – when you look at our overall underlying technology we have as a company on our renewable and environmental segment, and that goes across the board.

So in our renewables segment, there are obviously additives and other aspects we’d like to add to our overall technology portfolio that we think will make it more attractive for us to participate.

We look at going into renewable when we talk about waste to energy means a lot of things, right? It’s an easy topic, but there are a lot of technologies below that around it.

We have some of the best dinning grade technology in the world and that dinning grade technology is very efficient in burning and moving trash along the combustion process in order to maximize the steam or heat output from those facilities. There are little pockets of technology.

For example, they might pop up that are able to control some of the emissions associated with the combustion of that waste a little more effectively than we have, for example.

And we think when we look at technologies, we will look at ways and areas that we can augment what we have today and make it more robust, lower our cost structure from that standpoint, but that we think could complement long-term where we want to go.

As we talk about – and I’ll just focus on it for a second, as we talk about waste to energy in landfills, there is going to clearly be a need to consume and burn waste to create energy, no doubt. We’ve seen that worldwide. We’re one of the leaders in that worldwide today and have a very large presence internationally. U.S. has been limited.

It’s been limited for a number of reasons on the use of waste energy, but we do see that changing now, and we’re anxious to help move that along.

But one of the other areas that waste will be used for, obviously, is going to be creating different kind of bio-fuels and whether that’s bio-diesel or ethanol or in some cases, actually even the creation of hydrogen or utilizing that fuel to – or ways to create different types of pellet output to create different types of fuels that can be used in the production of hydrogen.

All of those areas are of interest to us. Some of that technology we sit around and some of the technology we’re looking at developing internally from an R&D perspective, but there is other companies out there that have some of those unique capabilities that we think we can scale up fairly rapidly in the space.

And so – and there is several of them out there that are looking to either for investments where we might take a minority position in those or where it might be – and obviously, through that, we will want to have some sort of license or market capabilities to bring the product into a revenue stream for us.

Others maybe something that we take a stronger ownership play in, where we can help further develop those technologies and actually own – physically own the IP associated with that. So we are looking at it from a renewable standpoint. We’re seeing also in the production of hydrogen.

We think hydrogen production longer term is going to be a very strong market as it relates to green and blue hydrogen energy, and we see those opportunities as well.

Our – as we mentioned in our presentation, our own chemical looping technology that we jointly created with Ohio State and Department of Energy is capable of actually producing hydrogen through the burning of say, natural gas, where you can on a small scale, it could be a very small facility or it could be a very large facility, but be able to burn that fuel source, create heat output at the same level as you were previously at the same time producing hydrogen as a fuel source.

So that double aspect around that capability, we think is very unique, and we’re starting to see a lot of interest in that technology. There are other smaller technologies that can complement some of that.

We might look at partnering up with companies that have some unique sequestration capabilities that would be use sources – uses of the CO2 that we capture. So we think all of those are very strong opportunities.

The other industry that we see interest around is the fact if you look at pet coke on, from an oil and petroleum standpoint, pet coke can be used in the burning in the chemical looped process.

And again, with the concept of creating that split stream out there, and that’s – those are going to be smaller scale type of facilities not on a super critical basis, but we think there is some interesting opportunities there as well worldwide as the oil and gas industry is looking to move into a green or blue energy direction, our technology fits very well within that industry.

And so there is always tuck-in aspects that we would like to add to that technology around it and improve our agent capabilities as we talked about on our RS technology, so just giving you some wide variety of things that we will be looking at there.

At the same time, though, there are larger companies that have services that we think are attractive to us where we can bring those companies into ours. And again, just reiterating the fact that this management team builds on the fact that we control the overhead and the cost structures of these companies.

But by acquiring some of these other companies that may have too high an overhead, but have high margin on services where we can cut the overhead out of those companies and bring those cash flows from those services right to the bottom line, those are attractive as well. And some of those will be in our thermal sector that we’re looking at.

Some of those are in our renewable sector as well that actually can maintain and provide services long-term to some of these plants.

And typically, when you talk about the services and parts, those are typically more recurring revenue type of opportunities and so those are exciting as well as we look at how we can manage those businesses, I think more effectively and bring back to the bottom line.

So I don’t know, Alex, if that helps, but they are some of the areas that we are looking at..

Operator

This ends our Q&A session. I would now like to turn the conference back to Megan Wilson..

Megan Wilson

Thank you for joining us. That concludes our conference call. A replay will be available for a limited time on our website later today..

Operator

Ladies and gentlemen, this concludes today’s conference call. Thank you for participating. You may now disconnect..

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