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Archrock, Inc. (AROC)

Q1 2012 Earnings Call· Thu, May 3, 2012

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Transcript

Operator

Operator

Good morning. Welcome to the Exterran Holdings, Inc. and Exterran Partners L.P. First Quarter 2012 Earnings Conference Call. At this time, I'd like to inform you this conference is being recorded. [Operator Instructions] Earlier today, Exterran Holdings and Exterran Partners released their financial results for the first quarter ended March 31, 2012. If you have not received a copy, you can find the information on the company's website at exterran.com. During this call, the companies will discuss some non-GAAP measures in reviewing their performance such as EBITDA as adjusted, EBITDA as further adjusted, gross margin, gross margin as adjusted and distributable cash flow. You will find definitions and a reconciliation of these measures to GAAP measures in the summary pages of the earnings release and on the company's website at exterran.com. During today's call, Exterran Holdings may be referred to as Exterran or EXH, and Exterran Partners as either Exterran Partners or EXLP. Because EXLP's financial results and position are consolidated into Exterran, the discussion of Exterran will include Exterran Partners unless otherwise noted. Also, the term international will be used to refer to Exterran's operations outside the U.S. and Canada, and the combination of U.S. and Canada will be referred to as North America. I want to remind listeners that the news release issued this morning by Exterran Holdings and Exterran Partners, the company's prepared remarks on this conference call and the related question-and-answer session include forward-looking statements. These forward-looking statements include projections and expectations of the company's performance and represent the company's current beliefs. Various factors could cause results to differ materially from those projected in the forward-looking statements. Information concerning the risk factors, challenges and uncertainties that could cause actual results to differ materially from those in the forward-looking statements can be found in the company's press release, as well as in the Exterran Holdings' annual report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2011, Exterran Partners' annual report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2011, and those set forth from time to time in Exterran Holdings' and Exterran Partners' filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission, which are currently available at exterran.com. Except as required by law, the companies expressly disclaim any intention or obligation to revise or update any forward-looking statements. Your host for this morning's call is Brad Childers, President and CEO. I would now like to turn the call over to him. Mr. Childers, you may begin your conference.

D. Childers

Management

Thank you. Good morning, everyone. With me today is Bill Austin, CFO of Exterran Holdings; and David Miller, CFO of the Exterran Partners level. Overall, it was a good quarter for us, both operationally and financially. We generated better-than-expected operating results. We increased our backlog of new business significantly and we reduced our debt levels. We generated these results by focusing on the 3 major items that I mentioned in our previous earnings call would be our areas of focus. First, enhancing our cash flow and profitability by taking costs out of our operations, by continuing to reduce and rightsize our SG&A, by increasing pricing what make sense. Second, consolidating and simplifying our businesses to make us faster and more efficient. Finally, by expanding in our active growth markets. Although we're just getting started, I believe the actions we're taking are positively impacting our performance as demonstrated by our results for the quarter. I want to spend a few minutes highlighting some of the initiatives that have contributed to this positive impact. Starting with our operating cost reduction initiatives, we focused on improving our contract operations and aftermarket services costs. We did this by more actively managing the utilization of our employees in these operations, which led to improved labor efficiency and lower costs. Additionally, we enhanced the controls over our lube oil usage, which resulted in a reduction in the amount of lube oil we used and helped to offset the impact of high lube oil prices. To further improve our cost structure, we continued to examine the infrastructure we used to manage our business to find areas where we can further reduce costs. In the first quarter, we made an additional consolidation of regional management teams in North America and closed the 3 international locations we discussed last…

William Austin

Management

Thanks, Brad. To summarize, we are encouraged with the progress we've made in the first quarter of 2012. We had better-than-expected operating results and an increased backlog of new business. Importantly, our financial position improved significantly as a result of positive developments during the quarter. While we did have certain onetime benefits and offsets in the first quarter, we are set up for relatively similar operating results in the second quarter to be followed by an improving overall trend in the second half of the year, driven by the execution of our backlog of new business as well as cost improvements. Overall, I believe that we are somewhat ahead of our plans, although there will be some lumpiness in our results moving forward based on the nature of our business. Now I will provide a summary of these results. We generated EBITDA as adjusted of some $96 million for the first quarter as compared to $119 million in the fourth quarter of 2011. EBITDA, as adjusted for the quarter, excluded the $37.6 million in cash proceeds from the sale of our joint venture assets in Venezuela. Our North American contract operations revenues was $154 million in the first quarter, somewhat above our guidance range, and gross margin was 51% for the fourth quarter, that's up from 49% both in the fourth quarter of last year and the full year 2011. As Brad mentioned earlier, our performance benefited from our February price increase, profit improvement initiatives, including for what he described and what we described as workforce utilization in Lubol management [ph]. North American operating horsepower declined by some 6,000 horsepower during the first quarter, as growth in the liquids-rich and oil plays was somewhat offset by the declines in the conventional, more dry gas areas. North American operating and horsepower…

D. Childers

Operator

Thanks, Bill. My summary for this call, we had a good quarter. We addressed some of the challenging issues during the quarter and we begun to see contributions from our various performance improvement initiatives. Throughout the year, we're going to continue to focus on improving our margins across all our product lines, growing our operating horsepower North America contract operations, although we are concerned about the impact of the natural gas prices in the near term, building our international backlog, reducing our debt to EBITDA ratio at the Exterran Holdings level and simplifying our company in terms of our business processes, product and service lines, and support infrastructure. We're really encouraged by the initial progress we've made in the implementation of our initiatives and we will continue our efforts to improve our overall performance. We look forward to providing further updates on our upcoming earnings calls. Operator, at this point, we'd like to open the call up for questions.

Operator

Operator

[Operator Instructions] Our first question is from Mike Urban from Deutsche Bank.

Michael Urban

Analyst · Deutsche Bank

A quick kind of housekeeping item on the 10-Q filing and some of the items you went through. Just to understand, I mean, is this just a categorization issue? Is there any impact on cash flow, covenants, any -- I mean, anything that I'm missing here?

William Austin

Management

Mike, good question, maybe we could put this to bed. It's fairly narrow, I tried to get into the fact that one is a misclassification from investing to financing and that moves some numbers down, it doesn't change any of the cash flows none of the consolidated. Nothing that's on the big picture what EXH or EXLP looks at. The other is in the guarantor note. And the reason you have to put a guarantor note, because we have debt instruments that are out there that have guarantees from various of our subsidiaries. You have to have a statement in the note of cash flows and balance sheets and some other financials in some of those subsidiaries, both at the parent and some of the operating subsidiaries. As we looked at that in our review, we looked at it and we realized that some of those things have to change, and we are looking at the controls and we're looking at making those changes. But all in all, the numbers on a consolidated basis don't change.

Michael Urban

Analyst · Deutsche Bank

So basically the number should've been in one line and it was another and it nets to 0, more or less?

William Austin

Management

Yes.

Michael Urban

Analyst · Deutsche Bank

Okay. And, okay, shifting over to the business, it certainly makes sense to note some caution with respect to gas prices and where they are, and the potential impact. Is that something more perspective? In other words, given the low gas prices, we should expect to see some impact or is it something that you've already seen in the way of shut-ins or reduced activity in some of the dry gas basins and that's been -- we saw some impact of that in Q1?

D. Childers

Operator

Sure. We actually haven't seen much impact of shut-in activity in Q1. The point is, and as you said, Mike, we just have to raise the caution that there's uncertainty right now looking out as to how long this low gas price is going to last and what the reaction will be by our customers in the back half of the year, especially. But with that caution flag raised, we are not withstanding working to deliver horsepower growth. And my expectation is that we are flat to growing in 2012 based on the activity levels that we're seeing currently.

Michael Urban

Analyst · Deutsche Bank

Okay. Even if you do see some level of shut-ins or reduced dry gas activity?

D. Childers

Operator

Yes. But the extent is to be determined and that's the point about the uncertainty in the market.

Michael Urban

Analyst · Deutsche Bank

Okay. And on the cost and margin front in North America, I see only a partial quarter of the price increase. At this point, as we're in the second quarter here now, do you have or could you give us a sense of how much of the book is rolled to the higher pricing and how much of an impact did that have in the first quarter?

D. Childers

Operator

Sure. So the price increase is fully in. It was very effectively implemented, we got very -- no real resistance or push back, so the price increase has stuck. And on an annualized basis, it's going to increase our revenue on a full horsepower basis by about 2%. And we saw a little more than half of that in the first quarter.

Michael Urban

Analyst · Deutsche Bank

Okay, very helpful. And then it was great to see some recovery on the Venezuela JVS. What was -- I guess, apples-to-apples, what was the book value those assets net to Exterran? I'm just trying to get a sense for what you got relative to the book value of the assets on an apples-to-apples basis.

D. Childers

Operator

We wrote off -- yes, I think what we got is we wrote off about $91 million in 2009 when those assets were nationalized, Mike.

Michael Urban

Analyst · Deutsche Bank

Okay. And the wholly-owned assets, what does the book value of those or what did you write off on those when nationalized?

D. Childers

Operator

Yes. We wrote off about $380 million when those assets were nationalized at a total dollar level. But we also had a $50 million recovery for an insurance policy that we had in a place applicable to expropriation. So the net hit to us was $330 million.

Operator

Operator

Our next question comes from Joe Gibney from Capital One.

Joseph Gibney

Analyst · Capital One

Just a couple of quick ones for me. Just, Bill, on the G&A side, you referenced moving down to the low $90 million range in 2Q in line with previous expectations, does it head lower in the back half of the year? I'm just trying to calibrate a little bit on your expectations for tightening up cost on the G&A side.

William Austin

Management

I like the caption, we expect progress throughout the year, how's that?

Joseph Gibney

Analyst · Capital One

All right, fair enough. And, Brad, just one for you. Just a broader perspective on the FPSO space and how Exterran fits in, how you want to compete. You referenced your holding plans to build in Brazil understandable? I'm just trying to understand your perspective on where Exterran fits into the FPSO side of the equation from a fabrication standpoint.

D. Childers

Operator

Sure. So on that particular decision, we just determined with what we have going on in our portfolio, potentially not a bad investment but not the right investment for us right now. So that was the decision on that particular investment. But in the FPSO market overall, we continue to service that market out of our Singapore facility. And because of local content requirements in Brazil, we'll be targeting other markets where we still see growth in that market, including West Africa. So the decision is limited to pulling back on the investment that we were -- that we had put in place to make in Brazil.

Joseph Gibney

Analyst · Capital One

Okay, fair enough. And just on the North America contracts side, just one follow-up question. You referenced despite some dry gas sort of cautionary flags, you still expect flat growth in horsepower. If you could, just what is your horsepower mix on a sort of dry gas versus liquids basis, percentage of the fleet just sort -- further kind of understand your mix currently.

D. Childers

Operator

Sure. This is an estimate, but we think we are about 70% dry gas and 30% more liquids based on applications currently.

Operator

Operator

Our next question is from Sharon Lui from Wells Fargo.

Sharon Lui

Analyst · Wells Fargo

Just a couple of housekeeping questions for EXLP. In terms of growth CapEx, what is the budget for 2012 for the Partnership?

D. Childers

Operator

With the drop down, it's around $40 million to $45 million.

Sharon Lui

Analyst · Wells Fargo

Is that just maintenance or is that...

D. Childers

Operator

Growth CapEx?

Sharon Lui

Analyst · Wells Fargo

Yes.

William Austin

Management

Well, that was maintenance CapEx.

D. Childers

Operator

Let's see, Sharon, can I get back to you with that number?

Sharon Lui

Analyst · Wells Fargo

Sure, no problem. Do you have the debt balance for the Partnership?

William Austin

Management

I think, we recorded at the end of -- it was $635.5 million.

Sharon Lui

Analyst · Wells Fargo

Okay. And I guess in terms of your exposure to specific producers, would you be able to quantify, I guess, how much does Chesapeake account for your contract compression business given that they are planning to significantly reduce, I guess, rig count activity?

D. Childers

Operator

Yes. We do not have a significant amount of business with Chesapeake.

William Austin

Management

And Sharon, our growth CapEx is in the $75 million to $80 million range for 2012.

Sharon Lui

Analyst · Wells Fargo

And that's for the Partnership?

William Austin

Management

Yes.

Sharon Lui

Analyst · Wells Fargo

Okay. And do you know what was the expenditures during the first quarter?

William Austin

Management

Just above $25 million, about $26 million.

Operator

Operator

Our next question comes from Daniel Burke from Johnson Rice.

Daniel Burke

Analyst · Johnson Rice

A quick one before I forget about it. Bill, I think you referenced a couple of items in the international contract result in Q1, any sense of the magnitude of those?

William Austin

Management

We have a sale, it was in West Africa to a good customer that had a right to buy it. And that sale from a cash basis will come in, in the low tens of millions of dollars. From a benefit from us from an EBITDA standpoint, it was probably in the $4 million to $5 million range.

Daniel Burke

Analyst · Johnson Rice

And to be clear, I'll see those 2 figures in the revenue and gross margin at the segment level international contract?

William Austin

Management

You will.

D. Childers

Operator

The sale of the property, Daniel, will not be in the segment.

William Austin

Management

Great. That's right, that's in the PP&E, I'm sorry. You'll see the EBITDA though in the gross margin.

D. Childers

Operator

Yes, the net gain or loss in the sale will be included in other income.

Daniel Burke

Analyst · Johnson Rice

Okay, all right. And then on the international contract backlog side, in terms of timing of having that -- those dollars hit the P&L, what's the horizon? I mean, by Q1 of '13 should that $60 million figure be fully rolled in or is the horizon stretching out a little bit farther?

William Austin

Management

No. Almost all of that $60 million is going to be implemented this year. So we should have the full run rate of that in the, certainly, by the fourth quarter.

Daniel Burke

Analyst · Johnson Rice

Okay, great. And then last one for me, actually it refers right back to, I think, the last question, so it's been covered a bit here. But given the context that the expectation in NACO is to maintain or see a slight gain in operating horsepower. So maybe just a hair softer than last quarter's expectations, any change to your build plans internally for this year?

D. Childers

Operator

Not yet. And the basic reason is where we're building are for parts of the fleet that are primarily going into the growth areas, which are driven by the rich plays and liquids infrastructure buildout that we're really seeing. And in those categories for that equipment, we remain very highly utilized. So it hasn't yet impacted our build program.

Operator

Operator

Our next question comes from Blake Hutchinson from Howard Weil.

Blake Hutchinson

Analyst · Howard Weil

Just talking about fabrication first, I mean, such taking over in terms of prominence at least with that sort of backlog build. What type of embedded pricing improvement do you have or pricing push have you put into North American-based operations on the processing and treatment side thus far?

D. Childers

Operator

Well, we're not going to talk about pricing specifically. But given the tightness in the market and the capacity in the market, we found room and we are pushing pricing up, and I think that you should continue to look as we get that recently-contracted projects working through our backlog throughout the year, you're going to see steadily improving margins in that segment as well...

Blake Hutchinson

Analyst · Howard Weil

Okay, okay. So that was going to be my -- really, my next question is despite the fact that we've shifted, the backlog has shifted more towards North America. Whatever pricing you put through, you feel like you take most, if not all, of that home, so maybe we have a couple 100 basis points of opportunity to push even though that North America margins have been, up until this point, inferior to international margins.

D. Childers

Operator

Sure. The point's valid. In the mix of the backlog, the North American portion in compression, in particular, has certainly increased compared to international. But for North America compression, as well as the processing treatment correction equipment, we've continued to see ability to move margin forward and that's despite some of that headwind that we get in the mix coming off of international.

Blake Hutchinson

Analyst · Howard Weil

And we're not missing anything on the cost side that would hurt that possibility here in North America?

D. Childers

Operator

No.

Blake Hutchinson

Analyst · Howard Weil

Okay. And then, Bill, I guess with regard to the international compression margin guidance, understanding there was some onetimers in Q1, is a retreat to the mid-50s kind of more symptomatic of a lower revenue run rate? And then the international revenue that you had over the second half of the year is accretive to kind of that mid-50s margin guidance and we keep -- maybe considered something a little higher than natural margin of that business going forward?

William Austin

Management

Boy, that's a big question, Blake. We did try to take out the effect of the sale in the first quarter. In giving that guidance, I wanted to get into that mid-50s, but we have lots of initiatives to work that one hard, let's put it that way. In the backlog that we're getting is good, high-quality backlog in the international contract side.

Operator

Operator

[Operator Instructions] Our next question is a follow-up from Mike Urban from Deutsche Bank.

Michael Urban

Analyst · Deutsche Bank

Mostly housekeeping items. What is your depreciation DNA guidance for the year?

William Austin

Management

Mike, you may get me to relook at some papers. I don't think we gave any depreciation guidance, but let me -- I may have to get -- typically, we have some increases based on the CapEx number, but I'll have to give you a little more -- it's a little bit above where we were. Yes, we're showing increasing a little bit over last year. Sorry, I'll try to get a little more specific on that in the next day or 2.

Michael Urban

Analyst · Deutsche Bank

Okay. And the only other thing I had was, you talked about how much of the price increase you saw in the quarter. The other part of the margin equation, I guess, is some of the cost and efficiency initiatives you talked about, better employee utilization, cost management and things that you've implemented in terms of lube oil and other costs. Did you get a full benefit from that in the first quarter or is there still a little bit more benefit to come from those initiatives as well?

D. Childers

Operator

We did get some benefit from that in the quarter. We saw some nice moves on, in reductions in our labor materials cost. But yes, we do believe we have more to come from some of those improvements, initiatives that we have in place. So we got some, we're actually really encouraged by seeing that some of the work we're doing is coming through the numbers. And yes, we have more to go.

Operator

Operator

We have no further questions at this time. I would like to turn the call back over to Brad Childers for closing remarks.

D. Childers

Operator

Thank you, everyone, for participating in our first quarter earnings call, and we look forward to talking to you again next quarter. Thanks very much.

Operator

Operator

Thank you. Ladies and gentlemen, this concludes Exterran Holdings and Exterran Partners first quarter 2012 earnings conference call. Thank you, for participating. You may now disconnect.