Earnings Labs

Energy Fuels Inc. (UUUU)

Q1 2023 Earnings Call· Tue, May 9, 2023

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Transcript

Operator

Operator

Good morning. My name is Brain, and I will be your conference operator today. At this time, I would like to welcome everyone to the Energy Fuels’ First Quarter 2023 Conference Call. All lines have been placed on mute to prevent any background noise. After the speaker’s remarks, there will be a question and answer session. [Operator Instructions] Thank you. Mr. Chalmers, you may begin your conference.

Mark Chalmers

Analyst

Thank you, Brian and good morning or good afternoon, depending on where you are joining this conference call from. Thank you for joining the Q1 2023 conference call and webcast today. As always, we are very excited to discuss what has been a very busy kick off in Q1 to 2023, as well as to also update you on the significant accomplishments we continue to make. For those that cannot join the call today, we will still have the replays of this presentation available for two weeks on our website, either later today or tomorrow. Every quarterly call I comment on the fact that we are making extraordinary progress on many fronts, and certainly this quarter is no exception if you have read our Q1 result press release. I believe it is very appar’ent that energy fuels has emerged as a clear leader in U.S. critical mineral production at a time when this has never been more important. Many of you have also heard me make the comments that we will always be aggressive, but not reckless, and I believe that Q1 is a testament to this. While we have made significant strides to further strengthen our uranium and rare earth production capabilities, along with our balance sheet in ways that I believe are value discipline in staying several steps ahead of our competition. I also think the title of our quarterly press release speaks volumes, net income of 114 million and 143 million in working capital, nearly 20 million of uranium vanadium sales, and the commencement of development of rare earth separation capabilities in Utah. Today, I will elaborate on these accomplishments during the quarter and provide some details on what I believe the rest of the year looks like and it is also pleasing to say that we…

Operator

Operator

Thank you. [Operator Instructions] Your first question comes from Heiko Ihle with H.C. Wainwright. Please go ahead.

Heiko Ihle

Analyst

To answer your earlier question to yourself, the stock closed at 655, so up 8.5%. Company realized total gross margin of 57% on your sales during the quarter. And that consists of 58% of uranium, 37% of the vanadium. Where do you think this figure could go for the remainder of the year and what, if any efficiency or the focus that you are utilizing to possibly get them up a little bit more?

Marcus Giannini

Analyst

Well, Heiko. A lot depends on the prices of uranium. A lot of our uranium contracts are hybrids, so they can go up and down, but they have floors and ceilings on them. I think they will be pretty steady at that right now, because of the inventories we have. When we are looking at the various uranium projects that we can put into production, we do have some production that is probably in the order of around $35 to $40 per pound. So I would say that they should be probably pretty steady for the year. Curtis, do you want to make any comments in that regard?

Curtis Moore

Analyst

Yes. I was going to say, we put out guidance for our remaining sales this year of $54 to $58 per pound on that extra 260,000 pounds. So, yes, I think, like Mark said, for the rest of this year, it will be steady, later when we have to put in produced material into these contracts. Assuming we don’t get an uplift in prices, you would see those margins go down. But I think, there is extremely strong justifications to believe that uranium prices are going to go up and we are going to capture that value in our existing contracts because we have market related components in those contracts plus future contracts that’ll be hopefully secured at higher prices.

Marcus Giannini

Analyst

So Heiko, we try to make sure we are trying to build margins of $20, $25 a pound, but it really depends on how the market’s responding and whatnot. So, but yes, we are very pleased with what we can secure on both a combination of our sales our new uranium production, our inventory, and the ability to add in uranium production from both Rare Earths and alternate feed. So, we are a different story when it comes to how you build our, the book in terms of where our margins can be.

Heiko Ihle

Analyst

Very good. Changing gears 180 degrees, you always may have a million things going on with the farm right now. I find it pretty impressive and commendable, just some longer term thinking. Where do you see management’s time broken down in a couple of years between uranium vanadium and Rare Earths and if you could also, maybe percentage wise, where do you see financial investments going by segment over the next even couple of quarters?

Mark Chalmers

Analyst

Yes, well, that is a tough question to answer with a lot of accuracy, but look, I think right now, when you look at our time, I would say, you look at what we have got in Wyoming, what we have got in with our conventional mines and stuff, it is probably around 60/40 or something in that order. 60% or 40% uranium somewhere in that order. Now, when you look to the future and you roll out the future a lot depends on both of those markets. If the uranium price goes crazy or the rare earth business continues to do well, we will have to - we will flex it according to getting the best margins, the best return for our shareholders. We will be dynamic for the circumstances. And that is one of the things that you can appreciate that, energy fuels you get a much more diversified investment where we have some flexibility to shift and swing a bit depending on which markets we should spend our time on. So, I don’t know if I can answer it any more accurately than that at this point in time, but it will always be driven on the best outcome for our shareholders.

Heiko Ihle

Analyst

No, I was cognizant that there wasn’t going to be a scientific answer to this and I mean, obviously you are a very big shareholder yourself, so I would assume that this is going to be very much driven by shareholders. Thanks a lot, I appreciate the question and I will get back to queue.

Mark Chalmers

Analyst

Thank you Heiko.

Operator

Operator

[Operator Instructions] next question we have Joseph Reagor with Roth MKM.

Joseph Reagor

Analyst

Hey Mark and team, thanks for taking the questions. I guess, first thing, Mark, you mentioned that, obviously you are not moving away from being a uranium company and that you are looking at opportunities there. Do you think that some of the assets that are still in the portfolio might not make the most sense for you guys and could potentially sell an asset to generate cash to buy a different asset?

Mark Chalmers

Analyst

At this point in time, the existing assets Joe that we are not planning to sell any of them at this point in time. They are good assets, in fact, we are looking at reinitiating. We have actually reinitiated permitting on, further permitting evaluation on a number of them, including Roka Honda and Sheep Mountain. And we feel that there is a big value lift just by advancing those and getting those fully permitted. Now, the Sheep Mountain Project is fully permitted to mine, but to go to the Sweetwater Mill that is nearby, we are looking at evaluating whether that could potentially be heap leach. So, we are not planning to sell anything at this time. But again, whatever we do will be focusing on trying to uplift and improve whatever investments that we have or assets that we have and we will do that dynamically as is prudent for the circumstances in the market.

Joseph Reagor

Analyst

Okay, fair enough. And then, you know, thinking about the assets that you do have, what do you think the maximum production rate you guys could reach would be between the Nickels Ranch facility and the White Mesa Mill, you know, if pricing were to cooperate?

Mark Chalmers

Analyst

Well, when you look at - including La Sal, Whirlwind, Pinyon Plane, when you look at them, I tell people that without major capital investments, we can get up to around two million pounds per year because most of these projects are fully constructed, fully paid for, they don’t require a lot of capital, they require some working capital. But if you start, say the uranium market really gets - improves and really frothy in terms of demand for uranium and we start investing, say, a hundred, another hundred or 200 million, maybe 300 million in capital, we could take it up to somewhere in the order of five million pounds per year. So the beauty that in the place that we are at, that is such a sweet spot right now is having the flexibility to call on these different projects that we have, based on whatever contracts we have in place in the market with limited new capital, which is becoming very expensive as you can appreciate.

Joseph Reagor

Analyst

Yes. Tell me about it. So I guess last thing is on the Phase 1 for the Rare Earth separation plan, are you guys planning to put out like a PEA or feasibility study or something before you go forward with it or are you just using the internal study?

Curtis Moore

Analyst

We are doing it all internal. I mean, we have been cracking and leaching with the material that we have received came for mores, and we have got really all the data that we need in terms of crack and leach. We have a very extensive and long term piloting we have done on SX. And we feel that if we were to do those studies at this point in time, it would really be kind of a waste of time because of the limited strike rate of 25 million or less really, with regard to the capital costs. So we are comfortable doing that on our own and out of treasury, because it is a low strike rate for us.

Joseph Reagor

Analyst

Okay. Thanks for taking my questions. I will turn it over.

Operator

Operator

Thank you. There are no further questions at this time. I will turn the call back over to Mark Chalmers for any remarks.

Mark Chalmers

Analyst

Well, in closing, look I really appreciate the opportunity to update everyone who is on this call or who may be listening to this call later on the outstanding results that we had this quarter, and I’m very proud of that, we have got a great team, people are working hard and they are working smart, and there is a very, very bright future ahead for our company, because of the things we are doing. There really is no peer group, as I said earlier, but again, we appreciate the support of our shareholders and we really like to have days like today, because of these changing, improving markets for the critical minerals, and also having good results. So thank you very much for your time and look forward to giving further updates in due course and no later than the next quarter. But we know we plan to continue to move forward and update the market as often as we can when we have got material news flow. Thank you very much.

Operator

Operator

Ladies and gentlemen, this concludes your conference call for today. We thank you for participating and ask you to please disconnect your line.