Halliburton Company (HAL) on Q3 2022 Results - Earnings Call Transcript

Operator: Good day and thank you for standing by. Welcome to Halliburton’s Third Quarter 2022 Earnings Call. At this time, all participants are in a listen-only mode. After the speakers’ presentation, there will be a question-and-answer session. Please be advised that today’s conference is being recorded. I would now like to hand the conference over to your speaker today, David Coleman, Senior Director of Investor Relations. Please go ahead. David Coleman: Hello. And thank you for joining the Halliburton third quarter 2022 conference call. We will make the recording of today’s webcast available on Halliburton’s website after this call. Joining me today are Jeff Miller, Chairman, President and CEO; and Eric Carre, EVP and CFO. Some of today’s comments may include forward-looking statements reflecting Halliburton’s views about future events. These matters involve risks and uncertainties that could cause our actual results to materially differ from our forward-looking statements. These risks are discussed in Halliburton’s Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2021, Form 10-Q for the quarter ended June 30, 2022, recent current reports on Form 8-K and other Securities and Exchange Commission filings. We undertake no obligation to revise or update publicly any forward-looking statements for any reason. Our comments today also include non-GAAP financial measures. Additional details and reconciliation to the most directly comparable GAAP financial measures are included in our third quarter earnings release and in the quarterly results and presentation section of our website. Now I will turn the call over to Jeff. Jeff Miller: Thank you, David, and good morning, everyone. Our outlook today is strong, oil and gas supply remains tight for the foreseeable future, International market activity is accelerating and North America service capacity continues to further tighten. As a result, pricing is moving up in both markets. Halliburton’s strong third quarter results demonstrate the power of our strategy. Here are some highlights. Total company revenue increased 6% sequentially as both North America and International activity continue to expand. Operating income grew 18% compared to adjusted operating income from the second quarter with improved margin performance in both divisions. Our overall operating income margin was 16% representing 45% incremental margins over last quarter’s adjusted operating income. Our Completion and Production division revenue increased 8% over last quarter, driven by completions activity and pricing in North America and International markets. C&P delivered operating margin of 19% in the third quarter. The Drilling and Evaluation division revenue grew 3%. Operating margin of 15% increased 140 basis points sequentially and 380 basis points above the same period last year, demonstrating the earnings power and global competitiveness of our D&E business. North America revenue grew almost 9% sequentially as both drilling and completions activity improved throughout the third quarter. Pricing gains and activity increases across both divisions drove these results. International revenue grew 3% sequentially with improved activity in the Middle East and Latin America that more than offset the revenue decline related to exiting our Russia business. Importantly, during the third quarter, we generated similar incremental margins in both international and North America markets. Finally, we generated free cash flow of $543 million and retired $600 million of debt during the quarter. I am pleased with the third quarter results. I want to express my appreciation to the men and women of Halliburton whose hard work and dedication made these results possible. Your commitment to collaboration, safety and service quality everyday make Halliburton successful. Turning to our macro outlook. Oil and gas supply remains fundamentally tight due to multiple years of underinvestment. This tightness is apparent in historically low inventory levels, production levels well below expectations and temporary actions such as the largest ever SPR release. Against tight supply, demand for oil and gas is strong and we believe it will remain so. While broader market volatility is clear, what we see in our business is strong and growing demand for equipment and services. There is no immediate solution to balance the world’s demand for secure and reliable oil and gas against its limited supply. I believe that only multiple years of increased investment in existing and new sources of production will solve the short supply. The effective solution to short supply is conventional and unconventional, deepwater and shallow water, new and existing developments, and short and long cycle barrels, all of it. I expect progress towards increased supply will be measured in years, not months as behavior of both operators and service companies have changed. Operators remain disciplined. Their commitments to investor returns require a measured approach to growth and investment. Service companies follow the same discipline, delivering on their commitments to investor returns and taking a measured approach to growth and investment. What I think is underappreciated is how this results in more sustainable growth and returns over a longer period of time. Let’s turn now to Halliburton’s performance, starting with the International markets. Our third quarter performance demonstrates the strength of our strategy to deliver profitable International growth through improved pricing, selective contract wins and the competitiveness of our technology offerings. International revenue in the third quarter for the C&P and D&E divisions grew year-over-year from a percentage standpoint in the high teens and mid-20s, respectively, which outpaced International rig count growth and reflects our competitiveness in all markets. Our year-over-year growth and the margin expansion demonstrated by both divisions give me confidence in the earnings power of our International business. Looking forward, I see activity increasing around the world, from the smallest to the largest countries and producers. I expect the areas of strongest growth will be the Middle East, led by Saudi Arabia, but with meaningful activity increases in the UAE, Qatar, Iraq and Kuwait. Elsewhere, Brazil, Guyana and many others have also signaled a commitment to increased activity. Throughout these markets, I am pleased with the broad adoption of our new directional drilling platform such as iCruise and EarthStar. Importantly, these broad-based activity increases serve to tighten equipment availability and drive price increases in our International business. Shifting to North America, we had a fantastic quarter. Our solid performance demonstrates our strategy to maximize value in North America. We achieved this through improved pricing, partnering with high quality customers and differentiated technology. Our revenue grew 9% sequentially and is up 63% over the third quarter last year. Pricing continues to improve across all product lines and completions equipment remains extremely tight across the market. Interest in eFleets is strong and customers are pleased with the superior efficiencies, operational uptime and reduced carbon footprint of our market-leading solution. Looking into 2023, I see continued growth. The inbounds for calendar slots are stronger than I have ever seen at this point in the year. More importantly, I see increased demand for a limited set of equipment and an environment where technology and performance are increasingly valued, all perfectly set up for Halliburton to maximize value in North America. Market consolidation, competitors that answer to public investors, disciplined customers and supply chain constraints, all drive the services market that I expect to remain tight for the foreseeable future. Halliburton will continue to outperform in this market. Our best-in-class Zeus eFleets have pumped over 20,000 hours for customers. Our eFleet customers know that they have a field-proven technology, which carries the full weight of Halliburton’s expertise to build, run and optimize this next-generation equipment. Additionally, our SmartFleet intelligent fracturing system continues to gain traction and we expect an almost eight-fold increase in stages completed this year. SmartFleet gives customers unparalleled access to data about where and how their fractures permeate, the potential for frac hits on adjacent wells and the real-time data necessary to improve completion designs. In all markets, Halliburton’s strong financial performance demonstrates its strategy and action, profitable international growth, maximizing value in North America and improved asset velocity to deliver value for our shareholders today. These strategies equip us to outperform under any market conditions, but especially to maximize returns through this up cycle. Execution is at the heart of Halliburton’s identity. We collaborate and engineer solutions to maximize asset value for our customers. You have seen that in action in today’s results. You can hear how excited I am about Halliburton’s future all around the world. The structural demand for more oil and gas supply provides strong tailwinds for our business and Halliburton is ideally positioned to deliver improved profitability and increased returns for shareholders. Now I will turn the call over to Eric to provide more details on our third quarter financial results. Eric? Eric Carre: Thank you, Jeff, and good morning. Let me begin with a summary of our third quarter results. Total company revenue for the quarter was $5.4 billion, a 6% increase over the second quarter, while operating income was $846 million, an increase of 18% over second quarter adjusted operating income. Globally, higher activity and pricing improvement supported these strong results. Operating margin for the company was 16% in the third quarter, 164-basis-point increase over second quarter adjusted operating margin and 393 basis points over adjusted operating margin in the third quarter of 2021. Our third quarter reported net income per diluted share was $0.60, an increase of $0.11 or 22% from second quarter adjusted net income per diluted share and more than doubled the adjusted net income per diluted share for the same period last year. Beginning with our Completion and Production division, revenue in the third quarter was $3.1 billion, an 8% increase when compared to the second quarter, while operating income was $583 million, an increase of 17% when compared to the second quarter. These results were driven by increased pressure pumping services, primarily in North America land and increased completion tool sales in Middle East Asia. In our Drilling and Evaluation division, revenue in the third quarter was $2.2 billion, an increase of 3% when compared to the second quarter, while operating income was $325 million, an increase of 14% when compared to the second quarter. These results were driven by improved drilling-related services in Latin America and Middle East Asia, and increased project management and wireline services internationally. The exit from our Russia business negatively impacted financial results for both divisions. Moving on to geographic results, in North America, revenue in the third quarter was $2.6 billion, a 9% increase when compared to the second quarter. This increase was primarily driven by increased pressure pumping services and drilling-related services in North America land. These increases were partially offset by decreased activity across multiple product service lines in the Gulf of Mexico. Latin America revenue in the third quarter was $841 million, an 11% increase sequentially, driven by increased well construction services and project management activity in Mexico. Europe Africa revenue in the third quarter was $639 million, an 11% decrease sequentially, almost all of this reduction was related to exiting our Russia business. Middle East/Asia revenue in the third quarter was $1.2 billion, a 6% increase sequentially and primarily resulting from increased completion tool sales in the Arabian Gulf and higher drilling services activity in Saudi Arabia and Southeast Asia. In the third quarter, our corporate and other expenses were $62 million, which was in line with expectations. For the fourth quarter, we expect our corporate expense to be up slightly or roughly in line with second quarter. Net interest expense for the quarter was $93 million, a slight decrease due to higher yields on cash balances. For the fourth quarter, we expect this expense to decrease slightly due to lower debt balances. Other net expense for the quarter was $48 million, primarily related to currency losses driven by the strength of the U.S. dollar. For the fourth quarter, we expect this expense to remain approximately flat. Our normalized effective tax rate for the third quarter came in at approximately 22%. Based on our anticipated geographic earnings mix, we expect our fourth quarter effective tax rate to increase slightly. Capital expenditure for the third quarter were $251 million. We expect our full year capital expenditure to be in line with our target of 5% to 6% of revenue. Turning to cash flow, we generated $753 million of cash from operations and $543 million of free cash flow during the third quarter. We expect full year free cash flow to be in the range of last year’s free cash flow. With the latest payment of $600 million, we have now retired $2.4 billion of debt since 2020. We are quickly approaching our near-term leverage target of 2 times gross debt-to-EBITDA. Given our balance sheet position and strong outlook, we now have greater flexibility to increase the cash we will return to shareholders through dividends and/or share buybacks under our existing repurchase program. Now let me turn to the near-term outlook. In the Completion and Production division, we expect fourth quarter revenue to grow in the low-to-mid single digits and margins to improve 50 basis points to 100 basis points. In the Drilling and Evaluation division, we expect fourth quarter revenue to grow in the low-to-mid single digits and margins to improve 75 basis points to 125 basis points. I will now turn the call back to Jeff. Jeff Miller: Thanks, Eric. Let me summarize our discussion today. Halliburton’s third quarter financial performance shows our strategy in action, delivering value for our shareholders. Oil and gas supply remains tight, requiring multiple years of investment. Demand for Halliburton services is strong. We will continue to execute on our strategic priorities that drive free cash flow and returns for our shareholders. And now, let’s open it up for questions. Operator: Thank you. Our first question comes from Dave Anderson with Barclays. Your line is now open. Dave Anderson: Hi. Good morning, Jeff. Jeff Miller: Good morning, Dave. Dave Anderson: So first question on U.S. land, so we often hear about budget exhaustion this time of year, but you actually are saying -- you are saying you are seeing stronger inbound than ever going to year end. I am curious as to how those inbounds have changed, are the inbounds more from public E&Ps versus privates? And I am also wondering, are these customers looking for term now, with such limited equipment available and does that get a premium? Jeff Miller: Yeah. Look, I mean, we are certainly not seeing budget exhaustion. We remain sold out through the end of the year and into next year. So the market is strong and activity remains strong. And so as we look at what kind of inbounds are we getting, I’d say, it’s a mix, but it may be a little stronger towards larger companies. Let’s just say it that way just given they want to be certain they have equipment for 2023. I expect that in North America, the more you work, the more you produce, the more we have to work and I think we are seeing that play out. At term, I would say that, people would like term. We view that as -- we have term, but at the same time, flexibility around pricing, just because, I really believe and I think it’s pretty clear to us that 2023 remains extremely tight, both from an equipment standpoint, repair parts standpoint, you name it, so very encouraged about the outlook for 2023 in North America. Dave Anderson: That makes sense. I locked in term right here. Shifting over to the Middle East, you talked about increased project management in the Middle East. I don’t know if it’s a little tricky to do, I was just curious if you could just think about all those projects collectively. Where are we on the overall kind of ramp-up, are you kind of halfway there, are you kind of -- do you -- are you in closer to fully ramped up? And I guess, secondarily, once you do get ramped up on this project management, is there another leg of growth out there in terms of more tenders or is it more likely to be follow-on potentially some upselling of these contracts. It’s been a while since we have seen an upmarket in project management in Middle East? Jeff Miller: Look, I think that really hasn’t even begun in my view. I think we are just getting underway in terms of some of the bigger projects, discrete work starting. But I think we have got a long way to run internationally and in the Middle East in particular. And this is all consistent with sort of my earlier look on the macro in terms of, we didn’t get here overnight. We got to where we are from a supply standpoint over eight years to 10 years and that’s the kind of time frame that it takes to solve for. And I think the Middle East broadly takes a long view of this business, and as a result, when they are getting traction now, but it’s not a knee-jerk reaction. It is a methodical march towards reserve extensions and adding reserves, which takes time and money, and so I am super encouraged about the outlook in the Middle East. Dave Anderson: Thanks, Jeff. Jeff Miller: Thank you. Operator: Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of James West with Evercore ISI. Your line is now open. James West: Hey. Good morning, Jeff and Eric. Jeff Miller: Good morning, James. Eric Carre: Good morning, James. James West: So, Jeff, I wanted to dig in a little more on the International business, obviously, this quarter had some mixed results just given Russia coming out. But Halliburton as a company as at least I understand it and certainly you can elaborate on this, but you have spent the last the better part of the last three decades really building out a superior International franchise and one that should be competitive with your major peers or your major competitor here. Is there any reason that we should think that you would underperform or that you would outperform over the next several years in the International arena, given the outlook is as strong as kind of you are alluding to and certainly what we see in the market. We start with the Middle East, if you want, but there’s also many other regions that are going to be showing really substantial growth. I am just curious kind of how Halliburton is set up for that? Jeff Miller: Thanks, James. Look, we are extremely well set up for International expansion and have outgrown many quarters in the past and expect to continue to do so into the future based on our technology portfolio and our footprint internationally. Just for some context, Halliburton grew 21% internationally year-on-year, while exiting Russia this quarter, and of course, this is the quarter in Russia, where we typically see the pre-winter sort of step up in the 15% range, so that wasn’t there. But we are seeing strong growth and expect to continue to see that internationally. I think also important to recall, I mentioned in my comments, was the strong international incrementals, which were basically on par with North America, which continues to demonstrate not only growth but margin expansion internationally. If I look ahead internationally, we are only halfway through our iCruise deployment. James West: Right. Jeff Miller: I think that all of that left to do. So I feel, like I said, really good, our production business is new and on plan and so I expect to continue growing revenue internationally and expanding margins. So I feel really good about our international outlook, actually better than I ever have. James West: Okay. Well, that’s a very strong statement. And perhaps to follow up on that, on the D&E side, which is an International bias, you are kind of hitting margin targets that we were anticipating for next year. So you are kind of already there. And do you think and as you see the outlook and I know you may not want to get bogged down in specific numbers, but how do you see that progression as we go through the end of this year and 2023? Jeff Miller: Look, I expect to continue to see improvement. We are in the right markets. We have got extremely competitive portfolio. All service lines are contributing to that. I think the -- when I look out, I have always said about our D&E business that we were making meaningful investments in that business, probably, started saying that four years ago and then every year… James West: Right. Jeff Miller: … we wanted to stack better margins on better margins, full year margin, and obviously, there’s cyclicality throughout a year in weather and other stuff. But ultimately, the plan was to continue this march on stacking on better margins and that’s what you are seeing. And as I have already said, if we are only halfway through deployment of what I think the flagship technology is in D&E, we should continue -- I expect to continue stacking those better margins up. James West: Right. Got it. Okay. Thanks, Jeff. Jeff Miller: Yeah. Thank you. Operator: Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Arun Jayaram with JPMorgan. Your line is open. Arun Jayaram: Yeah. Good morning, Jeff. I wanted to talk… Jeff Miller: Hi, Arun. Arun Jayaram: … a little bit about the portfolio, I know one of your long-term ambitions is to grow house leverage to the production phase of the oil and gas life cycle versus just pure D&C. So I was wondering, if you could comment where you think you are on -- where you are at in terms of that journey and how you think about your potential to grow your share in things like lift and chemicals? Jeff Miller: Look, I feel good about that. I mean it’s all marching along as planned and we continue to grow. We are still in the very early innings of that International expansion, so call it, the second inning. So, but it’s doing exactly what we had hoped. We continue to grow the footprint in the Middle East with lift and with chemicals. Chemicals is -- we put our first full scale production lot through the plant this month. That’s an important first step and a lot of work to do. But again, the infrastructure is in place and we are getting access to market and making sales. The lift bottomline just a fantastic business in North America and it’s the same technology that we apply internationally and so those guys are just dead focused on profitable market entries and growth and we are seeing that Latin America and in the Middle East. Arun Jayaram: Great. And maybe just a follow-up for Eric. Eric, you highlighted your leverage target of 2 times. A number of your peers have announced some return of capital announcements at Liberty-Halliburton campaign. I was wondering, if you could maybe give us a little bit more thoughts on how you think about return of capital after reaching your deleveraging target and how you are thinking about future dividend growth versus buybacks? Eric Carre: Right. So, thanks, Arun. So what we have said for the last couple of years is that, our priority number one was really to get our balance sheet in order. So with the $600 million that we have retired in Q3 that puts us at about $2.4 billion retired since 2020, $1.2 billion retired this year alone. So if you combine that with our improved business performance for all practical purposes, we are at our target and considering as well our positive outlook we see no reason for that to change. So really big picture we are starting to turn our attention now to returning more cash to shareholders. So we are working through scenarios. We are engaging our Board. So, more details to come. Arun Jayaram: Great. Thanks a lot. Operator: Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Chase Mulvehill with Bank of America. Your line is now open. Chase Mulvehill: Hey. Good morning, everybody. So, I guess, first, I kind of want to hit on margins and if we kind of look at how your pre-shale margins, so call it, 2011 and maybe going all the way back to kind of 2006 and 2008 timeframe, you did mid-to-high 20% EBITDA margins. Today, you are sitting in the low 20$s. So, Jeff, I don’t -- could you just kind of walk us through what would need to happen to get back to these type of margins and whether you even think that this is possible to kind of get back to those type of margin levels in this cycle? Jeff Miller: Look, I think, the key thing about this cycle is its duration and it’s the right kind of cycle from a duration standpoint that I think we grow into better margins as we continue forward. So I am not going to try to put a date or a time. But my expectation is the duration of the market, sort of the behavior that I described to both operators and service companies, which is absolutely rational in terms of returning cash to shareholders, which is what Eric just talked about. This is the kind of cycle where we are able to do that and I think setting up for margin improvement, the EBITDA strengthening, all of those are the things that create the free cash flow. And I think that historically, actually, I really haven’t seen the cycle set up where we have got short supply the way that we do and the sort of runway that I see in front of us and all of the right sort of motivation by the industry. I think energy is a fantastic industry and I think what you are going to see is the demonstration from the entire industry of what returning cash to shareholders and generating meaningful returns look like over a good cycle, long cycle. Chase Mulvehill: Yeah. Perfect. Just to follow-up on International markets. Could you just talk about how tight the markets are today, what kind of pricing momentum that you are seeing and when you think about idled or spare capacity across international markets, at least for Halliburton, do you see an opportunity to continue to kind of mobilize the tighter markets or do you have a lot less spare capacity and what did that mean for CapEx for next year on the International side? Jeff Miller: Well, from a CapEx standpoint, we have already described that we are in the 5% to 6% range of revenues on CapEx. So what we do is deploy capital to the best opportunities, which opportunity -- which international markets demonstrate important opportunity, so we would direct capital that way as opposed to others. But I think what’s important about the market as we are just seeing customer urgency return in the sense that quality matters equipment matters. Is it tight, yes, it’s tight. I don’t think there’s a lot of spare capacity anywhere in the world. If I go back to our strategic tenants, it’s profitable growth internationally and asset velocity. And I think what you see is that asset velocity being baked into just the way that we work is creating the ability to do a lot more with less than we ever have in the past. And that’s one of the key reasons we are confident in our capital spend levels is because of the type of equipment we are putting in the market, its ability to be moved around, work longer, repair faster, and when we do all of those things, it just makes us a much better effective business internationally. Chase Mulvehill: Okay. I appreciate the color. I will turn it back over. Thanks, Jeff. Jeff Miller: Yeah. Thanks. Operator: Thank you. Our next question comes from Neil Mehta with Goldman Sachs. Your line is now open. Neil Mehta: Yeah. Good morning, team. The first question was around North America. You mentioned that you continue to see revenue growth in North America and that there is increased demand for a limited set of equipment. Can you talk about what the moving pieces are there? What kind of equipment type -- types of equipment are we talking about and how do you think about adding frac capacity, is there a demand for it as you look out in the market into 2023? Jeff Miller: Well, the activity we really see is, let’s just describe it as service intensity, which is increasing and that’s more reps on equipment, more sand through equipment. We are also seeing our drilling activity in the U.S. as well, so all services related to D&E. But principally, frac, and so as it works harder, it grow, I mean, that generates more value for us and so that’s probably the principal thing. When I think about capacity, we are maximizing value in North America and we are growing profitably internationally, and that automatically balances where we spend our money and how we approach markets. North America from a capacity standpoint for us, really we look at eFleets and it’s not really capacity, I view it as replacement over different time horizons. But we -- the conversations, for example, that we are having about eFleets are not anything really immediate. It’s all around late 2023, 2024, 2025 in terms of eFleet additions and so that will likely wind up replacing equipment over time. Yeah, so I am really encouraged about where the market goes. It’s extremely tight, it’s tight for repair parts, it’s tight for just everything, and we have all talked about sort of bottlenecks in the supply chain. I know that’s really going to rectify itself over any sort of short horizon. So I think that under all conditions North America is tight. I think capacity… Neil Mehta: Yeah. Jeff Miller: … could be added in a meaningful way even if it was desired. Neil Mehta: Yeah. That’s great perspective. And then just some early thoughts on 2023 in terms of what you are hearing from customers in terms of activity and any early thoughts around what you expect spending increases to be both in the U.S. and internationally as a percentage, and how much do you think inflation will be as a component of that increase? Jeff Miller: Look, I think, we have got strong growth as we look into next year. Really, we don’t haven’t even seen budgets from customers, but expect that growth to be strong. Clearly, we are going to be up from here, I guess, is how I would describe next year, up from where we are today, and obviously, that’s really strong growth that we have seen over the last year. So I think that the North America demand continues to increase and internationally we have already talked quite a bit about that. But I expect that we will see growth really everywhere in the sense that customers can be busy, they will be busy. I think the traction in the Middle East is just getting underway and I think that we will continue to see a tightening. And I continue to view this as a margin cycle as opposed to necessarily, it’s not a build cycle, it’s a margin cycle and I think that we are going to be the real beneficiaries of that at Halliburton. Neil Mehta: Thank you, Jeff. Jeff Miller: Yes. Operator: Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Scott Gruber with Citi. Your line is now open. Scott Gruber: Yes. Good morning. Jeff Miller: Good morning, Scott. Eric Carre: Good morning. Scott Gruber: The smaller pumpers here domestically have discussed replacing about 10% of their fleet annually, generally with e-frac additions. As we think about Halliburton, is that a rough guide for you all, assuming returns stay positive or do you have a different framework? How do you think about that kind of multiyear replacement cycle? Jeff Miller: Yeah. Look, what we are seeing, we have a healthy fleet today and we have a healthy fleet, because we have always reinvested in our fleet through thick and thin. I mean, at the worst of the market, the best of the market, we are always maintaining a replacement cycle for equipment and we get the benefit of that all of the time. When I look at the market, I have feedback from a customer recently that a lot of the equipment out there looks just dead on its feet. Don’t know how to get it replaced fast enough. I think that the pace at which we are working, what comes with the service intensity I described for frac equipment is just more revolutions and you can’t meet physics and so I think that when we look at replacement cycle, we view it as an electric replacement cycle. And so we have focused on that. We have got leading technology. And we are seeing strong pull from our customers for that technology. And so what we are doing is, as we get -- demand and pull translates into contracts of duration that return capital and cost -- and margin and capital, the actual return of capital all happen inside the same contract. And that demonstrates for me, the strength of the technology and also what that pull looks like. But it’s not something we rush to do. It’s something we do as the pull is adequate to sign that equipment up and it’s going to be over a period of time. Scott Gruber: Got it. Okay. No. Very well guys. I appreciate the color. And then turning to -- back to the International markets, you had impressive growth internationally even without Russia this quarter, as you highlighted. We had a few inbounds though this morning trying to ascertain exactly what the International growth was year-on-year excluding Russia. I apologize if you mentioned that number earlier, I may have missed it, but are you able to share with us what that… Jeff Miller: Yeah. Yeah. It’s… Scott Gruber: … growth was? Jeff Miller: Yeah. It’s 21% year-on-year International growth. Scott Gruber: Was that inclusive of the -- of Russia or excluding Russia? Jeff Miller: That’s excluding -- well, that’s -- Russia -- while we had Russia and excluding Russia for the last quarter. Eric Carre: With Russia in H1 and without Russia in Q3. Scott Gruber: Right. Do you have the number outside of Russia, how quickly you guys grew year-on-year? Jeff Miller: That I don’t know. Eric Carre: No. Jeff Miller: But it would have been substantially -- it would have been more. Scott Gruber: Yeah. Yeah. Okay. I could follow-up. Okay. Thank you. Jeff Miller: All right. Thanks, Scott. Operator: Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Stephen Gengaro with Stifel. Your line is now open. Stephen Gengaro: Thanks. Good morning, gentlemen. Jeff Miller: Good morning, Stephen. Stephen Gengaro: Two things for me. One just from a North American perspective, how are the conversations with customers about price? I mean, obviously, pricing has been improving for a while now, is there a pushback yet? How do the conversations go as far as 2023 pricing for frac and how do you think that plays out as you go forward? Jeff Miller: Look, I am absolutely not going to get into details around price discussions with customers. Look, I think that, I have already said, I view that pricing strengthens. We are still below pre-pandemic levels in terms of pricing, so there’s room to improve there. Service quality and technology are both driving premiums. I have talked about sort of pull on eFleets and just general performance and maintenance of the fleet. Pricing is always going to be iterative. It’s not giant steps. It’s what I talked about like throughout the year that gets us to where we are today and I think there’s a lot of power in having a structurally advantaged low emissions fleet, which is what we have out there today. Stephen Gengaro: Is it… Jeff Miller: Yeah, I think, one of the things that was left out of the conversation is securing capacity for 2023, reliable capacity, obviously, Halliburton we -- we are the execution company, we do what we say and so we are very reliable in terms of delivery. And I think securing that kind of capacity for 2023 is a high priority for our customers. Stephen Gengaro: And just as a follow-up, do you see -- is there a gap and how much in conversations the sort of cost of diesel relative to the lower cost of running eFleets play into either the gap in price or the conversations about pricing? Jeff Miller: Again, ignoring price, the conversation around the eFleets is really that it’s a better mousetrap over the long run. Is it more efficient to operate? Yes, it is. It should -- it creates value from a price standpoint, but it also creates value from an effectiveness standpoint, the ability to pump. These fleets are extremely reliable and then we took one out of the box and it pumped 500 hours first month. I mean that’s the type of reliability we are seeing out of the equipment. So I think all of that conspires to make it sought after in the marketplace. That’s why we see the pulls. Is cost a component? It probably is. I am sure it is for our clients, it always is. But I think it would be wrong to ignore the other components of value there. Stephen Gengaro: Great. Okay. Thank you. Jeff Miller: Thank you. Operator: Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Roger Read with Wells Fargo. Your line is now open. Roger Read: Yeah. Thank you. Good morning. I guess I’d like to ask the question a little bit differently on the capacity versus investment and tightness of new equipment, spare parts and everything, as you said, Jeff. But if we were to look at, maybe work you have turned down in North America or contracts that you either don’t want to bid on internationally or bid maybe less aggressively, has there been any change in that as we look across the course of 2022 and maybe what you are seeing for the early parts of 2023? Jeff Miller: It would be returning more not less in terms of, that’s part of how we improve margins on the overall portfolio and returns. But we have been really consistent about our strategy and maximizing value in North America growing profitably internationally and that is one of the key levers that we have to do both of those things. And so, yes, we have done both of those. Roger Read: Yeah. But I guess I am just wondering, I mean, you are turning down more not less, is it a material amount at this point or is it still pretty much just on the margin you see a project that’s not interesting or enticing? Jeff Miller: Look, I think, that it’s -- clearly it’s -- I don’t know how to describe that is that at the margin. It’s probably at the margin, but it is going to grow as the market continues to get tighter. We are building, I have already described, our CapEx and so we will be adding. We have been able to grow with the CapEx levels that we have had. I’d say, meaningfully, over the last year and expect that we will continue to grow because of the way that we are building equipment. So it’s not we are turning everything down by any means. But I think it’s an important point that we are much more, I mean, the contracts that we pursue and win are accretive to what we are doing and if they are not, then they probably fall out of the list, just because we want to -- even the new capital that we would have, whether it’s drilling equipment or anything else that’s going to go towards things that are of higher value. Roger Read: Yeah. It makes sense. So glad to hear there’s better selectivity out there. And then my other question was to follow-up. You mentioned tight for kind of everything in terms of new equipment, spare parts, et cetera. I know you are very integrated on the pressure pumping side in terms of manufacturing. But as you work with subcontracts, are you trying to do anything different in terms of helping them increase capacity or are we just -- the system is tight and there’s not really much prospect for change in terms of, I am just thinking the supply chain all the way down on the types of equipment where you want to expand or where there’s a relatively high maintenance component? Jeff Miller: Look, it will get fixed over time, but in most of these cases, there’s not a lot that can be done to accelerate their supply chain when it’s far reaching. Clearly, we plan ahead and we have been planning ahead for over a year. We have got great visibility. But that market will just be tight for spare parts and equipment. Roger Read: All right. Appreciate that. Thank you. Jeff Miller: All right. Thank you. Operator: Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Marc Bianchi with Cowen. Your line is now open. Marc Bianchi with Cowen, your line is now open. Jeff Miller: All right. Operator: Please shut your mute button. Thank you. And I am currently showing no further questions at this time. I’d like to turn the call back over to Jeff Miller for closing remarks. Jeff Miller: Yeah. Thank you, Shannon, and thank you all for participating in today’s call. Just let me summarize with a few key points. Halliburton’s strong third quarter performance shows our strategy is delivering value for our shareholders. Oil and gas supply, shortness constraints and shortages I see today create strong and growing demand for Halliburton’s equipment and services in support of this multiyear upcycle. At Halliburton, we will continue to execute on our strategic priorities to drive free cash flow and we will support of this multiyear. Looking forward to speaking with you again next quarter. Please close out the call. Operator: Thank you. This concludes today’s conference call. Thank you for your participation. You may now disconnect.
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Citi Lowers Halliburton Price Target Amid Softer Domestic Market

Citi analysts lowered their price target for Halliburton (NYSE:HAL) to $45 from $50 while maintaining a Buy rating on the stock. The analysts cited a slightly weaker domestic frac market as the reason for adjusting the company's financial estimates. Q2 revenue estimate has been trimmed by 1% to $5.93 billion, with EBITDA also reduced by 1% to $1.33 billion, which remains 1% above Street estimates.

For Q3, North American revenues are expected to remain flat at $2.6 billion, while Q4 revenues are projected to decline by 7% sequentially to $2.41 billion due to anticipated seasonal weakness and efficiency gains in frac operations. Despite these challenges, international operations are expected to remain strong, with a forecast of 5% sequential growth in Q3 and 4% in Q4, contributing to a 10% year-over-year increase.

Citi’s Q3 EBITDA estimate stands at $1.39 billion, aligning with Street estimates, while the Q4 forecast is set at $1.37 billion, 5% below consensus. Looking ahead to 2025, Citi anticipates 4% growth in North America and 7% internationally, driving total EBITDA to $5.79 billion, which is 6% below previous expectations and 4% below Street estimates.

Wolfe Research Targets Halliburton (HAL) with $52 Price, Foresees 34% Upside

Wolfe Research Sets New Price Target for Halliburton (HAL:NYSE)

Sam Margolin of Wolfe Research has recently set a new price target for Halliburton (HAL:NYSE) at $52, as reported by StreetInsider on April 23, 2024. This ambitious target suggests a significant potential upside of approximately 34.06% from HAL's trading price at the time of the announcement, which was $38.79. This optimistic outlook from Wolfe Research on HAL's future market performance is grounded in the company's recent financial achievements and operational strengths, particularly in its Completion and Production division and its growing international presence.

Halliburton's stronger-than-expected profits for the first quarter of 2024 have been a key driver behind this positive assessment. The company's Completion and Production division played a crucial role in this success, contributing to another quarter where Halliburton surpassed earnings estimates. This performance underscores the company's operational excellence and its ability to exceed investor expectations, as highlighted by Zacks Investment Research on the same day. The robust performance of this division is indicative of Halliburton's strategic focus and operational efficiency, which have been instrumental in its financial success.

Furthermore, Halliburton's growing strength in international markets has been a significant factor in its financial performance, helping to mitigate the effects of a slowdown in North America. An increase in drilling demand from international markets has been pivotal, as reported by Reuters on April 23, 2024. This international expansion not only diversifies Halliburton's revenue streams but also reduces its dependence on the North American market, positioning the company for sustained growth in the face of regional market fluctuations.

The financial results for the first quarter of 2024 further solidify Halliburton's strong market position. With a net income of $606 million, or $0.68 per diluted share, and an adjusted net income of $679 million, or $0.76 per diluted share, Halliburton demonstrates its financial resilience. Although there was a slight decrease from the first quarter of 2023, the company still managed to achieve modest revenue growth, with total revenue reaching $5.8 billion, marking a 2% increase from the same period in the previous year. This financial stability, combined with a strategic focus on international markets and operational excellence, forms the basis of Wolfe Research's optimistic outlook for Halliburton.

Currently, Halliburton is trading at $38.59 on the NYSE, with a market capitalization of approximately $34.34 billion. Despite a slight decrease of $0.14 or -0.35% in its stock price, the company's performance over the past year—with a peak of $43.85 and a low of $27.84—reflects its market resilience and potential for growth. This trading activity, coupled with the company's solid financial results and strategic operational focus, supports the optimistic price target set by Wolfe Research, suggesting a promising future for Halliburton in the market.