SunCoke Energy, Inc. (SXC) on Q1 2022 Results - Earnings Call Transcript

Operator: Good morning. My name is Chris, and I’ll be your conference operator today. At this time, I’d like to welcome everyone to the SunCoke Energy’s First Quarter 2022 Earnings 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. Thank you. Shantanu Agrawal, Vice President Finance and Investor Relations. You may begin. Shantanu Agrawal: Good morning, and thank you for joining us this morning to discuss SunCoke Energy’s first quarter 2022 results. With me today are Mike Rippey, President and Chief Executive Officer; and Mark Marinko, Senior Vice President and Chief Financial Officer. Following management’s prepared remarks, we’ll open the call for Q&A. This conference call is being webcast live on the Investor Relations section of our website and a replay will be available later today. If we don’t get to your questions on the call today, please feel free to reach out to our Investor Relations team. Before I turn things over to Mike, let me remind you that the various remarks we make on today’s call regarding future expectations constitute forward-looking statements. The cautionary language regarding forward-looking statements in our SEC filings apply to the remarks we make today. These documents are available on our website as our reconciliations to non-GAAP financial measures discussed on today’s call. With that, I’ll now turn things over to Mike. Michael Rippey: Thanks, Shantanu. Good morning, and thank you all for joining us on today’s call. Today, we announced SunCoke Energy’s first quarter results. And before I turn it over to Mark, who will review the results in detail, I want to discuss a few highlights. As always, I want to start by thanking all of our SunCoke employees for their commitment and contributions, what was a record quarter for SunCoke. Our Domestic Coke fleet delivered excellent results this quarter and the main driver behind these results is our continued success in the foundry and export coke markets. Strong commodity markets and rising demand for our products provided a favorable backdrop for an excellent start to the year, despite some challenges due to unusually wet winter weather. We are pleased to have our operations continue to run at full capacity and look forward to a period of dry weather. Our Logistics segment also continues to perform well, but increased volumes from new customers at our domestic terminals and the API2 price adjustment benefit at CMT. During the quarter, we also extended our coal handling contract at CMT, through 2024 with a higher base rate and continued potential upside from the API2 price adjustment provision. Looking at our capital structure, we continue to pay our $0.06 per share quarterly dividend and our gross leverage ratio stands at approximately 2.2 times on a trailing 12-month adjusted EBITDA basis. We will continue to pursue a balanced yet opportunistic approach to capital allocation. Overall, our strong financial performance in the first quarter provides a solid foundation to build on for the balance of the year. We are well positioned to modestly exceed our consolidated full year 2022 adjusted EBITDA guidance of $240 million to $255 million. With that, I’ll turn it over to Mark to review our first quarter earnings in detail. Mark? Mark Marinko: Thanks, Mike. Turning to Slide 4, the first quarter net income attributable to SunCoke was $0.35 per share, up $0.15 versus the prior year period, primarily driven by export coke sales. Consolidated adjusted EBITDA for the first quarter 2022 was $83.8 million, up $13.2 million versus first quarter 2021. The increase was driven by higher margin on export sales and the API2 price adjustment benefit at CMT. Turning to Slide 5 to discuss our Domestic Coke business performance in detail. First quarter adjusted EBITDA was $76 million and we sold 962,000 tons of coke. This period over period adjusted EBITDA increase was driven by higher margin on export coke sales, which included a onetime benefit of lower cost carry over coal from 2021. Wetter than normal winter weather impacted coke production across the fleet during the first quarter. Additionally, the period over period coke production was impacted due to change in mix between foundry and blast furnace coke production. As a reminder, foundry tons do not replace blast furnace tons on a ton-per-ton basis. For example, due to differences in the production process, a single ton of foundry coke replaces approximately 2 tons of blast furnace coke. On the backdrop of the first quarter performance, we now expect to modestly exceed the domestic coke adjusted EBITDA guidance range of $229 million to $235 million. Turning to Slide 6 to discuss our Logistics business. The Logistics business generated $12.6 million of adjusted EBITDA during the first quarter of 2022 as compared to $10.9 million in the prior year period. The increase in adjusted EBITDA was primarily due to the API2 price adjustment benefit at CMT and higher volumes at our domestic terminals. Our Logistics business handled 5.2 million tons of throughput volumes during the quarter as compared to 5.3 million tons during the prior year period. CMT handled approximately 600,000 fewer tons versus the prior year period, mainly driven by coal supply and rail delivery issues. Domestic terminal saw a good uptick in volumes, driven by increased demand of handling services from new customers. During the first quarter 2022, we extended our take-or-pay coal handling agreement at CMT through 2024. The take-or-pay volume for the contract is 4 million ton annually, and the base rate was increased. The contract continues to include the API2 price adjustment provision, which provides good upside potential. Similar to the coke segment, we now expect to modestly exceed the Logistics adjusted EBITDA guidance range of $34 million to $40 million, with the volume guidance remaining unchanged. Switching gears, I would now like to talk about our liquidity position for Q1, let’s turn to Slide 7. As you can see from the chart, we ended the first quarter with a cash balance of approximately $80 million. Cash flow from operating activities generated close to $23 million, it was impacted by the timing of receivables, increase in coal inventory and changes in coal payment terms. We spent approximately $13 million on CapEx during the quarter, and our debt increased by $14 million, mainly due to working capital requirements. We also paid $5 million in dividends at the rate of $0.06 per share during the quarter. In total, we ended the quarter with a strong liquidity position of approximately $300 million. With that, I will turn it back to Mike. Michael Rippey: Thanks, Mark. Wrapping up on Slide 8. As always, safety and operational performance is top of mind for our organization. Our efforts will continue to focus on safely executing against our operating and capital plans. We are pleased to see increased demand for our services and new customers at our domestic logistics terminals. The extension of the coal handling agreement at CMT, and that’s the positive commodity market backdrop provides a strong foundation to continue to further strengthen CMT. As I mentioned at the beginning of this call, we’re extremely pleased with our success in the foundry and export coke markets. The first quarter results are further proof that our entry into these markets was timely and opportunistic. We continue to build customer relationships and are continuously looking to further increase market share. Sales into these markets allow our coal plants to run optimally at full utilization. On the capital allocation front, we expect our deleveraging initiatives to continue as we look to bring down our revolver balance further. We’re looking at growth opportunities both organically and through M&A. And as we have said before, we will remain disciplined, understanding that it is not in our shareholders interest for the company to sacrifice long-term value creation for short-term marginal gains. We continue to evaluate the capital needs of the business, our capital structure and the need to reward shareholders on a continuous basis and will make capital allocation decisions accordingly. Finally, as I stated earlier, continued strength in commodity markets combined with our excellent first quarter results leads us to project full year results to modestly exceed our adjusted EBITDA guidance of $240 million to $255 million. We will provide further updates to the guidance, as we have more clarity regarding the second half of the year in our next earnings call. With that, let’s go ahead and open the call for Q&A. Operator: Our first question is from Karl Blunden with Goldman Sachs. Your line is open. Karl Blunden: Hi, good morning. Thanks very much for the time. Cost inflation has been a big topic of focus through earnings season. I’d be interested in your thoughts on what you’re seeing in your business right now, both from an OpEx standpoint? And then CapEx, where – it’s very encouraging that you reiterated your CapEx guide, they’re interested in how that plays out for the rest of the year? Thanks. Michael Rippey: That’s good question, Karl. Thanks. On the CapEx side, we talked in last year’s earnings calls particularly beginning in the second half of the year that we are experiencing unexpected inflation in some of the capital project work that we planned. And it relates then to 2022, we fully put into our forecast the expected impacts of inflation. So our CapEx plan for the year anticipates the inflationary impacts that we continue to absorb. On the OpEx side, we indicated in our last earnings call that we saw the impacts of inflation affecting our business and have begun efforts to offset where possible any inflationary impacts that we might see. So we’re working hard to offset these inflationary increases, we see it really in everything we do, most notably well for our company. Coal is the most important driver of our operating costs. And there, as you know, we have pass-throughs for all of our contractual accounts. And as we now work, particularly in the export markets, we look to closely match our coal price and our coal sourcing decisions with our sales into the export market so as not to have any undue exposure to inflation in the commodity markets principally coal. Karl Blunden: Excellent. Makes sense. And then, you’re forecasting now higher EBITDA for the year by higher free cash flow, and you discuss some M&A and organic growth opportunities. I didn’t hear much discussion around shareholder returns either cash dividend or shareholder repurchases. Should we take that to mean that the focus is going to be on balance sheet strengthening for now and that’s perhaps a discussion to have at a later time? Or is there a room for some of that? Michael Rippey: As we’ve indicated, our focus is to continue to delever the balance sheet, the work there is on the revolver. And as always, the board continuously evaluates opportunities return to shareholder whether that’d be increased in the dividend or some other form, but that’s route ahead. Our focus right now is on deleveraging. Karl Blunden: Okay. Thanks, Mike. Appreciate it. Michael Rippey: Okay. Operator: Our next question is from Nathan Martin with The Benchmark Company. Your line is open. Nathan Martin: Hey, good morning, everyone. Congrats on the record quarter. Thanks for taking my questions. Again, record starts the year looks like Domestic Coke adjusted EBITDA per ton was $79, logistics shipments higher than I’d expected especially given some real delays. Congrats on extended take-or-pay. API2 prices looking like they should remain elevated at least for a while and given what’s going on in which the Russia-Ukraine conflict. So, I guess, there’s something out there that you guys are seeing over the next 3 quarters detaching from officially raising your full-year EBITDA guidance, or maybe what do you need to see over the next quarter to make you comfortable enough to raise that guidance? Thanks. Michael Rippey: Yeah, Nathan, thank you. And those are all good questions. As we indicated, we’ll review the guidance at the end of the second quarter. We have uncertainty and you touched on it particularly as relates to the global markets and our sales into those markets , full of more clarity as we end the second quarter and enter the third as it relates to principally export sales for the back half of the year. So we’ll address the full year guidance again at the end of the second quarter. We have more clarity into the back half export activities. Nathan Martin: And then maybe just kind of a clarification question like the adjusted EBITDA per ton on Domestic Coke side was $79. Was there something driving that higher number? I think, I heard what we were trying from fourth quarter to first quarter net effect that number at all? Michael Rippey: Yeah, it did. There’s 2 things there. And the success we’ve had in the export market, and then as you properly point out, we benefited from having some coal carry over from 2021 into 2022, and when you think about that kind of onetime benefit, it was slightly in excess of $10 million in the quarter. Nathan Martin: Okay. That’s very helpful. I appreciate that. And then maybe just going back to transportation for a second. Can we maybe get your updated thoughts there on rail transportation, logistics, if things kind of improved somewhat as we’ve gone throughout the first few months of this quarter, and what you’re seeing there? And then maybe any update on the labor side of things, which is something that we touched on last quarter as well? Michael Rippey: Yeah. The logistics supply chain issues have – I to say resolve themselves fully, because no sooner that I say that, I wish I hadn’t. But certainly, from what we’re experiencing early in the first quarter things are quite a bit improved. I don’t know what I fully understand your question on labor. Nathan Martin: I think you had mentioned before last quarter that maybe there’s some higher labor costs going on with contract workers are not is that still the case? Are you seeing that as far as inflationary pressures are concerned as you touched on earlier? Michael Rippey: No. Not particularly. So we’re seeing general wage inflation that others are in the economy nothing specific to SunCoke there. Nathan Martin: Got it. I’ll leave it there. Appreciate your kind information. Best of luck. Michael Rippey: Sure. Thanks, Nathan. Operator: It appears that we have no further questions at this time. I’ll turn the call over to Mike Rippey for any closing remarks. Michael Rippey: Again, thank you all for joining us on the call this morning. And as always, we look forward to your continued interest in SunCoke and all the things we’re doing here. So I appreciate your time and interest. Have a good day. Operator: Ladies and gentlemen, this concludes today’s conference call. Thank you for participating. You may now disconnect.
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