Civeo (CVEO -0.66%)
Q4 2021 Earnings Call
Feb 28, 2022, 11:00 a.m. ET
Contents:
- Prepared Remarks
- Questions and Answers
- Call Participants
Prepared Remarks:
Operator
Greetings, and welcome to Civeo Corporation fourth quarter 2021 earnings call. [Operator instructions] As a reminder, this conference is being recorded. It is now my pleasure to introduce your host, Regan Nielsen, senior director, corporate development and investor relations. Thank you.
You may begin.
Regan Nielsen -- Senior Director, Corporate Development and Investor Relations
Thank you, and welcome to Civeo's fourth quarter 2021 earnings conference call. Today, our call will be led by Bradley Dodson, Civeo's president and chief executive officer; and Carolyn Stone, Civeo's senior vice president, chief financial officer and treasurer. Before we begin, we would like to caution listeners regarding forward-looking statements. To the extent that our remarks today contain anything other than historical information.
Please note that we're relying on the safe harbor protections afforded by federal law, any such remarks should be read in the context of the many factors that affect our business, including risks and uncertainties disclosed in our Forms 10-K, 10-Q and other SEC filings. I'll now turn the call over to Bradley.
Bradley Dodson -- President and Chief Executive Officer
Thank you, Regan, and thank you all for joining us today on our fourth quarter earnings call. I'll start with the key takeaways, and then I'll provide a brief summary of our fourth quarter and full year 2021 performance. Carolyn, will then provide a financial and segment level review, and I'll conclude our prepared comments with our initial full year 2022 guidance and the regional assumptions underlying that guidance, as well as some directional commentary. And then we'll open up the call for questions.
The key takeaways from our call today are the business continues to generate cash, while supporting our ongoing debt reduction. For the full year 2021, Civeo generated $87 million and free cash flow and reduced total debt by $76 million to end the year at $175 million of total debt. Our fourth quarter results were better than we were expected. In the fourth quarter, Civeo delivered $34.5 million of adjusted EBITDA and $26.1 million of free cash flow.
Reduced our total debt by $20 million in the fourth quarter, bringing our net leverage ratio down to 1.49 times as of December 31, 2021. De-levering our balance sheet remains our top financial priority, and this quarter is the 11th straight quarter of leverage ratio reduction. Strategic investment and diversifying our revenue profile has paid dividends again in 2021, like it did in 2020, during the volatility experienced across all three of our segments. While, Australia activity declined in 2021 due to the China-Australia trade dispute, and business experienced increased labor costs due to COVID.
Our Canadian business continued to recover from the trough of 2020 to offset the Australian decline. If you recall, the exact opposite happened in 2020, where Australia had significant growth while Canada struggled and the oil markets ruled, this diversity and revenue drivers as a key component of serious free cash flow generation strategy. And we will continue to seek opportunities to expand our customer base and geographic footprint to reduce volatility in our free cash flow generation as we continue to reduce our debt. Despite high prices across the core commodities that we support, our customers continue to be focused on capital discipline and returning capital to their shareholders at the expense of spending on increased maintenance or increase in production.
This capital spending is ultimately what drives occupancy in our Canadian lodges in Australian villages. Civeo announced a share repurchase program in the third quarter of 2021, we begin executing on that program throughout the end year with total 24 purchases under the program of approximately 217,000 shares repurchased. Return of capital to our shareholders is currently the secondary focus of our capital allocation strategy, alongside our first priority of debt paydown. Australian business continues to be burdened with increased labor costs related to COVID, travel, and border restrictions, coupled with subdued activity from our customers related to the China-Australia trade dispute, which has led to lower build rooms in our villages.
In total, our team put together a solid fourth quarter despite the challenges of the pandemic, trade disputes, and limited capital deployment by our customers. Let me take a moment to provide a business update across our three segments. In Canada, our revenues and adjusted EBITDA increased sequentially and year-over-year, driven by our Canadian mobile camp activity. As expected, our lodges did experienced lower build rooms sequentially, related to typical holiday downtime in the fourth quarter.
Our Australian results were above expectations are going -- up occupancy was better than expected, but did reflect some typical holiday downtime sequentially. Adjusted EBITDA in the fourth quarter was down year-over-year as a result of weaker customer activity in the Bowen Basin and increased labor costs in our Western Australian integrated services business. Turning briefly to the U.S., conditions for our U.S. business continue to be challenging in the fourth quarter, but increased year-over-year activity in our lodges and offshore business led to higher revenues and adjusted EBITDA versus the fourth quarter of 2020.
Adjusted EBITDA was also positively impacted by a $3.8 million gain on sale of assets from the opportunistic fourth quarter 2021 sale of our West Permian launch. Turning to our balance sheet. Our net leverage ratio declined to 1.49 times at year end from 1.86 times at the end of the third quarter and 2.06 times at the end of 2020. Proactively dedicating free cash flow to reducing debt remains our primary financial priority.
With that, I'll turn the call over to Carolyn.
Carolyn Stone -- Senior Vice President, Chief Financial Officer, and Treasurer
Thank you, Bradley, and thank you all for joining us this morning. Today, we reported total revenue in the fourth quarter of $159.8 million, with GAAP net income of $9.8 million, or $0.58 per diluted share. During the fourth quarter, we generated adjusted EBITDA of $34.5 million operating cash flow of $25.3 million and free cash flow of $26.1 million. The increased adjusted EBITDA we experienced in the fourth quarter of '21 as compared to the same period in 2020, was largely due to increased build rooms in our Canadian oil sands lodges and increased Canadian mobile camp activity, partially offset by lower Australian village billed rooms and increased labor costs there due to COVID-19.
For the full year 2021, we reported revenue of $594.5 million and a net loss of $0.6 million, or $0.04 per share. In 2021, we generated adjusted EBITDA of $109.1 million, a modest increase from our 2020 full year adjusted EBITDA of $108.1 million. Results from the full year 2021 reflect the impact of a strengthened Australian and Canadian dollar relative to the U.S. dollar, which increased revenue and adjusted EBITDA by $40.6 million and $9.8 million, respectively.
On a constant currency basis, decreased build rooms related to the China-Australia trade dispute and increased labor costs across the Australian segments were offset by increased mobile camp activity and increased build rooms in our Canadian segment. Let's now turn to the fourth quarter results for our three segments. I'll begin with a review of the Canadian segment performance compared to its performance a year ago in the fourth quarter of 2020. Revenue from our Canadian segment was $92.2 million as compared to revenue of $65.5 million in the fourth quarter of 2020.
Adjusted EBITDA in Canada was $23.1 million, an increase from $13.8 million in the fourth quarter of 2020. The increase in revenue and adjusted EBITDA was largely caused by a meaningful increase in build rooms in 2021, related to the recovery in oil prices and the reduced effects of the COVID-19 pandemic, especially in our oil sands lodges. This was coupled with increased mobile camp activity. Our U.S.
dollar results further reflect the impact of a strengthened Canadian dollar relative to the U.S. dollar during the fourth quarter, build rooms in our Canadian lodges totaled 588,000, which was up 25% year-over-year from 469,000 in the fourth quarter of 2020 due to the factors we just discussed. Our daily room rate for the Canadian segment in U.S. dollars was $106, which represents an 7% year-over-year increase.
Turning to Australia. During the fourth quarter, we recorded revenue of $62.3 million, down from $63.7 million in the fourth quarter of 2020. Adjusted EBITDA was $13.6 million, down from$17.2 million during the same period of 2020. These results, which represent a 2% period-over-period top line decrease on a constant currency basis, were driven by decreased activity in villages, as well as increased labor costs, which were largely the result of COVID related travel and border restrictions.
Australian build rooms in the quarter was 465,000 down from 480,000 in the fourth quarter of 2020. To do against the continued uncertainty related to the ongoing China-Australia trade dispute. The average daily rate for Australian villages in the U.S dollars was $77 in the fourth quarter, which is consistent with the fourth quarter of 2020. Moving to the U.S.
Revenue for the fourth quarter was $5.3 million as compared to $4.2 million in the fourth quarter of 2020. The U.S. segment adjusted EBITDA was $3.3 million in the fourth quarter, which was an increase from a negative adjusted EBITDA of $1.4 million during the same period last year. This year-over-year increases were related to increased activity in our lodges and our offshore business, as well as the gain on sale of our West Permian launch.
On a consolidated basis, capital expenditures for the full year 2021 were $15.6 million, which was up from $10.1 million during 2020. This increase is primarily due to increased Canadian launch maintenance, coupled with increased Canadian mobile camp capital expenditures related to the award and pipeline contracts. Our total debt outstanding on December 31, '21 was $175 million -- $175.1 million, which represents a $20.1 million decrease since September 30th and a $76 million decrease from year end 2020. Our net leverage ratio for the quarter decreased to 1.49 times from 1.86 times as of September 30th.
And as of December 31, 2021, we had total liquidity of approximately $92.8 million, which consists of $86.5 million available under our revolving credit facilities, as well as $6.3 million of cash on hand. Bradley will now discuss our outlook for the full year 2022. Bradley?
Bradley Dodson -- President and Chief Executive Officer
Thank you, Carolyn. I'd like to discuss our full year 2022 guidance on a consolidated basis, including the underlying outlook for each of the regions, as well as the underlying assumptions related to our guidance. We're initiating full year 2022 guidance of revenues between $600 and $615 million EBITDA between $90 million and $95 million. Our full year 2022 capital expenditures forecast is a range of $20 to $25 million.
Travel expenditures are expected to be higher year-over-year in 2022 as we normalize our maintenance capital spending for our Canadian launches and Australian villages after several years of prioritizing free cash flow. That being said, our primary financial objective continues to be maximizing free cash flow generation. But based on the EBITDA and capex guidance just to outlined, an expected interest expense of $10 million for 2022 and minimal expected cash taxes and working capital investment, we expect 2022 free cash flow to range between $55 million and $65 million. To bridge our 2022 guidance from the 2021 actuals, our 2021 adjusted EBITDA included approximately $13 million of non-operating items, comprised of $3.5 million of Canadian emergency wage subsidy proceeds, $6.2 million in gains on sale those assets, and $3.4 million from other miscellaneous items, such as insurance proceeds and contract settlement.
Excluding those items from the 2021 results or 2021 adjusted EBITDA would have been approximately $95 million, in line with our 2022 guidance, EBITDA guidance of $90 million to $95 million. We've not included any non-operating items in our 2022 guidance figures and are not aware of any such items at this time. The single largest uncertainty and our 2022 guidance is the timing and duration of the pipeline projects in British Columbia that we are currently supporting with our mobile camp assets. Should these projects extend further into 2022 or even into 2023, we could see adjusted EBITDA in 2022 improve by up to approximately $7 million to $10 million.
I will now provide the regional outlooks and corresponding underlying assumptions by region. In Canada, as we look into 2022, we are encouraged by the recent uplift in oil prices. We know that our customers are currently prioritizing the return of capital to shareholders and need to be convinced of the longer term stability across commodity prices, and the broader economy, as well as improving COVID-19 dynamics before materially increasing capital investment in Canada. While activity in our lodges should remain steady, 2022 mobile camp activity will be negatively impacted by the completion of pipeline construction projects throughout the year, including the occurrence of the related demobilization costs.
We currently expect relatively consistent year-over-year turnaround activity in the second and third quarters of 2022, but as discussed in prior years, we won't get a more accurate view on this until at least March, when customers look to secure turnaround rooms. Today, mobile camp activity related to the Coastal GasLink pipeline will remain relatively strong throughout the first nine months of the year, after which the three mobile camps are currently expected to wind down by the end of 2022. However, our mobile camp supporting the TMX pipeline expansion is expected to continue into 2023. When these pipeline related mobile camps projects roll off, we incur the cost associated with the demobilization of these assets.
We have currently included all three demobilizations in our current 2022 guidance, with costs of approximately $7 million to $10 million in total, or approximately $2 million to $4 million of demobilization costs per camp. If one of the fourth quarter demobilization slips into 2023, we expect the demoralization cost of approximately $2 million to $4 million to also slip into 2023. Our Canadian guidance primarily depends on the following three assumptions; Decreasing COVID-19 infections and hospitalizations from current levels and that do not impact industrial activity; Customers are currently prioritized in return of capital to shareholders versus deploying capital into their operations, and this is reflected in our guidance. But that being said, customer 2022 capex budgets are marginally higher than 2021, and with WTI oil trading over $90 a barrel, we're consciously optimistic that customers will could increase capital expenditures further later in 2022; Lastly, availability of skilled labor continues to be an issue limiting our customers ability to increase staffing levels, particularly for turnarounds or construction projects, as well as impacting our ability to increase our head count.
Turning to Australia. We are encouraged by the significant increase in metallurgical coal prices in the back half of 2021 and into early 2022. However, customers are still focusing on capital discipline through the volatility in met coal prices, La Nina weather and the lingering China-Australia trade dispute. Our current guidance reflects continued capital discipline rather than the current price for met coal.
Iron ore prices remain at extremely healthy levels in customer activity in Western Australia remain strong. The COVID related travel and border restrictions continue to significantly increase the labor costs for our integrated services business. We are beginning to see signs of the restrictive restriction relief throughout Australia, but we believe labor shortages will remain throughout the year 2022. For our U.S.
business, the oil and gas price environment has improved significantly in recent months, but similar to our Canadian-Australian customers, there has been an emphasis on living within cash flow versus growth. We expect our well site and offshore businesses to improve throughout the year, but this is offset by lower contributions from our U.S. lodges due to the sale of the West Permian launch in October 2021. I will conclude our prepared comments by underscoring the key elements of our strategy as we navigate this extraordinary market climate.
Our mandate is as follows; We will prioritize the safety and well-being of our guests, employees, and the communities we work in; We will manage our cost structure in accordance with the occupancy outlook across our three regions; We will continue to enhance our best in class hospitality offerings; We will allocate capital prudently to maximize free cash flow generation, while we continue to reduce debt and begin to return capital to shareholders through our share repurchase program. As we continue to reduce debt, we will seek opportunities to further diversify our revenue and free cash flow generation through organic opportunities. With that, we're happy to take any questions.
Questions & Answers:
Operator
Thank you. [Operator instructions] Our first question comes from the line of Stephen Gengaro with Stifel. Please proceed with your question.
Stephen Gengaro -- Stifel Financial Corp. -- Analyst
Thanks and good morning, everybody. I think the first question is, is just use of cash. You have the share repurchase program in place. I look at what you've done, you've done a great job paying down debt you're going to generate, apparently, we think pretty good free cash flow next year.
What will it take and why not just get ultra aggressive on the buyback?
Bradley Dodson -- President and Chief Executive Officer
Well, as we've talked about in the past, we put the program in place in September. It didn't give us a very large open window before third quarter in a blackout period. But if you look at the disclosure in the 10-K, which will file later today or early tomorrow, you'll see that the pace of us buying back stock throughout the last four months of the year picked up each month. And so at the -- as we stand here today, with about four months underneath our belt, we're about a third, 30%, a third complete under the authorization of 700,000 plus shares.
And so I think we've made a good pace and we'll certainly look to be opportunistic around buying back stock here as we move forward into 2022.
Stephen Gengaro -- Stifel Financial Corp. -- Analyst
OK. Thanks. Has there been any thought to doing -- I think you have to do a more complete filing in Canada to expand it to a larger buyback, has there been any thought to that?
Bradley Dodson -- President and Chief Executive Officer
We're continuing to evaluate that. Certainly, we've made some progress, but we'll need to continue to evaluate that and should become an option that we want to take advantage of. We can certainly look at. Yeah.
Stephen Gengaro -- Stifel Financial Corp. -- Analyst
Great. Thanks. Two other things, what is on the -- on the Canadian front, just listening to your your commentary and you've got a lot of color, the -- mobile camp side, you talked about the demobs and I think that leads to a pretty sharp drop off in 4Q EBITDA in Canada, just because of the demobs cost, is -- can you give us any sense for the revenue of the two major pipeline project? Is it half the mobile camp revenue in Canada? Or how should we think about that?
Bradley Dodson -- President and Chief Executive Officer
Well, in terms of the camps we have supporting Coastal GasLink and TMX, that is the totality of our mobile camp revenue, 95% to 100% of it is related to projects.
Stephen Gengaro -- Stifel Financial Corp. -- Analyst
OK. So that makes sense. And then just the final one. Can you give us -- so the U.S market has been has been interesting.
When you think about activity growth, you sold the West Permian facility, how much revenue does that? I know it's not a huge piece, but is that -- how should we think about the revenue contribution that that facility had? And then when we think about EBITDA and all -- will that business run EBITDA breakeven give or take for most of '22, is that how we should be thinking about it?
Bradley Dodson -- President and Chief Executive Officer
So the revenue from the West Permian Lodge, as you may recall, we least out the facility in totality. I believe it was in April of 2021 to a third party who then operated that asset. We did a little less than $2 million in revenues from the West Permian launch in 2021 before we sold the asset. And in total for 2022, if you'll allow me a range, I would expect will be breakeven to maybe a $2 million EBITDA loss in the U.S.
Stephen Gengaro -- Stifel Financial Corp. -- Analyst
OK. Great. Thank you.
Operator
Our next question comes from the line of Steve Ferazani with Sidoti. Please proceed with your question.
Steve Ferazani -- Sidoti and Company -- Analyst
Morning, everyone, thanks for all the detail on the call. When you think about, if not expanding on the share buyback and your net leverage is probably to a point that you're comfortable with, or maybe that's not, or maybe you've changed the target there. How are you thinking about capital allocation? Cause your capex isn't going up huge.
Bradley Dodson -- President and Chief Executive Officer
So we have about $30 million and $32 million worth of amortization annually on the term loan. So that'll be a use of the free cash flow and then would look to continue to reduce leverage on the revolver as well. And then we'll opportunistically look to buy back stock as a secondary priority.
Steve Ferazani -- Sidoti and Company -- Analyst
And then in terms of the West Permian sale, which you mentioned was opportunistic, and I know you had that relationship there beforehand, but would you -- are there any other assets you might consider divesting as you reshape the portfolio?
Bradley Dodson -- President and Chief Executive Officer
Yeah. Across all three regions, if we have assets that we can monetize at valuations that effectively bring forward the cash flow generating capability of that asset to the current date. We'll certainly continue to look at that. Absolutely.
Steve Ferazani -- Sidoti and Company -- Analyst
What will bring down Australian labor costs and how are you thinking about that when you provided the guidance?
Bradley Dodson -- President and Chief Executive Officer
They need to open the international borders, which they have, we need to see the WA border open internally at the state border open, and consistently be open. It has been open from time to time over the last 12 or 15 months. But then, it will close again with very short notice, which makes it very difficult to source labor from Eastern Australia into WA. I think businesses across the world are dealing with limited availability of labor, as well as higher labor costs for us.
It's a double whammy, if we can't get full time hires and we get temporary hires that are both more expensive on an hourly basis and then less efficient. So our team has been working diligently to recruit folks to bring in foreign workers as well. So, but I do think that that process to unwind what's already happened will likely take the balance -- the full balance of 2022. So our guidance effectively looked at as based on the cost structure that was present in the second half of 2021.
So it assumes that it doesn't get better, but it assumes that doesn't get worse as well.
Steve Ferazani -- Sidoti and Company -- Analyst
OK. Fair enough. Thanks. Just last one for me is, what would get you more positive on expectations for Canadian turnaround activity? It doesn't sound like you're super optimistic on a huge jump this year, even though we've seen the capex budgets, the initial ones, at least be higher -- oil prices.
What's your thoughts there? And when we get to a more optimistic.
Bradley Dodson -- President and Chief Executive Officer
Well, it's one of those times are topics where some of the public statements made by our customers don't exactly line up with what they're telling us on the detailed level on a side by side basis. So right now are -- I would say to underlying your question, will be fairly conservative on our our overall occupancy in Canada for 2022. But based on the best information we have from our clients, should their actual activity line up more with what they've said about capex than we could have some upside, for sure.
Steve Ferazani -- Sidoti and Company -- Analyst
Great. Thanks so much [Inaudible].
Operator
We have a follow up question from the line of Stephen Gengaro with Stifel. Please proceed with your question.
Stephen Gengaro -- Stifel Financial Corp. -- Analyst
Thanks. So, Bradley, I was curious when -- you talked about uses of cash, has there been any thought of additional M&A whether it's like the action deal you -- were successful at down in Australia? Or other potential deals? And then maybe beyond that. Has there been any thought to other end markets when as it pertains to M&A?
Bradley Dodson -- President and Chief Executive Officer
Sure. Well, the action transaction we did in July of 2019 gave us our foothold in Western Australia, gave us critical mass in that region and expanded our service only business model significantly. And we were very pleased to do that. It also gave us exposure to iron ore, which we did not have a significant exposure to that commodity prior to the transaction.
In terms of priority, M&A would be last. So in our view of capital allocation that pay down one by that to look for organic capital growth organic expansionary opportunities, and then M&A would be last. When we think about the value that our stock is trading at right now, we believe that the buyback program presents better returns and typically you can receive at least at this point in M&A. Ideally longer term, we'd like to expand the business by expanding within our fairway, but looking for ways that have give us greater customer, enlarge our customer base or expand our geographies.
But keeping to our knitting in terms of the services that we're providing. And so we have looked at other geographies and in other regions, but typically closer to home than really going out into a completely different geography in the world.
Stephen Gengaro -- Stifel Financial Corp. -- Analyst
Thank you. And just one final. When you -- I think traditionally, I have to go back and look at the exact numbers, but I think about 60% of the full year EBITDA falls in the second and third quarters, and I guess outside of the seasonality that you is -- that you mentioned for the mobile camps of Canada this year. Is there anything else that we should be thinking about which would alter that normal seasonal pattern?
Bradley Dodson -- President and Chief Executive Officer
No. I think you've hit it, but just to be abundantly clear. Yes, in Canada, the second quarter and third quarter with the turnaround activity are the two quarters with the highest regional EBITDA. In terms of Australia, we should see sequential improvement quarter-to-quarter, Q1 to Q2, Q2 to Q3.
And then either flat to slightly down in Q4 in Australia, and that will be dependent on holiday seasonal downtime. U.S should be fairly flat. I'm cautiously optimistic on the U.S. business from a macro perspective, but it's not material to the overall Civeo financials.
And lastly, in total, about 2/3 of our EBITDA will come or is expected to come in the second and third quarters of the year.
Stephen Gengaro -- Stifel Financial Corp. -- Analyst
Great. Thank you for the color.
Bradley Dodson -- President and Chief Executive Officer
Oh, and one last thing, Stephen, was the -- and then of course, we've got that we currently have the vast majority of the demobilization costs in the fourth quarter in Canada, which is also impacting the quarterly flow, if you will.
Operator
Our next question comes from the line of Sean Mitchell with Daniel Energy Partners. Please proceed with your question.
Sean Mitchell -- Daniel Energy Partners -- Analyst
Hey, Bradley, thanks for taking the question. You may have, I got on the call a little bit late. You may have talked about it in your opening commentary, but looking at your capital spend in from '20, I think you guys spent about $10 million bucks in '21, it went up closer to $15 million, this year going $20 million to $25 million. What is the maintenance cap that you -- if you think about maintenance capital level within the organization, is it closer to that $10 million bucks?
Bradley Dodson -- President and Chief Executive Officer
I would say it's plus or minus $20 million. In 2020, our Canadian team, given all the dynamics we don't need to belabor. But with what was happening in the second and third quarters with related to COVID, we carved it way back and they did a great job of of managing to go lower capex number. This year was some of the same, quite frankly, the spending in 2021 would have been higher, except for supply chain disruptions when we couldn't get vehicles or computers, etc., to that we ordinarily would would want to purchase.
So our little less than $60 million of capex in 2021, ideally, it would be closer to $20 million, if all the supply chain disruptions hadn't happened. And so we have a higher expected maintenance capex number in 2022. But if you'll also recall, guidance for 2021 started off at $20 million to $25 million. And so, we're expecting the same starting point and for this year, and we'll do our best to be prudent in it.
And we've always tried to spin capital where we need to, but then not be smart about where we're spending it. So I expect we'll do the same this year.
Sean Mitchell -- Daniel Energy Partners -- Analyst
Got it. Thank you.
Bradley Dodson -- President and Chief Executive Officer
Thank you. It's good to talk to you.
Operator
There are no further questions in the queue. I'd like to hand the call back over to Bradley Dodson for closing remarks.
Bradley Dodson -- President and Chief Executive Officer
Thank you, Doug, and thank you, everyone for joining the call today. We appreciate your interest in Civeo, and I look forward to speaking to you on the first quarter earnings call in a few months.
Operator
[Operator signoff]
Duration: 36 minutes
Call participants:
Regan Nielsen -- Senior Director, Corporate Development and Investor Relations
Bradley Dodson -- President and Chief Executive Officer
Carolyn Stone -- Senior Vice President, Chief Financial Officer, and Treasurer
Stephen Gengaro -- Stifel Financial Corp. -- Analyst
Steve Ferazani -- Sidoti and Company -- Analyst
Sean Mitchell -- Daniel Energy Partners -- Analyst