Pangaea Logistics Solutions, Ltd. (PANL) CEO Mark Filanowski on Q2 2022 Results – Earnings Call Transcript

Pangaea Logistics Solutions, Ltd. (NASDAQ:PANL) Q2 2022 Earnings Conference Call August 10, 2022 8:00 AM ET

Company Participants

Emily Blum – IR, Prosek Partners

Mark Filanowski – CEO

Gianni Del Signore – CFO

Mads Boye Petersen – Chief Operating Officer

Conference Call Participants

Liam Burke – B. Riley

Michael Heim – Noble Capital Markets

Poe Fratt – Alliance Global Partners

Climent Molins – Value Investor’s Edge

Operator

Good morning. My name is Katie, and I will be your conference operator today. At this time I would like to welcome everyone to the Pangaea Logistics Solutions Second Quarter 2022 Earnings Teleconference. Our hosts for today’s call will be Mr. Mark Filanowski, Chief Executive Officer; Mr. Gianni Del Signore, Chief Financial Officer; and Mr. Mads Boye Petersen, Chief Operating Officer. Today’s call is being recorded and will be available for replay beginning at 11 AM Eastern. The recording can be accessed by dialing 800-938-2490 domestic, or 402-220-9028 international. All lines are currently muted, and after the prepared remarks, there will be a live question-and-answer session. [Operator Instructions]

It is now my pleasure to turn the floor over to Ms. Emily Blum with Prosek Partners. Please go ahead.

Emily Blum

Thank you, operator. And thank you for joining us for this morning’s second quarter 2022 earnings conference call for Pangaea Logistics Solutions. With us today from the company are CEO, Mr. Mark Filanowski, CFO, Mr. Gianni Del Signore, and COO, Mr. Mads Boye Petersen.

Before I turn the call over to Mark, I’d like to read the safe harbor statement. This conference could contain forward-looking statements within the meaning of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995 about Pangaea Logistics Solutions. Forward-looking statements are statements that are not based on historical facts. Such forward-looking statements are based upon the current beliefs and expectations of Pangaea Logistics Solutions management, and are subject to risks and uncertainties which could cause the actual results to differ from the forward-looking statements. Such risks are more fully discussed in Pangaea Logistics Solutions filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission.

The information set forth herein should be understood in light of such risks. Pangaea Logistics Solutions does not assume any obligation to update the information contained in this conference call. Also, please recall that a supplemental slide presentation will accompany this call. Those slides can be found attached to the 8-K that was filed with last evening’s release, which is available on the Investors section at pangaeals.com under company filings or on SEC website at sec.gov.

Now, I would like to turn the call over to Mr. Mark Filanowski. Mark?

Mark Filanowski

Thank you, Emily, and thanks to all who have joined us today for Pangaea’s second quarter 2022 earnings call. This morning, I will provide an update on our operations and the overall market before turning the call over to Gianni, our CFO, to provide a more detailed overview of our second quarter financial results. We will then open the line for questions.

After the market closed yesterday, we issued a release and accompanying presentation highlighting our record second quarter results. We continue to demonstrate strong execution on our long-term strategy that emphasizes profitable growth within niche, higher margin dry bulk shipping and logistics markets. An elevated TCE environment, together with more owned shipping days from our expanded fleet contributed to significant year-over-year growth in revenue, net income, adjusted EBITDA and free cash flow during the second quarter.

Total revenue increased 34% to $195 million in the second quarter. Net income increased 30% to $25 million and adjusted EBITDA increased 107% to a record quarterly result of $44.2 million. Our cash position also reached an all-time high of $102 million providing us with the balance sheet optionality to support the ongoing growth of the business and to continue our dividend policy.

While the macro environment remains volatile, our delivery of a unique integrated shipping and logistics model positions us to support our customers with a more complete supply chain offering, ensuring reliability and on time delivery. We continue to focus on higher margin niche markets, including ice class where cargo requirements are highly specific for our customers. Given the high level of specialization required, we experienced excellent customer retention together with longer duration’s DOAs.

Our four Post Panamax Ice Class 1A vessels built by us and delivered during 2021. We’re fully deployed in Q2 and all four will be fully utilized to serve our customer as we enter the third quarter. In June, we completed the sale of Bulk Pangaea after taking delivery of Bulk Concord earlier this year, completing renewal of our bauxite shuttle fleet. The ships comprising this shuttle fleet of three vessels, which continuously serve an important customer’s industrial needs are planned to fulfill the remaining ten years under the customer contract.

In an environment where the global supply chain remains influx, the services we provide our clients have never been more valuable. More of our customers are discussing long term cargo relationships as they seek to mitigate rate volatility and inconsistent delivery capabilities. Importantly, these contracts not only provide Pangaea with long term visibility into future cash flows, they provide a base of profitable business from which we can arbitrage other open shipping days in the market.

On the supply side, overall dry bulk fundamentals are favorable, as new building orders remain low and global shipping capacity is constrained. We expect global capacity will further — be further restricted by upcoming IMO emissions requirements coming into effect in January 2023, which could result in structurally higher shipping rates over an extended period of time. Pangaea is prepared for the new emissions regulations and we’re happy to play our part in reducing harmful emissions from our ocean transportation and logistics business.

Our efficient and well maintained fleet will not require large CapEx to meet regulations and we do not expect negative — significant negative impact to our operations as a result of EEXi and CII requirements. In the current market, Pangaea is advantaged given the specialty shipping and logistics niche. We are far removed from the commoditized models of the cape’s (ph) players and tonnage providers.

Our contracts are longer term are in trades that allow for premium pricing. Our fleet has efficiently utilized and we have the balance sheet to sustain investment in organic growth together with an attractive return of capital profile through a sustainable quarterly cash dividend. During a period of macro volatility, our business is positioned for consistent performance, long-term profitability and value creation.

I’d now like to turn the call over to Gianni to review our financial performance in more detail. Gianni?

Gianni Del Signore

Thank you, Mark, and thank you all for joining us on today’s call. Before walking through our financials, I’d like to expand on a few recent transactions and highlight our results for the quarter. This year, we have taken steps to deploy our capital, focus on issues and capitalize on the dry bulk market to generate and return shareholder value.

We have used cash from operations to renew our owned fleet, which as Mark mentioned, we completed the sale of the Bulk Pangaea after taking delivery of the Bulk Concord earlier this year. Renewing our bauxite shuttle fleet and generating $8.4 million of cash from the sale of the Bulk Pangaea. Reduced debt as scheduled paying $9.6 million in long term debt and finance lease obligations, and consistently pay dividends reflecting our continued confidence in the outlook of our business.

We believe that our business model and operating leverage position us favorably to maximize our profitability through the cycle. And as Mark mentioned, our ability to deploy capital in a prudent via opportunistic manner has been integral to our track record of value creation. In what remains a volatile market, we believe a balanced approach to capital deployment is appropriate, one that includes a consistent return of capital program together with debt reduction and investment in high return organic growth investments, reflecting our continued confidence in the outlook for our business.

Turning now to our second quarter financials, starting on Page 6 of our presentation. You will see a year-over-year increase in our total revenues driven by a 29% increase in our achieved TCE rate to $27,139 per day, which represented a 4% premium to the average published market rates. Voyage revenues increased approximately 48% to $173.2 million and charter revenues decreased approximately 21% to $22.4 million as our fleet was deployed on more voyage charters compared to time charters during the quarter.

Charter expenses paid to third-party ship owners increased to $65.7 million from $62.6 million in the second quarter of last year, a 5% increase due to increases in market rates to charter in vessels. However, total charter in days decreased 20% as a result of the expansion of our owned fleet during 2021, which reduced the number of vessels needed to supplement the owned fleet at prevailing market rates. Further, the expansion of our owned fleet throughout 2021 led to an increase in vessel operating expenses, which increased by 32% to $12.9 million compared to $9.8 million.

Vessel operating expenses on a per day basis excluding management fees decreased from $5,254 per day to $5,198 per day. Unrealized loss on derivative instruments were $3.5 million during the quarter, representing the change in market value of open derivative positions from March 31 to June 30. Within other current assets, we recorded FFAs of $3.1 million, fuel swaps of $1.9 million, an interest rate cap of $2.8 million.

As we’ve discussed in the past, we utilized forward freight agreements and bunker swaps to selectively hedge our exposure to the market on our long-term cargo contracts and forward cargo bookings. While this locks in future cash flows, the mark-to-market unrealized gains or losses can lead to fluctuations in our reported results on a period to period basis. While settlement of the position and execution of the fiscal will occur at a future date. Net income for the quarter was $25 million or $0.56 per share compared to net income of $19.2 million or $0.43 per share for the same period in 2021.

Moving on to the balance sheet and cash flows on Page 7 of our presentation. We ended the quarter with $102 million of total cash and cash equivalents, an increase of $45.9 million year end, driven by $69 million in positive operating cash flow, $8.4 million from the sale of the Bulk Pangaea and offset by acquisitions of the Bulk Concord and related financing activities. We ended the quarter with $305 million in long-term debt and finance lease liabilities of which 51% is fixed at an all-in rate of 3.7%, 39% is capped and on LIBOR rate of 3.25% and 9% is floating at LIBOR plus approximately 2.1%.

Collectively, [Technical Difficulty] efficiently expand our fleet, strengthen our financial position and return value to shareholders to [Technical Difficulty] dividend. Our liquidity position has never been stronger as we look to expand our platform for [indiscernible] vessel acquisitions, complementary to our cargo strategies, opportunities in stevedoring and logistics businesses, continued debt repayment and a consistent return to shareholders.

With that, I will now turn the call back over to Mark for any additional remarks before we get to the Q&A portion of the call. Mark?

Mark Filanowski

Thank you, Gianni. We thank our customers, business partners and shareholders for their continued commitment and partnership. We look forward to updating you in — further in coming quarters.

I will now open the floor for questions.

Question-and-Answer Session

Operator

Thank you. [Operator Instructions] Our first question will come from Liam Burke with B. Riley. Your line is now open.

Liam Burke

Thank you. Good morning, Mark. Good morning, Gianni.

Mark Filanowski

Hi, Liam. Nice to hear from you this morning.

Liam Burke

Thank you. It’s nice hearing the results. You opportunistically added the four ice class vessels last year. You essentially swapped out the new acquisition with the sale of an older vessel. As we look forward, rates remain attractive how are you balancing chartered in versus possibly adding fleet assets?

Mark Filanowski

Fleet assets for us, when we add them, they’re a little bit opportunistic, a little bit planned. In fact, right now, we’re taking advantage of an opportunistic deal that we’ve been involved with for a while. We’ve got to ship on charter again for about a year and it’s — I guess, it’s a little bit — it’s about the average age of our current fleet, but what the plan would be is to acquire this vessel from its owners who want to sell it. They’ve come to us on a private basis. And we’re in the final negotiations of purchasing that ship with probable plan to sell an older vessel that’s due for docking in about six months.

So fleet renewal, like I said, is constantly ongoing, but that wouldn’t be a net new addition to our fleet. Pretty happy with right now with the size of the existing owned fleet and we charter in for needs when cargo opportunities come along. So we’re about where we have been over the past year in terms of chartered in fleet and owned fleet right now and look to stay there for the remainder of the year profitably (ph).

Liam Burke

All right. Fair enough. The rates are really attractive even when we’re looking at the partials for third quarter. They’re a little off sequentially, but then having said that, they’re very, very high. Directionally, how do you see rates going through the balance of the year?

Mark Filanowski

Yes, we see mostly blue skies with a few thunderstorms on the horizon. hopefully they pass us by. But if they do, we think any decrease in demand or any pressure on demand think it will be only temporary in our segments. Spot market has been pretty good. As you said, the rates are high compared to historical numbers, not as high as they were a few months ago, but everybody I think in our business is comfortable with rates where they are today and maybe we see a little bit more upside than downside.

Liam Burke

Great. Thank you, Mark.

Operator

Thank you. Our next question will come from Mike Heim with Noble Capital Markets. Your line is now open.

Michael Heim

Good morning. Thank you for taking my question. Let me talk about the other side of the organic growth and that’s returning proceeds to stakeholders. You do have a lot of debt that looks like it’s come due in 2024. Can you just talk about your thoughts about paying that down or restructuring or refinancing that?

Mark Filanowski

Hey, Mike. I don’t think we have any really significant balloons coming up. We do have a couple of ships that are coming up for renewals and we’ll probably renew those financings when time comes, whether it’s with same lenders or in different packages and get some opportunity to roll that forward. Companies always looking at ways to return capital to shareholders. As I mentioned, we were looking at this ship, it’s financeable and maybe even with its financial sale of another ship, we can generate some cash from that purchase and sale opportunity.

We’re looking at other organic investments in our logistics business today that would be low double-digits but had profitable operations. Working capital is always a little bit of a concern for us because rates can move and bunker prices can move very fast and very hard. So we always like to have a little bit of cushion there. On dividends, we’re paying a consistent dividend. We’ve increased it twice this year already. We’re always looking at other alternatives too.

Michael Heim

It seems like some of your counterparts have gone to a fixed dividend policy, is that something you’d ever think about?

Mark Filanowski

Their business model is a little bit different than ours and we look for consistency and performance, we look for consistency and distributions to our shareholders, a formula dividend doesn’t really fit our business model right now that Board has decided.

Michael Heim

Okay. All right. Thank you.

Operator

Thank you. Our next question will come from Poe Fratt with Alliance Global Partners. Your line is now open.

Poe Fratt

Good morning, Mark. Good morning, Gianni. Good morning, Mads. I had a couple of questions. First of all, just to follow-up on the dividend. You had increased the dividend in the previous two quarters and you didn’t change it this quarter. Your dividend is still fairly low relative to your earnings. record quarter. Can you just talk about the outlook for the dividend and more in the context of what you did this quarter?

Mark Filanowski

Pro, I think it’s our Board’s approach to have a consistent, sustainable dividend. And one quarter doesn’t mean we can increase the dividend and keep it going for a long time. So I think that the Board has a little longer term approach and wants to look at dividends that way not try to increase it every quarter because there may come a quarter where we’ve got to decrease it. And afraid of this shock of any decreased dividend might have on everyone’s perception.

Poe Fratt

Seems a little unlikely, but who knows. can you — so Mark, will we be looking at sort of an annual dividend review or is it just a quarter-to-quarter and more sporadic, I mean that just tends to bring into a little less credit that you’d get for a dividend if you don’t have sort of a more consistent policy?

Mark Filanowski

The Board discusses dividends and other ways to get capital back to shareholders at every meeting. Especially active discussions when we have results like this. So I can’t, say we have an annual plan, but have we discussed it at every Board meeting.

Poe Fratt

Great. And you talked about the fleet renewal in the context of this potential opportunity. Before you said that, you said, you potentially were chartering in something for a year. Is this the same situation or can you just talk, clarify that statement a little bit?

Mark Filanowski

Yes, I’m sorry. It is a shift we’ve had on charter for a year. So we know the ship pretty well. We know the performance. We know what we can do with the ship. And the owner opportunistically wants to sell the ship now. And so we said we’d be interested in buying the ship and we’ve arranged that with the owner. We’re in the final negotiations for the — under terms of the purchase and hope to sign something in the next few days.

Poe Fratt

And my assumption is because you’ve chartered in for longer than average (ph) period that it’s part of one of your longer term COAs. Is that sort of the case where you’re matching your COA book with owned assets?

Mark Filanowski

Well, that’s always part of the puzzle, right? We’ve got a fixed amount of cargo on the book. and we need to manage the fleet properly in order to serve those contracts most efficiently. This particular ship was chartered in on an index basis. So we’ve been able to put it in and out of our COA business as we saw — as we see fit and do any active spot business additionally with that ship. So ships under the COAs except for the ice class business they’re not specifically identified to any contracts. We use the ship that’s most available and that’s suited for that contract. And if one of ours doesn’t fit, we try to win in from the market, if that gives us a better result.

Poe Fratt

Okay, great. And then in the context, Mark, you’ve emphasized that you have pretty efficient fleet, you’ve renewed it. But in the press release you were talking about studying ways to make your fleet even more efficient. Can you highlight some of those measures that you take, how much capital it would entail and then also the timing of that energy efficiency boost

Mark Filanowski

Sure. Some of the efficiencies come out of the way we operate the ships, the tracks we take, the speed into – the speed at which we performed the cargo movement. And those things can be optimized with software and study of weather and there’s more interaction between our operations department and the people who are performing, the voyage is on the ship. And even when we consider business, we might be able to do a better job of assigning a shift, one shift versus another for a particular cargo to take maybe more cargo and therefore make the whole movement more efficient.

So there are a lot of different ways to improve your performance in small measures. and that’s done mostly with use of data. You get weather data, you get data back from the ships and then you access that data to make your ship, make your voyages a little more efficient. So that’s not a lot of capital investment in those ships, maybe some software investment and maybe the way we do that business in house. There are other ways we might take advantage of a ship in a dry dock to add some better paint systems on the ship that reduce friction that maybe some — that’s not a significant increase, but those paints are more expensive.

There are ways that you can try to make a propulsion more efficient by channeling one more and more efficiently to and from the propeller area. Those opportunities do take a little bit of capital, talking hundreds of thousands, not millions. But that takes a little bit of planning. It’s usually done when the ship is in dry dock. So you don’t take a lot out of service time. So those are some of the things that can be done with the existing fleet that can make measurable but small improvements in the way the ships perform.

Poe Fratt

Okay, great. And just two quick ones. One is that the Nordic Bulk acquisition of the additional third interest was structured $15 million cash and then $7.5 million over three years. It looks like in the last two years you’ve pretty much said that you’re going to pay off the remaining $5 million in the third quarter. Can you just highlight the decision to do that and is there any carrying cost there you’re avoiding or you just have enough cash where you’re comfortable getting rid of that obligation right now?

Gianni Del Signore

Yes, Poe, I think where the two aspects to that is, one, it’s one of our floating rate facilities. So the rate is locked through September, but after that it gets reset. So we see an opportunity to pay down one of our floating rate, we call it, loan facilities. And we have the cash that we decided to instead waiting for another year and letting the interest rate reset, we’ll just pay the entire amount off. And it also cleans up some legacy agreements around Nordic Bulk Holdings. So it’ll put that basically to bet.

Poe Fratt

Got you. And is that part of the reason you paid down the 240,000 of related party to or…

Gianni Del Signore

Yes. That one is somewhat just balance sheet cleanup. It’s noise on our balance sheet having related party payable for that amount of money, $240,000 was — it was about time that went away.

Poe Fratt

Okay. Great. And then you added the brand new assets before JV assets. Any way Gianni to quantify that, the impact in the second quarter in your operating results? Was that a major driver for brand new assets or more efficient than the rest of your fleet? Any way to give us color on how that potentially impacted the quarter?

Gianni Del Signore

Well, I think the performance of the vessels we fully consolidate the entities. So you’ll see the EBITDA generated by those vessels in our quarterly results. You’ll see that the implications of the debt, the interest, all of that flows 100% into our results. I think we’ll also see those vessels more impactful in the third quarter as they actually are now starting the [indiscernible] and trade in the summer season. So to quantify it, I think we get the full benefit of their performance. We have the EBITDA increases based on their trading. And they’re within the fleet to separate four specific vessels out of 60 or even four out of the 24 owned vessels. It’s harder to provide that color to you. But what we can say is that they are performing, they’re earning and they’re — we’re getting what we believe is more of the benefit out of those vessels.

Poe Fratt

Okay. Sorry, just one quick one. As far as your forward cover, 3,026 days already booked in the quarter, in 256 (ph) roughly. Can you — I took a stab and I calculated that potentially is about 60% of your third quarter days. Is that in the ballpark? And then where are you booking days right now? I assume it’s a little bit lower than that 256?

Mads Boye Petersen

[indiscernible] So we’re still looking at better line voyages that on average generate a higher return on that. So the numbers we saw didn’t include all of our better line activity for the quarter. And yes, when we are in certain parts of the market, the number is probably lower than that, but then we also have a cargo book that also gives us a good cushion and balances out with cargo set up booked in the last six months, which obviously has higher churn than the spot market. So that sort of is the model, right? We unwind as part of the chartered in fleet and consistent their booking cargo with our customers. And of course, the cargo we booked three, four months ago, are in the money now. So I don’t foresee a wild change. It’s a different number for that reported for the rest of the quarter to be honest.

Poe Fratt

Okay. Great. Thanks for your time.

Gianni Del Signore

Thank you, Paul.

Operator

Thank you. Our next question will come from Climent Molins with Value Investors Edge. Your line is now open.

Climent Molins

Good morning and thank you for taking my questions. Despite your strong operational performance, you’re trading at one of the biggest discounts in the sector. And I was wondering, following up on the capital allocation questions, is there any appetite to pursue share repurchase at prevailing pricing and considering trading liquidity could become an elimination, is it under offer something that could potentially considered?

Mark Filanowski

Climent, like I said, the Board is constantly talking about the best use of capital for any excess cash we have and people do mention stock buybacks. We talk about dividends all the time. And as management, we’re concerned about ongoing operation and reinvestment of the fleet. So it’s an active discussion all the time. Board has made no decision at all on share buybacks, but like I said, this is an active discussion.

Climent Molins

All right. Thank you for the color. The margin on the trading business seems to be expanded from a quarter-over-quarter basis. Could you provide some shipping insight on these and whether we should expect similar contribution going forward or was this more off an one off given the operating environment?

Mark Filanowski

I think I talked a little bit about the impact of the new ships on the quarter, on a quarter-to-quarter basis. Last year, at this time, we had one, maybe two ships in operation for only part of the second quarter, those four new buildings this year. We’ve got all four active in the second quarter. So those additional owned ship days are adding to our EBITDA performance,

Gianni Del Signore

But also to add a little color, I think your part of the question was quarter versus Q1, ‘22 versus Q2. And I think what you’re seeing in the margin expansion is just really our chartering strategy in practice and showing the results, the market declined in that type of environment. We reset — we have the opportunity to reset the cost of our own — excuse me, our chartered in fleet. So we delivered vessels and we’ll charter in new ones. So if there is decline, it also presents opportunities to us. Yes, our TCE earned may decline slightly, but also our charter in per day cost declines and that with a book of fixed cargo and some forward bookings does provide a margin expansion in that type of environment.

Climent Molins

That’s very helpful. Thank you. That’s all for me. Thank you for taking my questions and congratulations for this quarter.

Mark Filanowski

Thank you.

Gianni Del Signore

Thank you.

Operator

Thank you. Our next is follow-up from Poe Fratt with Alliance Global Partners. Your line is now open.

Poe Fratt

Sorry, two more questions. One is, can you just highlight the drydocking scheduled for the next two quarters in 2022? And then maybe give us a preview for 2023 drydocking activity?

Mark Filanowski

So we have no further drydocking activity schedule this year. We have one ship coming up in the first part of next year.

Poe Fratt

Okay. Which one is that Matt?

Mark Filanowski

It’s about new, Poe.

Poe Fratt

Okay, great. And then Mark, in your comments you’ve talked about customers coming to you with the desire to lock in longer term agreements. Is this something that on the margin as you’re seeing more of? Can you just highlight expand on that comment and just how you potentially could structure long term agreements where you don’t take the — where you have some risk mitigation measures?

Mark Filanowski

So, Poe, the way we — I think we saw this playing out was that in a very sort of in a pool market that is continuously rising and going into maybe on the spot levels into the 30s during past of last year and this year as well. The customers tend to also look at this sort of historical view, right? And maybe not as inclined to go out and take — make those contracts at those higher levels, especially not the long term ones. We see more interest than we see generally on bigger exceptions towards doing that at levels where we are today, plus or minus a little bit. We’re still in historically we presented pretty good, pretty good value for us, right?

So I think that part sort of is the mental aspect from our customer side makes it a little bit more likely than it happened in this type of rate environment versus at the peak we’ve seen in the last 18 months or so. And in terms of the risk, because we do have a pretty big owned fleet that is mainly to service those contracts. The main risk we have essentially is on the fuel pricing, right, when we either use bunder adjustment cost is to sort of reset the freight rates according to whatever we’re buying the fuel at the time of reform, alternatively hedge using bunker swaps typically, right? So that’s the way we look at that.

Poe Fratt

Great. That’s helpful. Thanks, Mark.

Operator

Thank you. It appears there are no further questions at this time. I would now like turn the program back over to our presenters for any additional or closing remarks.

Mark Filanowski

Thanks everybody for attending today, we like this active discussion and we hope to have better news — even better news next quarter. Thanks again.

Operator

Thank you. Ladies and gentlemen, this concludes today’s event. You may now disconnect.

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