Okeanis Eco Tankers Corp
OSE:OET

Watchlist Manager
Okeanis Eco Tankers Corp Logo
Okeanis Eco Tankers Corp
OSE:OET
Watchlist
Price: 259 NOK -1.15% Market Closed
Market Cap: 8.2B NOK
Have any thoughts about
Okeanis Eco Tankers Corp?
Write Note

Earnings Call Transcript

Earnings Call Transcript
2020-Q4

from 0
Operator

Welcome to OET's Fourth Quarter 2020 Financial Results Presentation. We will begin shortly. Ioannis Alafouzos, Chairman and CEO; Aristidis Alafouzos, COO; and John Papaioannou, CFO of Okeanis Eco Tankers, will take you through the presentation. They will be pleased to address any questions raised at the end of the call. I would like to advise you that this session is being recorded. John will begin the presentation now.

J
John Papaioannou
Chief Financial Officer

Thank you. Welcome to the presentation of OET's results for the fourth quarter of 2020. We will discuss matters that are forward-looking in nature. These forward-looking statements are based on our current expectations about future events, including OET's commercial performance, dividend policy, projected dry dock schedules and anticipated debt capital commitments. Actual results may differ materially from the expectations reflected in these forward-looking statements. Starting on Slide 3, we review the highlights of the quarter. We generated net revenue of $41 million, adjusted EBITDA of $28 million and adjusted profit of $8 million or $0.25 per share. The top line miss to our own guidance released in December was half driven by the incurrence of off-hire on the time chartered VLCC due to having the wrong type of COVID test for crews when entering Chinese ports. The other half of the miss relates to an IFRS accounting charge on the ballast for sailing 2 Aframaxes in the shipyard for their first special survey and scrubber retrofits. Our Board declared a fourth consecutive cash dividend of $0.10 per share, or $3 million. Since inception, we have returned $1.45 per share in cash to shareholders. As we have always promised, we recently uplisted to the Oslo Børs from the Oslo Access market. Towards the end of 2020, and as previously announced, we took some short coverage at rates that are currently well in the money on 2 VLCCs, 1 Suezmax and 1 LR2. Lastly, we hedged the floating rate debt of the Nissos Anafi.I'll now hand it over to Aristidis for an overview of our industry-leading commercial performance.

A
Aristidis Alafouzos
Chief Operating officer

Thanks, John. Once again, OET is trending as a top performer in the spot market for VLCCs and Suezmaxes. During Q4, we achieved a fleet-wide TCE rate of $28,500 per operating day, net of 9% technical off-hire days. Our VLCCs generated $27,000 per day in the spot market, a 37% outperformance relative to our tanker peers that have reported Q4 earnings. We continued fixing longer West Africa to China runs on our 1 VLCC trading in the spot market, the Nissos Anafi. Our Suezmaxes generated $16,000 per day in the spot market, 40% higher than the tanker peer group average. We continued our strategy of trading the Med-China route and mixed in shorter voyages to avoid fixing long voyages at market bottoms. Lastly, our Aframax/LR2 fleet generated roughly $10,000 per spot day. Our Aframax fleet has now undergone its first special survey and been retrofitted with scrubbers. And we took some short-term time charter cover on our clean LR2, the Nissos Heraclea. Moving on to Slide 5. We provide guidance for our time charter equivalent revenue in the first quarter of 2021. We include only concluded fixtures in our guidance. We have covered all of our available VLCC spot days at $18,000 per day on a Brazil to China run. The VLCC market in the AG was flooded with older tonnage emission approvals, leading to discounted rates in that region and leading us to the Atlantic basin. Moving on to Suezmaxes. We have covered 90% of our available spot days at $17,000 per day. The last 10% of available spot days are allocated to Poliegos, which will be in a position to fix a front-haul voyage with minimum ballast. This voyage could conservatively make $30,000 per day for 40 days. Lastly, we covered 54% of our Aframax spot days at $14,600 per day. We estimate the next spot voyage to be in the mid-teens per day. Our commercial performance and time charter coverage comfortably ensures profitability in Q1. In the past weeks, we have seen higher interest in Eco scrubber tonnage for longer-term time charter business at increasingly higher rates. When the big trading houses are looking for and taking in longer-term tonnage, it is a clear indication of where freight rates are headed. We have also seen strong interest in the S&P market for Eco scrubber vessels. We believe that the Eco scrubber values have bottomed in Q3 2020 and have since appreciated by 10%. With the new EEXI regulations as well as increasing bunker prices, buying interest will focus more and more on OET type tonnage. On Slide 6, we quantify our commercial outperformance by taking the difference between our achieved spot rates and those of the tanker peer group and by multiplying it by the number of spot days available to us. Our spot performance has generated more than $38 million in profit for our shareholders since inception with our VLCCs outperforming the peer group average by $14,000 per day, our Suezmaxes by $9,000 per day and our Afras by $3,500 per day. OET has consistently outperformed the peer group. And now back to John.

J
John Papaioannou
Chief Financial Officer

Thanks, Aristidis. Starting with our income statement on Slide 7. We continue managing our cost well. In 2020, daily OpEx, excluding management fees, averaged $7,000 per day while daily G&A came in below $800 per day. We generated total earnings of $3.20 per share, equating to trailing 12-month P/E ratio of 2.4. Moving to Slide 8. We report book value of NOK 105 per share. As guided last quarter, our leverage peaked in Q3 and has since declined to $835 million at year-end, backed by strong time charter coverage and a very modern fleet. Debt will decrease by $14 million per quarter going forward. On Slide 9, we summarize our cash flows. Our liquidity position stood at $32 million at year-end while we have concluded our growth CapEx and scrubber retrofit programs. The next ship due for her first special survey is the Suezmax Milos in the middle of 2021. We are working on bringing this special survey forward to early mid Q2 to capitalize on the current low market rates. Shifting to Slide 10. We provide an overview of our debt stock and amortization by vessel. Our all-in cost of debt in 2021 is roughly 3.5%, and we expect to pay down $55 million of debt through the year. We have 1 debt maturity this year in Q4, the Nissos Therassia. We have been approached by numerous lenders that are eager to refinance the ship with us, including its existing lender. We anticipate that we will be able to refinance relatively easily if the ship hasn't already been sold until Q4. Lastly, we have now hedged the debt of the fleet, excluding those on bareboat lease and the Aframaxes. It is important to note that when entering into swaps, the timing must align with the amortization schedule of the ship and that hedging rates thus reflect the forward part of the curve and not spot 3-month LIBOR. I'll now turn it over to Ioannis to walk you through our market outlook.

I
Ioannis Aristidis Alafouzos
Chairman & CEO

Thank you, John. I'll start with a view on refinery runs between OECD and non-OECD countries. Non-OECD country refinery runs have now recovered to pre-COVID levels, last seen this time last year. The aviation refinery demand today is in OECD countries and particularly in Europe, where lockdowns and mobility restrictions continue to impact demand and where we ultimately expect refinery closures, which is very beneficial for shipping, of course. We are confident that the vaccine rollout will release huge pent-up demand for air travel this year. And that this recovery in aviation demand will eliminate whatever surplus is left, driving increased crude oil production and seaborne trade. On Slide 12, we see that forward refining margins have also recovered to pre-COVID levels, indicating that product futures are pricing in a strong recovery in demand later this year. Refinery profitability is a key leading indicator for tanker rates. And higher profitability means higher runs, higher seaborne inputs and stronger tanker rates. On Slide 13, we show that the global oil market rebalancing, that the global oil market rebalance has made great progress and that the pace of stock growth will not accelerate throughout March. Floating storage and crude in-transit are at normal levels, while only onshore storage remains slightly elevated. There are also reasons to believe that China and India will hold structurally higher inventories going forward, suggesting that the rebalancing is more advanced than data suggests. On Slide 14, we present an OPEC production focus and what the incremental volumes mean in terms of VLCC demand equivalents. OPEC production has clearly bottomed out, and we expect Q2 to be 1.4 million barrels per day higher than Q1. To put this in perspective, this is the largest quarter-on-quarter OPEC production increase in history. This will be led by the Southeast and exclude Russia, which we anticipate will also increase production in April. Through the end of the year, OPEC production will grow by 3 million barrels per day, generating the equivalent of 64 VLCCs of demand on an annualized basis. At the same time, the fleet is aging. Bunker prices are rising and environmental regulations are increasing. 24% the fleet is 15 years or older and highly disadvantaged in today's market. We estimate that the Eco and scrubber savings on our VLCCs are about $15,000 per day. We believe that the spread will continue to widen. On Slide 16, we want to point out that in the tight market, VLCC rates do not rise in a straight line but rise exponentially. From the current load utilization of 83%, we expect the market will tighten to the high 80s by the end of this year and into the low 90s in 2022. To summarize on Slide 17, crude oil trade, tanker rates and asset values have bottomed. Charters are actively looking for period tonnage with forward delivery. Our conversations with trading houses suggest that the refineries are scouring the market for oil and that the rebalancing will be complete by the summer. We're excited about the next couple of years in the tanker market. I think now we are ready to take, I guess, questions, yes.

Operator

[Operator Instructions] We do currently have a question on the phone line. This comes from the line of Peder Jarlsby from Fearnley Securities.

P
Peder Nicolai Jarlsby
Equity Analyst

Just a quick one in terms of your coverage. You obviously have quite substantial TCE coverage relative to your peers. And I know the kind of outlook for most is that we'll see a recovery in the second half of the year. But I think it's fair to say there's still quite a bit of uncertainty. Given that uncertainty, I'm just curious to hear how you think of managing those open vessels you have on a risk-reward basis? Are you looking for more charter coverage? Or are you happy with kind of where you are in terms of your fleet composition at the moment?

I
Ioannis Aristidis Alafouzos
Chairman & CEO

Well, we're very bullish on the market. And we intend to try and reduce our TCE coverage as much as possible in the next month. We believe that the time for cover is over effectively. And that now it's the time to increase our spot exposure. We really don't see any way that the market will be at current or weaker levels in the next quarter. As we said in our report, we expect OpEx to increase its oil production. And generally, there seems to -- if you consider that outside Europe and the United States effectively that the rest of the world has increased -- has reached pre-COVID levels in oil demand. Well, I think this answers everything, especially since Europe, as you know, plays a very small part in the oil -- the demand in Europe has stopped increasing. It's quite stable. So we are also extremely confident that we will wake up in 1 or 2 months from now in a different world where substantial parts of the population will have been vaccinated. And I think we cannot envisage today the potential rebound in travel and in general activity that is coming. We can see an extremely bright future, not only for the end of this year, but also for the coming years. We are very, very bullish.

P
Peder Nicolai Jarlsby
Equity Analyst

And just 1 more quick one. In terms of the fuel spreads, I guess we don't talk as much as we used to do about, but things are improving. And maybe for John, in terms of how you see -- based on your oil market view going forward, how do you see this -- the fuel spreads kind of playing out? Do you expect them to stay here? Are there any particular developments you're expecting to see going forward?

J
John Papaioannou
Chief Financial Officer

We've understood that VLSFO refining margins are at very good levels for the Asian refiners. Demand has held up well in terms of bunkering demand, of course. So right now, things sort of present a very rosy picture for the VLSFO price in Asia. Sour crude obviously has been -- that market has been very tight given that OPEC has been holding back production. And so there, with the return of sour barrels from OPEC, you can see more HFO production entering the market, which should maybe losing fundamentals for HFO. So overall, we think here in the $100 to $120 spread range, I think this is a very comfortable place for spreads with the potential to widen structurally over the next couple of years.

I
Ioannis Aristidis Alafouzos
Chairman & CEO

Yes. And if I may add, John, I think that historically, we have seen that spreads generally widen as the price of crude increases. So -- and we expect an extremely firm crude price. I think we will probably exceed the $100 per barrel. And I think at that stage, we might have massive differences between low sulfur and heavy sulfur fuel oil. Diesel will be in great demand with economic recovery that's coming, and this will also impact the spreads further.

Operator

The next question comes from the line of Eirik Haavaldsen from Pareto Securities.

E
Eirik Haavaldsen
Head of Research

I wanted to ask you on your emission reporting slide. Are you -- I mean, 2023 is actually not too far away now. Are you sensing or seeing any change in the approach you have or the dialogue you have with charters with regards to this emission reporting and energy efficiency indicators and so on. It would be interesting to just hear your views and thoughts on how things are going to play out here in a few years' time when this is some agreement total ESG frenzy at the moment and you are kind of on the forefront of this development in your market. So curious to just hear your thoughts on what you might see there because it's going to have an impact, right?

A
Aristidis Alafouzos
Chief Operating officer

It's Aristidis. Well, I agree that charters and owners and the entire community are paying much more attention to the emissions that the vessels have and that in the future the EEXI and the other indexes and regulations that will be put in place will have a greater impact on which vessels are chosen for a business. I think at this point today, the decision on selection of the ship is still predominantly based on like the fuel efficiency rather than the emission that the ship has. So it's more of an economic decision. But I think generally, this is expected to change over time. And with the new EEXI, we'll see also that older ships, which Okeanis -- to our technical understanding as of today, our fleet won't require any retrofits to comply with the new regulations. But ships, let's say, built 10 to 15 years ago, could have their speed reduced to comply with the regulation by up to even 25%, 35%. And this will create big issues for older tonnage. So at this point, efficient and ships with fewer emissions will have a huge advantage in the market.

E
Eirik Haavaldsen
Head of Research

But you think it's really going to be speed reductions that's going to be the kind of only solution to this. And obviously, if all ships older -- 10 years older, then the slowdown by 20%, 25%. I mean how is that going to be economically feasible for the tanking market, do you think?

A
Aristidis Alafouzos
Chief Operating officer

Well, I mean, I think it needs to be considered about like how you comply with this formula that derives the EEXI. And -- you can put on a newish duct or change the propeller or put on some expensive paint, but I don't think that these changes will ever achieve the emissions target that the vessel will require to have. And due to this, the only solution you have is to reduce the output of your engine so you can comply with the formula.

I
Ioannis Aristidis Alafouzos
Chairman & CEO

If I may add something, I would say -- this is Ioannis. I would say that when '19 -- 2020 ship will be making, let's say, $60,000 a day and 2011 build ship will be making $20,000. That will be -- that's how this will be achieved, I guess.

E
Eirik Haavaldsen
Head of Research

No, I agree. And I think this is something that hasn't been -- we haven't talked enough about this. So I guess this is something to talk about for 2021. And finally, one more, if I may. Your Aframaxes, you previously talked about may be selling them at some point. They don't -- 2 of them at least are in the difficult spot market. We've seen some increased interest and increase in Eco ship values. You plan of hanging on to them in the current -- given your market outlook?

A
Aristidis Alafouzos
Chief Operating officer

Look, I mean, we've said multiple times that we're interested in selling the ships. We're just looking for the right opportunity that makes sense to us. We feel comfortable with the way that the market is developing, and we think that the price will continue to appreciate.

Operator

There are no further questions in the queue. So I will hand the call back to you, hosts.

I
Ioannis Aristidis Alafouzos
Chairman & CEO

Okay. Well, thank you very much. I guess, gentlemen, I didn't hear of any lady being present. So we hope that next time in a quarter from now, we will have more exciting news for all of us. Thank you.

J
John Papaioannou
Chief Financial Officer

Thank you.

Operator

Thank you for joining today's call. You may now disconnect your lines.