Pulse Seismic Inc. (TSX:PSD) (OTCQX:PLSDF) (“Pulse” or “the
Company”) is pleased to report its financial and operating results
for the three months ended March 31, 2019. The unaudited condensed
consolidated interim financial statements, accompanying notes and
MD&A are being filed on SEDAR (www.sedar.com) and will be
available on Pulse’s website at www.pulseseismic.com.
“I am very pleased by our first quarter
results,” commented Neal Coleman, President and CEO of Pulse.
“Accomplishing a 131% quarter-over-quarter increase in data sales
is exactly the kind of result we were working towards by increasing
our geographical coverage through our January purchase of
Seitel.”
Pulse’s acquisition of Seitel Canada Ltd.
(“Seitel”) on January 15, 2019 more than doubled the Company’s
seismic coverage, increasing Pulse’s revenue-generating potential
by adding unique, complementary, high-quality data over areas that
Pulse’s library did not previously cover. With significant
synergies to be realized by combining Pulse and Seitel, the Company
foresees increased sales ultimately driving a higher cash
margin.
As reported in previous filings concerning the
acquisition, in addition to the purchase price of $58.6 million,
Pulse assumed various future liabilities that are viewed by the
Company as being a part of the total cost of the acquisition. These
estimated $4.2 million of costs are being expensed over time, with
a large percentage occurring in the first year, including $1.9
million in the first quarter of 2019. These non-recurring expenses
are categorized as restructuring costs and are being excluded from
the Company’s calculation of cash EBITDA and shareholder free cash
flow.
To date in 2019, Pulse has licensed $7.8 million
of seismic data, which is equivalent to 55 percent of 2018 annual
sales generated by the combined Pulse and Seitel data
libraries.
HIGHLIGHTS FOR THE THREE MONTHS ENDED
MARCH 31, 2019
- Data library sales was $5.3 million for the three months ended
March 31, 2019 compared to $2.3 million for the three months ended
March 31, 2018;
- The net loss was $2.7 million or
$0.05 per share compared to a net loss of $696,000 or $0.01 per
share in the first quarter of 2018;
- Cash EBITDA was $3.1 million or
$0.06 per share compared to $934,000 or $0.02 per share for the
comparable period in 2018;
- Shareholder free cash flow was $2.7
million or $0.05 per share compared to $880,000 or $0.02 per share
in the first quarter of 2018; and
- At March 31, 2019 long-term debt excluding deferred financing
charges was $36.6 and included the $3.9 million balance of the
contingent liability related to the Seitel purchase. There
was $22.0 million undrawn and available to the Company on the
revolving credit facility.
|
SELECTED
FINANCIAL AND OPERATING INFORMATION |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
(thousands of
dollars except per share data, |
Three months ended March 31, |
Year ended |
numbers of shares
and kilometres of seismic data) |
2019 |
2018 |
December 31, |
|
(unaudited) |
2018 |
Revenue |
|
|
|
Data library sales |
5,277 |
2,289 |
10,076 |
Other revenue |
143 |
39 |
112 |
Total revenue |
5,420 |
2,328 |
10,188 |
|
|
|
|
Amortization of
seismic data library |
3,566 |
1,878 |
7,337 |
Net loss |
(2,671) |
(696) |
(1,730) |
Per share basic and diluted |
(0.05) |
(0.01) |
(0.03) |
Cash provided by
operating activities |
1,458 |
(8,592) |
(3,250) |
Per share basic and diluted |
0.03 |
(0.16) |
(0.06) |
Cash EBITDA
(a) |
3,097 |
934 |
5,037 |
Per share basic and diluted (a) |
0.06 |
0.02 |
0.09 |
Shareholder free
cash flow (a) |
2,700 |
880 |
4,671 |
Per share basic and diluted (a) |
0.05 |
0.02 |
0.09 |
Capital
expenditures |
|
|
|
Seismic data purchases, digitization and related costs |
61,029 |
62 |
62 |
Property and equipment |
335 |
2 |
18 |
Total capital
expenditures |
61,364 |
64 |
80 |
Weighted
average shares outstanding |
|
|
|
Basic and diluted |
53,793,317 |
53,887,280 |
53,838,106 |
Shares outstanding
at period-end |
53,793,317 |
53,850,917 |
53,793,317 |
Seismic
library |
|
|
|
2D in kilometres |
829,207 |
447,000 |
450,000 |
3D in square kilometres |
65,310 |
28,956 |
28,956 |
|
|
|
|
FINANCIAL
POSITION AND RATIO |
|
March 31, |
March 31, |
December 31, |
(thousands of dollars except ratio) |
2019 |
2018 |
2018 |
Working
capital |
(736) |
22,216 |
25,804 |
Working capital
ratio |
0.9:1 |
13.5:1 |
15:1 |
Cash and cash
equivalents |
1,302 |
18,232 |
23,016 |
Total assets |
78,784 |
41,218 |
38,847 |
Long-term
debt |
36,577 |
- |
- |
Shareholders’
equity |
32,800 |
36,656 |
35,238 |
Long-term debt to equity ratio |
1.1:1 |
- |
- |
|
|
|
|
(a) The Company’s continuous disclosure
documents provide discussion and analysis of “cash EBITDA”, “cash
EBITDA per share”, “shareholder free cash flow” and “shareholder
free cash flow per share”. These financial measures do not have
standard definitions prescribed by IFRS and, therefore, may not be
comparable to similar measures disclosed by other companies. The
Company has included these non-GAAP financial measures because
management, investors, analysts and others use them as measures of
the Company’s financial performance. The Company’s definition of
cash EBITDA is cash available for interest payments, cash taxes,
repayment of debt, purchase of its shares, discretionary capital
expenditures and the payment of dividends, and is calculated as
earnings (loss) from operations before interest, taxes,
depreciation and amortization less participation survey revenue,
plus any non-cash and non-recurring expenses. Cash EBITDA excludes
participation survey revenue as these funds are directly
used to fund specific participation surveys and this revenue is not
available for discretionary capital expenditures. The Company
believes cash EBITDA assists investors in comparing Pulse’s results
on a consistent basis without regard to participation survey
revenue and non-cash items, such as depreciation and amortization,
which can vary significantly depending on accounting methods or
non-operating factors such as historical cost. Cash EBITDA per
share is defined as cash EBITDA divided by the weighted average
number of shares outstanding for the period. Shareholder free cash
flow further refines the calculation of capital available to invest
in growing the Company’s 2D and 3D seismic data library, to repay
debt, to purchase its common shares and to pay dividends by
deducting non-discretionary expenditures from cash EBITDA.
Non-discretionary expenditures are defined as debt financing costs
(net of deferred financing expenses amortized in the current
period) and current tax provisions. Shareholder free cash flow per
share is defined as shareholder free cash flow divided by the
weighted average number of shares outstanding for the period.
These non-GAAP financial measures are defined,
calculated and reconciled to the nearest GAAP financial measures in
the Management's Discussion and Analysis.
OUTLOOK
Although successive quarterly results will be needed to confirm
trends, Pulse’s first-quarter results are consistent with the
Company’s assessment that the Seitel acquisition would
approximately double its baseline seismic data library sales (all
other things being equal). Following the first quarter, Pulse’s
strong sales in April bring the Company’s year-to-date seismic data
library revenue to $7.8 million (compared to full-year 2018 sales
from both Pulse and Seitel of $14.5 million). This includes
significant sales from both datasets, corroborating Pulse’s
business case for the Seitel acquisition.
Pulse’s outlook for the remainder of 2019 remains cautious,
however. While some industry indicators are strengthening, many
remain weak. Briefly:
- Domestic natural gas prices (AECO) remain very low, averaging
$2.10 per GJ in February, spiking to nearly $5.00 per GJ amidst
brutal cold in early March, before collapsing in April to the range
of only $0.50 per GJ;
- The domestic oil price benchmark, Western Canada Select (WCS),
has rallied since the pricing crisis experienced last fall, which
saw WCS trade at a rock-bottom $5.97 per bbl in December after the
WTI-WCS price differential widened to a record $45.93 per bbl.
Following government-mandated curtailment of Alberta’s oil
production to force a reduction in the domestic oil storage
inventory, WCS has recovered to the higher end of the price range
it held through much of 2015-2018. Despite lower overall world
crude prices, WCS improved to $45.33 per bbl and the differential
fell to $9.68 per bbl in February 2019. If this holds, it
represents billions of dollars in annualized revenues for western
Canada’s oil-producing sector;
- Oil and natural gas well drilling was extremely weak over the
winter, with none of the customary seasonal spike, due to factors
including the WTI-WCS differential, but drilling forecasts for 2019
remain reasonable. On May 1 , the Petroleum Services Association of
Canada reduced its 2019 drilling forecast by 300 wells to 5,300
wells. This was a decrease of 1,300 hundred wells from its initial
2019 forecast and 300 less than it had predicted in its update in
late January. As of May 1, however, the Canadian Association of
Oilwell Drilling Contractors was maintaining its 2019 forecast of
6,962 wells;
- Proceeds from mineral lease auctions or “land sales” in Western
Canada as of April 30, 2019 were down by 60% from the comparable
period in 2018, and by 75% from the same time period in 2017. From
January to April 2019, in Alberta $42.3 million in new exploration
lands were leased and in British Columbia the total was only $2.5
million;
- The Trans-Mountain Pipeline expansion project, critical for
accessing Pacific Rim crude oil markets, received renewed
regulatory approval from the National Energy Board but remains in
limbo while awaiting a political decision by the federal government
on whether to proceed with construction;
- The Keystone XL pipeline project appears to be moving forward,
having received a new presidential permit from the U.S.
Administration in late March;
- Efforts continue to move forward with Canada’s first large LNG
export project;
- U.S. LNG exports continue to grow, exceeding 4 bcf per day in
April as additional liquefaction trains come on-stream amidst a
global boom in the LNG trade, which now exceeds 40 bcf per day
worldwide. This boom adds impetus to Canadian LNG projects;
- While the level of corporate merger-and-acquisition activity
remained low in the first few months of 2019, this could suggest a
pent-up potential for industry transactions if overall industry
volatility is reduced somewhat; and
- The Alberta provincial election on April 17 was won by the
United Conservative Party, which campaigned on a platform of
reducing the regulatory burden facing the industry, lowering the
corporate income tax rate and vigorously promoting energy
development including new export pipelines.
On balance, Western Canada’s oil and natural gas sector still
faces economic headwinds and uncertainties. In addition, Pulse is
likely to experience a delay before any renewed industry investment
and activity translate into higher seismic data sales. The Company
is, accordingly, prepared for additional quarters of weak
traditional sales while also cautioning that there is no visibility
as to transaction-based sales.
Pulse’s management team remains pleased with the Company’s cost
structure and financial position, and confident in its ability to
pay down debt at the schedule and rate specified, as well as the
additional sales-based consideration for Seitel. The Seitel
acquisition financing structure enables Pulse to comfortably meet
its obligations. The low cost structure of Pulse’s business model
facilitates significant synergies on future sales.
The Company has been structured to survive and even grow through
all phases of the industry cycle. Throughout 2019 Pulse intends to
pay down debt, continue to manage costs conservatively and remain
stringent in assessing potential new opportunities. Pulse has
unused borrowing capacity of up to a further $22 million if
needed.
As Canada’s largest pure-play seismic data library provider,
Pulse’s sales are highly scalable without either capital investment
or higher operating costs, and a transaction-based sale of any size
could occur at any time. The Company’s low cost structure and the
broad coverage of its seismic database make Pulse’s revenue, cash
margin and shareholder free cash flow highly levered to any uptick
in industry field activity and demand for seismic data amidst a
longer-term recovery in western Canada’s oil and natural gas
sector.
CORPORATE PROFILE
Pulse is a market leader in the acquisition,
marketing and licensing of 2D and 3D seismic data to the western
Canadian energy sector. Pulse owns the largest licensable seismic
data library in Canada, currently consisting of approximately
65,310 square kilometres of 3D seismic and 829,207 kilometres of 2D
seismic. The library extensively covers the Western Canada
Sedimentary Basin where most of Canada’s oil and natural gas
exploration and development occur.
For further information, please contact:Neal
Coleman, President and CEOOrPamela Wicks,
Vice President Finance and CFOTel.: 403-237-5559Toll-free:
1-877-460-5559E-mail: info@pulseseismic.com.Please visit our
website at www.pulseseismic.com.
This document contains information that
constitutes “forward-looking information” or “forward-looking
statements” (collectively, “forward-looking information”) within
the meaning of applicable securities legislation.
The Outlook section contains forward-looking
information which includes, among other things, statements
regarding:
- Pulse’s outlook for the remainder of 2019 remains
cautious;
- Pulse is prepared for additional quarters of weak traditional
sales while also cautioning that there is no visibility as to
transaction-based sales;
- Pulse is confident in its ability to pay down debt at the
schedule and rate specified;
- Pulse’s capital allocation strategy;
- Pulse’s dividend policy;
- Oil and natural gas prices;
- Oil and natural gas drilling activity and land sales
activity;
- Oil and natural gas company capital budgets;
- Future demand for seismic data;
- Future seismic data sales;
- Future demand for participation surveys;
- Pulse’s business and growth strategy; and
- Other expectations, beliefs, plans, goals, objectives,
assumptions, information and statements about possible future
events, conditions, results and performance.
Undue reliance should not be placed on
forward-looking information. Forward-looking information is based
on current expectations, estimates and projections that involve a
number of risks and uncertainties, which could cause actual results
to vary and in some instances to differ materially from those
anticipated in the forward-looking information. Pulse does not
publish specific financial goals or otherwise provide guidance, due
to the inherently poor visibility of seismic revenue.
The material risk factors include, without
limitation:
- Oil and natural gas prices;
- The demand for seismic data and participation surveys;
- The pricing of data library license sales;
- Relicensing (change-of-control) fees and partner copy
sales;
- Cybersecurity;
- The level of pre-funding of participation surveys, and the
Company’s ability to make subsequent data library sales from such
participation surveys;
- The Company’s ability to complete participation surveys on time
and within budget;
- Environmental, health and safety risks;
- Federal and provincial government laws and regulations,
including those pertaining to taxation, royalty rates,
environmental protection and safety;
- Competition;
- Dependence on qualified seismic field contractors;
- Dependence on key management, operations and marketing
personnel;
- The loss of seismic data;
- Protection of intellectual property rights;
- The introduction of new products; and
- Climate change.
The foregoing list is not exhaustive. Additional
information on these risks and other factors which could affect the
Company’s operations and financial results is included under “Risk
Factors” of the Company’s MD&A for the year ended December 31,
2018. Forward-looking information is based on the assumptions,
expectations, estimates and opinions of the Company’s management at
the time the information is presented.
PDF
available: http://ml.globenewswire.com/Resource/Download/0be5be73-d88f-405e-8d41-aba0986dc3fe
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