Cool Company Ltd.'s Q2 2025: Contradictions Emerge on Charter Market Sentiment and Asset Acquisition Strategy

Generado por agente de IAAinvest Earnings Call Digest
jueves, 28 de agosto de 2025, 9:43 am ET2 min de lectura

The above is the analysis of the conflicting points in this earnings call

Date of Call: None provided

Financials Results

  • Revenue: CHF 85.5M, in line with Q1 and above prior guidance
  • Operating Margin: 43% of operating revenues

Guidance:

  • Q3 total operating revenues expected similar to Q2 (~CHF 85.5M).
  • Blizzard and ICE roll off long-term charters in late September; Q4 rates for these two will be down “well over $100,000/day.”
  • Two vessels redeliver late Q3 with first spot voyages secured, pressuring average TCE.
  • Two remaining dry docks over the next couple of quarters.
  • 50% of fleet days covered through 2027; expect a more balanced market by then.
  • Average interest cost ~5.6%; ~75% of debt hedged; may add swaps if terms improve.

Business Commentary:

* EBITDA Growth and Market Conditions: - CoolCo reported adjusted EBITDA of CHF 56,500,000 for Q2 2025, modestly up year-on-year. - The growth was supported by the delivery of new vessels like the Cool Tiger and Gale Saga, despite a challenging market with low rates and competition.

  • Vessel Utilization and Dry Docking:
  • The company has concluded nine drydocks, including performance upgrades on four vessels, with average vessel operating expenses decreasing to CHF 15,900 per day.
  • This was part of their strategyMSTR-- to extend vessel life and improve efficiency, offsetting the impact of poor spot market rates.

  • LNG Supply and Market Balance:

  • CoolCo highlighted a significant increase in LNG supply, with a 2339% increase in supply by 2026 and 2028 compared to 2024 volumes.
  • The company expects this supply increase to help balance the LNG shipping market, although short-term market conditions remain challenging.

  • Charters and Backlog Strategy:

  • The company's backlog provides support during market volatility, with 50% of days covered until 2027.
  • This strategy has helped mitigate the impact of low spot market rates and shallow long-term charterCHTR-- markets.

Sentiment Analysis:

  • “Total operating revenue remained steady at $85,500,000 and adjusted EBITDA was up at $56,500,000 versus $53,400,000 in the first quarter.” Management noted “rates remain low… levels remain unsatisfactory.” Guidance: “For Q3, we anticipate total operating revenues to be at a similar level as Q2,” but “we’re likely to be down well over $100,000 per day across these two vessels come Q4.”

Q&A:

  • Question from Alexander Bidwell (Weber Research Advisory): How have recent U.S. LNG SBAs/FIDs and the U.S.-EU energy deal affected charter-market sentiment and discussions?
    Response: Positive news is prompting early inquiries for long-term shipping, though some activity is still opportunistic.
  • Question from Alexander Bidwell (Weber Research Advisory): Any specifics on potential asset acquisitions you’re evaluating?
    Response: No active deals; the team continuously screens opportunities and has RCF flexibility.
  • Question from Liam Burke (B. Riley): Are you satisfied with returns from the four vessel LNG-E upgrades?
    Response: Yes—about $10M per ship, yielding ~+$5k/day premiums with potential upside and life-extension benefits.
  • Question from Liam Burke (B. Riley): Did you adjust drydock timing given weak charter rates and expected improvement into 2026?
    Response: No major changes; drydocks scheduled in shoulder seasons are mostly complete, reducing future off-hire.
  • Question from Frode Markedahl (Clarksons Securities): Status and economics of the LNG-E upgrade program and how the ~$5k/day premium is derived?
    Response: Four of five upgrades finished; final in Q4. Cost ~$10M each. Three ships have upside-sharing (~$5k/day to CorCo); two Shell-chartered ships received fixed compensation.
  • Question from Frode Markedahl (Clarksons Securities): When might U.S. volumes shift from Europe to Asia?
    Response: Timing is uncertain; near-term events could send more cargoes east, while steam-vessel exits aid a gradual rebalancing.
  • Question from Frode Markedahl (Clarksons Securities): Role of steam-turbine ships in the spot market and likelihood of idling/scrapping?
    Response: They’re often idled or underutilized; many will not find re-employment post-charter and are likely to be scrapped.
  • Question from Peter Hagen (ABG): Can you detail the 3-year variable charter structure—index, floors, ceilings?
    Response: It’s index-linked; floor around $20k/day (excluding upgrade upside) and ceiling around $100k/day, tracking broker benchmarks.
  • Question from Peter Hagen (ABG): Quantify upgrade upside and key drivers (e.g., LNG prices)?
    Response: Total value ~+$10k/day with CorCo’s share ~+$5k/day; driven by subcoolers reducing GCU use at low speeds and by LNG prices.
  • Question from Peter Hagen (ABG): Strategy for vessels rolling off contracts through 2026—spot vs term?
    Response: TFDEs likely mix of spot/12–18m terms given shallow long-term market; two-strokes target 5–12y deals with improving inquiry levels.

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