NYSE:PUMP ProPetro Q2 2024 Earnings Report $5.31 +0.11 (+2.12%) Closing price 04/25/2025 03:59 PM EasternExtended Trading$5.32 +0.01 (+0.19%) As of 04/25/2025 06:05 PM Eastern Extended trading is trading that happens on electronic markets outside of regular trading hours. This is a fair market value extended hours price provided by Polygon.io. Learn more. Earnings HistoryForecast ProPetro EPS ResultsActual EPS-$0.03Consensus EPS $0.08Beat/MissMissed by -$0.11One Year Ago EPS$0.34ProPetro Revenue ResultsActual Revenue$357.00 millionExpected Revenue$361.85 millionBeat/MissMissed by -$4.85 millionYoY Revenue Growth-17.90%ProPetro Announcement DetailsQuarterQ2 2024Date7/31/2024TimeBefore Market OpensConference Call DateWednesday, July 31, 2024Conference Call Time9:00AM ETUpcoming EarningsProPetro's Q1 2025 earnings is scheduled for Tuesday, April 29, 2025, with a conference call scheduled at 9:00 AM ET. Check back for transcripts, audio, and key financial metrics as they become available.Q1 2025 Earnings ReportConference Call ResourcesConference Call AudioConference Call TranscriptSlide DeckPress Release (8-K)Quarterly Report (10-Q)SEC FilingEarnings HistoryCompany ProfileSlide DeckFull Screen Slide DeckPowered by ProPetro Q2 2024 Earnings Call TranscriptProvided by QuartrJuly 31, 2024 ShareLink copied to clipboard.There are 12 speakers on the call. Operator00:00:00Good day, and welcome to the ProPetro Holding Corp. 2nd Quarter 2024 Conference Call. Please note this event is being recorded. I would now like to turn the call over to Matt Augustine, Director of Corporate Development and Investor Relations for ProPetro Holding Corp. Please go ahead. Speaker 100:00:18Thank you and good morning. We appreciate your participation in today's call. With me today is Chief Executive Officer, Sam Sledge Chief Financial Officer, David Schorlemer and President and Chief Operating Officer, Adam Munoz. This morning, we released our earnings results for the Q2 of 2024. Please note that any comments we make on today's call regarding projections or our expectations for future events are forward looking statements covered by the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act. Speaker 100:00:45Forward looking statements are subject to several risks and uncertainties, many of which are beyond our control. These risks and uncertainties can cause actual results to differ materially from our current expectations. We advise listeners to review our earnings release and risk factors discussed in our filings with the SEC. Also, during today's call, we will reference certain non GAAP financial measures. Reconciliations of these non GAAP measures to the most directly comparable GAAP measures are included in our earnings release. Speaker 100:01:13Finally, after our prepared remarks, we will hold a question and answer session. With that, I would like to turn the call over to Sam. Speaker 200:01:21Thanks, Matt, and good morning, everyone. As we've communicated previously, 2024 is a prudent year for ProPetro, and I'm pleased to report that we are delivering. In the Q2 of 2024, we demonstrated the effectiveness and resilience of our strategy. We have proven that despite a softer market environment, ProPetro can deliver and is delivering meaningful value for our customers, partners and shareholders. David will walk you through our financial results in a moment, but first I'd like to share some important business highlights from the Q2. Speaker 200:01:57Despite unexpected activity disruptions during the quarter, our focus on industrializing our business and prudent dynamic capital allocation has helped ProPetro deliver resilient free cash flow generation. We expect our strong free cash flow to continue, thanks to the investments we've made and the strategic decisions we've taken to position our business for sustainable long term value creation. Underpinning our strategy and our confidence are 3 core principles which you have heard us discuss previously. Let me walk you through each and share some details on our progress. First, our company is set up to drive free cash flow generation. Speaker 200:02:37We made meaningful investments through our fleet recapitalization and are now reaping the rewards. Demand for our next generation gas burning assets is strong and our transition towards a more efficient service offering that will remain relevant in our competitive market is progressing uninterrupted by market headwinds. We ended the 2nd quarter with 7 Tier 4 DGB dual fuel fleets with each bringing industry leading diesel displacement. The rollout of our forced electric fleet offering is well underway and the results we've seen so far make us highly confident that we're on the right path to deliver enhanced customer value and ultimately superior shareholder returns. This quarter we deployed our 3rd force electric frac fleet. Speaker 200:03:25This is the 1st force electric fleet we deployed with ExxonMobil as a part of our 3 year contract with the 2nd fleet expected to be deployed in the next few months. The agreement includes the deployment of 2 force electric fleets, wireline and pump down services in 2024 with an option for a 3rd force fleet with integrated wireline and pump down services to commence operations early in 2025. Our 3 year contract with ExxonMobil was a major milestone and in addition to other contracted electric equipment is a glimpse of ProPetro's future. Moreover, we will continue to allocate capital to our force electric offering and away from conventional diesel equipment, following the demand trends and the customer preferences we're seeing in the market. On that note, we have placed an order for our 5th force Electric fleet and we expect it to be in the field under contract in 2024. Speaker 200:04:28In addition to electrification, are evolving our business and capitalizing on our strengths in other ways as well. We have been executing committed contracts that help ProPetro deliver through cycle returns. We continue to work closely with our customers creating efficiencies tied to integrated services and higher equipment utilization. We are cultivating an incredibly talented and committed workforce and our progress and success to date are made possible by our 1st in class operating team in the field, all resulting in a business that has more durable and resilient future earnings profile. Putting all these factors together, we are proud to deliver valuable, more efficient and flexible services while reducing risks and costs for our customers. Speaker 200:05:14We are very confident that our business is poised for our continued growth and success, all made possible by our team here at ProPetro. Now moving to M and A, which has been and will continue to be an important strategic driver for our company. Our disciplined and opportunistic approach to deploying capital towards value accretive acquisitions remains a fundamental strength at ProPetro. Our Silvertip acquisition continues to be a strong tailwind for our earnings and free cash flow as does our acquisition of Par 5 Cementing, which is now fully integrated into our legacy cementing business. This quarter, we were pleased to complete the acquisition of AquaProp, an innovative provider of cost effective wet sand solutions. Speaker 200:05:58This acquisition is yet another example of our commitment to enhancing innovation and integration through thoughtful capital allocation. The addition of AquaProp is aimed squarely at further industrializing our operations with the ultimate goal of bringing more value to our customers and ProPetro through removing unnecessary equipment off location. Furthermore, it builds on a reputation of delivering best in class integrated completion services desired by operators in the Permian Basin. We will stay disciplined and opportunistic in our pursuit of accretive M and A and valuations that make sense. Indeed, ProPetra's stable and robust cash generation results allow us to advance our fleet transition and participate in accretive M and A all while maintaining a strong balance sheet. Speaker 200:06:48Importantly, it also provides optionality to return capital to shareholders. On that note and as we announced last quarter, our board approved an increase and an extension of our share repurchase program through May 31, 2025 with an additional $100,000,000 authorized for Speaker 300:07:08a total of $200,000,000 Speaker 200:07:11Since the inception of our plan in May of 2023, ProPetro has repurchased approximately 10% of outstanding common shares. David will add more on this in a minute, but let me just say that our actions on this front confirm our Board and management's confidence in ProPetro's continued earning growth and free cash flow generation. Returning capital to shareholders will continue to be among our top priorities. The success I just laid out and the initiatives we are pursuing showcase ProPetro's strength. Despite some turbulence in the market, our strong performance is why we believe ProPetro shares are a unique investment opportunity and that the investment thesis is apparent in the discrepancy between our equity value and the strong financial performance evident in our results. Speaker 200:08:00Yes, the 2nd quarter was challenging. Rig counts continued to move lower and pricing across our conventional diesel assets became more competitive. We experienced a weaker quarter sequentially in our wireline business due to shifting customer schedules and also saw significant weather impact as we had several uncharacteristically strong storms push through the Permian during May June. Yet our premium service offering coupled with our operational excellence, robust and blue chip customer base and superior service proved to be resilient as our dual fuel electric equipment remained highly utilized. We're also pleased to report another quarter of lower CapEx relative to our original budget, which will further support free cash flow and our capital allocation plans moving through the remainder of 2024 and beyond. Speaker 200:08:52We are confident in our ability to deliver strong financial results through the balance of this year and into 2025. Turning now to our market outlook. While ProPetro is of course not immune to the macro pressures facing our industry, we continue to take decisive action building out our high quality service offering and maintenance of our strong balance sheet designed to deliver meaning free cash flow generation. We remain optimistic about the strength of North American land oilfield services potential over the next several years and are confident that our industrialized model, geographic focus in the Permian Basin and the disciplined execution of our strategy will pay off despite the slow to no growth environment that exists today. Lastly and maybe most importantly, our pursuit of operational excellence allows us to effectively service our strong blue chip Permian focused customer base and is supported by our proven electric technology, which garners committed contracts. Speaker 200:09:51Our balance sheet is healthy and we have ample liquidity to be opportunistic in our capital allocation decisions. In sum, our evolving industrial model has proven to be effective and we look forward to achieving even greater success. We expect to continue elevating ProPetro as well as our entire industry for years to come. I'll now turn the call over to David to discuss our Q2 financial results. David? Speaker 400:10:18Thanks, Sam, and good morning, everyone. As Sam mentioned, despite broader market headwinds, we generated strong returns and continued to execute on our strategy. With our significant capital spend of the last few years behind us, we have transitioned to focus on higher free cash flows and consistent earnings. And today, we have results that evidence the turnaround we've discussed in prior quarters. In the 2nd quarter, revenues decreased 12% versus the Q1 to $357,000,000 net loss was $4,000,000 and adjusted EBITDA decreased 29% sequentially to $66,000,000 The decreases across our 2nd quarter financial metrics were mostly attributable to unexpected activity disruptions and softness across our conventional diesel equipment and wireline offerings, as well as significant weather impacts in the Permian Basin. Speaker 400:11:15Additionally, we incurred an operating lease expense related to our electric fleets of $12,000,000 for the quarter as compared to $9,000,000 in the prior quarter. Our effective frac fleet utilization for the 2nd quarter was 15.5 fleets, which was above the guidance range we had provided. Thanks to efficiencies exceeding our expectations from previous years, we are shifting away from reporting on fleet utilization based on days worked. Instead, we'll focus on guiding and reporting the number of active frac fleets, which we believe better represents asset utilization in our hydraulic fracturing business. During the Q2, 14 hydraulic fracturing fleets were active and we expect to run approximately 14 active fleets in the Q3 of 'twenty 4. Speaker 400:12:07Moving to our capital program. Net cash used in investing activities during the Q2 of 2024 was $57,000,000 of which $21,000,000 was related to the acquisition of AquaProp. As we shared last quarter, our supply chain and operations teams are scrutinizing our capital spend more than ever and we're also conducting supply chain assessments to maximize returns from our vendor relationships. I'm pleased to share that the work they are doing is already driving favorable results. And here's where the story we've discussed in recent quarters gets very interesting and encouraging. Speaker 400:12:46As Sam mentioned, despite a challenging environment and weaker financial results sequentially, the company delivered a 5th consecutive quarter of impressive free cash flow, achieving $48,000,000 which represents a 17% sequential improvement over the Q1. If we exclude cash used for acquisition consideration for AquaProp of $21,000,000 in the 2nd quarter, Free cash flow adjusted for acquisition consideration was $69,000,000 bringing total year to date free cash flow adjusted for acquisition consideration to $110,000,000 which represents 69% conversion ratio of adjusted EBITDA to free cash flow adjusted for acquisition consideration. This is the dramatic change we've been working to produce through dedication and diligent strategic execution. Our entire organization has been involved in this transformation and there remains work yet to be done. As we continue to demonstrate, the inflection point we reached in reduced capital spend is a strong tailwind for cash generation and is a testament to the success of our fleet transition and optimization of our business. Speaker 400:14:03Accordingly, we are now reducing our prior guidance of $200,000,000 to $250,000,000 for 2024 capital expenditures, down to a range between $175,000,000 to $200,000,000 Using the midpoint, the new guidance represents a 40% reduction compared to last year's capital spend of $310,000,000 dollars ProPetro's cash and liquidity position also remained strong. As of June 30, 2024, total cash was $67,000,000 and our borrowings under the ABL credit facility were $45,000,000 Total liquidity at the end of the quarter was $145,000,000 including cash and $78,000,000 of available capacity under the ABL credit facility. Moreover, the transformation of our fleet to more force electric fleets will drive an even greater decline in associated maintenance capital spend, resulting in increased free cash flow and more durable profitability, particularly with the multi year contractual coverage we are seeing for these fleets. In the remainder of 2024, we anticipate further validation of our strategy and a demonstration of the earnings enhancement resulting from our investments in the business. As Sam shared earlier, ProPetro's improved cash generation profile allows us to pursue our fleet transition while also participating in accretive M and A and maintaining a strong balance sheet. Speaker 400:15:38Importantly, it also provides optionality to return capital to shareholders. In the second quarter, we remained active in our share repurchase program, retiring another 2,500,000 shares. Since the inception of the program, we've retired approximately 11,300,000 shares, which equates to nearly 10% of shares outstanding as of the inception of the program in May 2023. This translates to the return of nearly $100,000,000 to shareholders. We will continue to opportunistically execute share repurchases under the increased and extended $200,000,000 repurchase program authorized by our Board in April 2024. Speaker 400:16:23We also believe that our strategy will continue to deliver and afford us the flexibility to stay dynamic, selective and opportunistic in our capital allocation approach. Each of the core principles Sam discussed plays a critical role in our success. We look forward to delivering for all of our stakeholders as we pursue our ongoing electric fleet conversion, organic and continued inorganic growth and the disciplined pursuit of increased shareholder value. In fact, in just the first half of this year, we've allocated 61% of our free cash flow adjusted for acquisition consideration to higher priority capital allocations with $45,000,000 in share repurchases and $21,000,000 toward targeted acquisitions that we expect to accelerate cash flows further. ProPetro's foundation upon which our strategy is built could not be more solid with our strong balance sheet, refreshed asset base and operational excellence positioning us for the long term. Speaker 400:17:30Our strategy is carefully crafted to drive success in the slow to no growth environment in which we are operating today. Without question, a consolidated industry and even more activity disciplined Permian customer base presents challenges. ProPetro is up to that challenge and we are thriving. The crux of our strategy is that it benefits not only ProPetro, but also our customers by delivering the very best commercial and industrial solutions for their completions programs. We believe that is a winning strategy to drive durable earnings and cash flows. Speaker 400:18:08With that, I'll turn the call back to Sam. Thanks, David. To build on what David just said, before turning to Q and A, I'd like to reinforce ProPetro's compelling investment thesis and the recent actions we've taken to sustain meaningful cash flow generation and to limit our Speaker 200:18:24capital spend, further accelerating our true earnings growth trajectory. We remain confident in our strategy and the future of our company. Despite the headwinds and the slow to no growth environment evident in the energy services space we operate in, our company is uniquely and favorably positioned. We've been successful in transforming our fleet, pursuing accretive M and A and executing on share buybacks, all while maintaining a healthy balance sheet and liquidity profile. The results you are seeing today are just the beginning. Speaker 200:18:54We will continue to build on our progress long into the future. Despite what you may be hearing across the oilfield services space, demand remains strong for our services. Our next generation fleet, operational excellence and strong blue chip Permian customer base will sustain the momentum we have. I'd also be remiss not to mention that the demand for our force electric fleet outpaces our current supply. Moving forward, you will continue to see us capitalize on these positive trends. Speaker 200:19:25We are clear eyed about the market pressures that persist, but also about the assets we have to navigate the turbulence. Our best in class commercial architecture supports our strategy and positions ProPetro to continue delivering strong free cash flow generation for the remainder of 2024 and beyond. Finally, I couldn't be prouder to lead an incredible ProPetro team. It is because of their dedication that we are able to confidently present and execute this roadmap. To the whole ProPetro team, I thank you for your commitment. Speaker 200:19:57It is what gives our leadership conviction that we have the right strategy and remain a leader in the Permian Basin. With that, I'll ask the operator to open up the line for questions. Operator? Operator00:20:09Thank you. We will now begin the question and answer session. Our first question comes from Luc Lamoine from Piper Sandler. Please go ahead. Speaker 500:20:38Hi, good morning. Speaker 200:20:40Good morning, Luke. Sam, you Speaker 500:20:41talked about the outlook for the second half of the year. Looking a lot like the first half. You had some variability in 2Q, which you wanted to detail about. I'm kind of guessing when you look at the back part of the year, maybe you're expecting some of these issues, transitory issues to go away in 3Q, a little bump in 3Q and then some seasonality in 4Q. But if you could just kind of maybe provide a little more detail and kind of frame up how you see the rest of the year unfolding, that'd be helpful. Speaker 200:21:12Yes, Luke. I mean, I think you described it pretty succinctly and pretty effectively. I'd say what you just described in terms of a little bump in 3Q and some seasonality in Q4 is likely the way we're looking at it. I think when we said back half looking similar to front half, we're probably that's probably more of an activity focused comment. That said, I think we're also the closer we get to 4Q every year, the more we find out about holiday seasonality around Thanksgiving and Christmas remains to be seen exactly what that looks like, but we're fairly confident that 4Q will be strong as well. Speaker 500:21:57Okay. And then, David, pretty big reduction in the CapEx, especially if you go from the high end to the low end of your revised guidance. Can you just talk about what changed there a little bit? Speaker 400:22:10Sure, Luke. We have seen as we have continued to transition our fleets from more conventional equipment, a decrease in the capital intensity required. And so that's part of it. The other part, if you look at our strategy slide, is optimizing our business and what operations is doing and I'll give a lot of credit to Adam and his team is extending the life of the equipment as we use it in the field. So those benefits, that effort that has been put in over the last 18 months is beginning to bear fruit along with the fleet transition from a conventional to electric equipment. Speaker 400:22:48And just to give you some sense of that, our hours, our pumping hours from Tier 2 diesel equipment dropped 25% sequentially during the quarter. The hours coming from electric went up 60% sequentially and Tier 4 DGB went up kind of mid teens. So we're seeing that transition that we've talked about. It's going to play out in our P and Speaker 200:23:14L and our cash flow more significantly as we go forward. Yes. And I think David said it well, Luke. The one thing that I would add is that this guidance change for us, which is fairly significant in our eyes, is not we're not deferring any CapEx here. We're we are still giving the business absolutely everything it needs to perform at the highest levels and into the future. Speaker 500:23:41Okay, got it. Thanks a bunch. Operator00:23:45The next question comes from Derek Podhauser from Barclays. Please go ahead. Speaker 600:23:51Hey, just wanted to ask about the pricing trends you're seeing out there. You said in the release, you're seeing some pricing pressure in the Tier 2 diesel assets, which makes sense. But have you seen any pressure leak into the Tier 4 DGB assets? And then where do you think we should bottom out here as far as pricing? Just your overall outlook on pricing would be helpful. Speaker 200:24:11I'd say for the our next gen assets that we're calling our dual fuel or electric assets, pricing remains very strong. On an individual case basis, is there a little bit of pressure here and there? But yes, but nothing material, I would say. The pricing story as we see it in the frac market in the Permian Basin is mainly a diesel pricing story. They're still on the fringes of a few irrational players that are pricing things pretty low and that can disrupt the diesel market, which is really a minority piece of the overall market. Speaker 200:24:45It's definitely a minority piece of our offering and that applies to the rest of the market too. So that's one of the reasons why although we're seeing some pricing pressures that part of the market, we remain super confident about ProPetro's prospects from just a general competitiveness standpoint and a profitability standpoint going into the future because that's a waning part of our portfolio. And we are likely accelerating decisions to wind down all investments in diesel equipment maybe a little sooner than we initially expected. So yes, the diesel market has been pricing affected. Also, yes, the remainder of the gas burning electric dual fuel market has been very strong. Speaker 600:25:35Got it. That's very helpful. And then maybe more on that point about the fleet transition. I mean, we're getting down to single digit tier 2 diesel fleets here. What do you expect to be at a 100% natural gas burning fleet? Speaker 600:25:47And then on top of that, it sounds like your 5th fleet 5th force fleet is coming in at the end of the year. You might have a 3rd option for Exxon next year, which sounds like would need to be a 6th fleet. So maybe more just about when you can get to 100 percent natural gas and also the cadence of e fleets, how we should think about it for 2025? Speaker 200:26:05Yes. Well, thanks for pointing that out on the force electric fleets. We did within the quarter pull the trigger on the 5th Force fleet, which is a new development from our last conference call. We pulled the trigger on that fleet and fit it within this lower CapEx guidance range. So we're pretty proud to be able to do that. Speaker 200:26:24That is accelerating, I think what the main And I think the biggest variable to get us there is probably what market demands are. Is 2025 come with higher activity overall in the industry? Does it have a greater demand pull on our entire portfolio? That likely maybe draws out the harvesting of some of these diesel assets for us. If the market remains kind of flat and muted, which we think it will, whether we have we use the term slow to no growth pretty often that we need to go out into the market and create our own wins through operational excellence and next generation assets that likely that diesel equipment might go away a little more quicker in that scenario. Speaker 200:27:24But will we be running diesel fleets this time next year? Yes, probably because we have relatively young high performing assets in that part of our portfolio that probably deserve a shot to earn a return on their way out. And that's kind of how we're looking at it. But investing in diesel is likely from a capital spend perspective, the lowest priority from a capital allocation standpoint. Speaker 700:27:50Got it. That makes sense. And just Speaker 600:27:52a quick clarifier on the 5th, 4th Force fleet is was that a purchase or is that another lease? Speaker 400:27:59That's a lease, Derek. And we are benefiting from our lease program. But keep in mind, there's a very different calculus there. We're replacing equipment that has shorter useful lives with assets that last materially longer to 3x the useful life of what we would consider from the conventional equipment. So it's a very different calculus. Speaker 400:28:24We think it's an investment in the long term viability of the company and we're seeing that the conversion is very much desired by our customers and generating very efficient and more higher margin profitability as we go forward. Speaker 800:28:43Great. Thanks, Sam Speaker 600:28:44and David. I'll turn it back. Operator00:28:47The next question comes from Arun Jayaram from JPMorgan. Please go ahead. Speaker 900:28:53Good morning, gentlemen. One of the things I'd love to hear about is just kind of a potential bridge to think about kind of Q3 profitability? And maybe we could start with what type of tailwinds do you expect from the Aqua Prop acquisition as well as the Exxon fleet? And maybe you could highlight maybe some of the quarter specific impacts that you felt in 2Q, maybe wireline as well as some of the weather? And again, just trying to bridge to thoughts on 3Q. Speaker 200:29:35Sure. I'll start and David can fill in the gaps. The last question you asked about 2Q, I think we outlined it pretty clearly in all of our materials. It was a product of 3 main factors weather, schedule disruptions and pricing. We probably won't give quantitative detail on which one of those was more and which one was less, Definitely a combination of all those three things. Speaker 200:30:02I'd like to just call out the schedule disruptions, maybe to give a little bit of commentary. We had during the quarter basically one customer that had 2 of our fleets make some last minute decisions to delay some work. So that creates some white space and some kind of jaggedness and uncertainty in the calendar. What we then do knowing that that work is coming back at a good price with good visibility is try to fill the gap with whatever we can to keep the crew, the equipment hot and to cover as much fixed cost as we can. That then has a knock on effect on something like pricing because going out looking for last minute work is not the most profitable way to run a frac business, we believe. Speaker 200:30:46So but those three things, weather, schedule, kind of unpredicted schedule disruptions in pricing. And then back to your I think what your first question was around where we go to 3Q, we do believe activity will stay relatively flat. We do think profitability will come up. We're still seeing a little bit of we did see a little bit of weather in July. So how much profitability comes up is we haven't quite totally quantified that, but we do expect overall Q3 to be up activity and the calendar look a little more strong. Speaker 200:31:24Wireline, I'd say both wireline and cementing are improving going into Q3, which is at certain times over 25% of our business. Those two businesses wireline cement, so they can't be discounted in the grand scheme of things. Speaker 400:31:40Yes. Arun, this is David. The only thing I would add there is that I think we're probably less sensitive to the month to month variability of the business and working on generating durable earnings and free cash flows over the longer term. And so I think that crew continuity is very, very important to our team and to our customers and also in generating the results of optimizing our business. And so that's what we're sticking to. Speaker 400:32:10And I think as it relates to cash flow performance going forward, we do see consistency moving into the second half of the year and beyond. Speaker 900:32:19Great. Just my follow-up. David, on the leasing of the Force Fleet new builds, at what time is the first time you can elect to exercise your buy option on the new builds? At what time post the start up of the lease payments does that option occur? And just maybe give us a sense of could you give us help us quantify how much what is the residual cost if you decide to buy out the leases? Speaker 400:32:57Sure, Arun. The initial term is 36 months. We do have options to extend beyond that should we so choose, but the purchase option at that time is in the neighborhood of $10,000,000 We do have some credits that we earn as we generate hours, but that's essentially where the number is. Speaker 900:33:21Great. Thanks a lot. Speaker 1000:33:23You bet. Operator00:33:24The next question comes from John Daniel from Simmons. Please go ahead. Speaker 800:33:31Hi, good morning. I guess, I'm Simmons back again. I guess, Sam, you made a statement that Q4 would be strong, I mean you're making that statement for ProPetro or is that a broader view on the Permian? Speaker 200:33:50That's probably more so for just us, John. And strong, I guess it's add on to that strong relatively maybe to what we've seen for other Q4s. In the last several years, you've seen Q4s that haven't skipped a beat quite literally and you've seen Q4s that have almost been cut in half across the industry. But as it pertains to us, I think the way we've positioned ourselves with our customers and this next generation gas burning equipment kind of puts us to the base load or the top of the heap of most of our customer portfolios, especially these e fleets, right. They have mechanisms in them that account for any white space and things like that. Speaker 200:34:34So is it a product of just us and our customer base? Maybe, but the more long term oriented just the entire E and P space gets around their activity and they contract things like e fleets and have stronger dedicated agreements for things like dual fuel fleets. It just bodes well for more stability throughout the year. That said, I mean, mean, we could always be surprised as it pertains to Q4, but conversations with our customers right now are pretty good from an activity standpoint going into the end of the year. Speaker 800:35:12Okay. And then sort of a pointed question here. Thanks for that. Just given the opportunities for additional electric fleets, because I'm imagining you're not going to stop at 5 just given the success. Do you buy any more Tier 4 DGB engines going forward? Speaker 800:35:29And as you look to 'twenty five, would you anticipate any Tier 2 rebuilds? Speaker 200:35:37Fantastic question on the Tier 4. I think we're trying to figure out that exact same thing right now. With the demand pull 2 things with the demand pull that we're seeing on our e fleets and our contract structure, coupled with things David mentioned earlier about the lower operating cost profile, lower maintenance CapEx that comes with these e fleets, it's very, very convicting to us to continue to push more aggressively into the eFleet space. And from an equipment standpoint, that is number 1 on the capital allocation list. It can be the best for capital. Speaker 200:36:25So I think that Tier 4 investments are dependent on what wins we can create in the eFleet space as it pertains to Tier 2 diesel. We're basically done there from a capital spending standpoint. So we have no reason or motivation to be doing things like rebuilding diesel engines at this time. Speaker 800:36:46Fair enough. The last one for me, I promise, is you have obviously 7 fleets that are Tier 4 dual fuel. Have any of those customers told you that they prefer the Tier 4 dual fuel solution over electric and if so, why? Speaker 200:37:06I think it's more the other way around. Honestly, the Tier 4 many of our Tier 4 customers are first time Tier 4 dual fuel customers. So we've been working together on what it looks like to use gas in our operations and kind of create fuel wins. That said, it's really a stepping stone or in a waiting line for electric equipment. Once we have some success with dual fuel with certain operator, you're blending 60 plus percent, which we think we're all but industry leading in the Permian Basin as it pertains to blending diesel displacement percentages, creates a lot of savings for our customers. Speaker 200:37:55And then the next step in the conversation is what does it look like to go to 100% gas, which is electric at this time. Adam, did you want to add to that? Yes. No, John, the only thing I would Speaker 300:38:06add to that is the customers that have been running the Tier 4 for a while now have seen and grown to love the efficiencies, 20 plus hours per day. And it's really Shelby and his team going in there and improving and showing them the results of our currently deployed force fleets and showing them that they won't lose any efficiency gains by switching over their only benefiting from the 100% fuel displacement, diesel displacement. So I think it's just showing them the proof is in the pudding. We're showing them data. We're showing them results from the current force fleets running. Speaker 300:38:44And that's getting them over the bridge there. Operator00:38:53The next question comes from Scott Gruber from Citigroup. Please go ahead. Speaker 1000:38:59Yes. Good morning. Good morning, Scott. Speaker 700:39:04I want to get Speaker 1000:39:04some more clarity on the CapEx drop, which is pretty impressive, just especially in light of the ordering of the 5th, 4th fleet. Was the drop mainly due to cut in the Tier 2 diesel fleet CapEx? Or was there also an element of slowing investment in your ancillary services? And if that was a factor, how should we think about ancillary service investment in 2025? Speaker 200:39:38Scott, I'll make just a couple of simple points first and David can add on if he needs to. This is tailwinds from a next generation equipment standpoint, number 1. A lot of maintenance CapEx tailwinds. Every day we have another electric fleet in the field. The more data and confidence that we have in its lower operating expense, lower maintenance CapEx. Speaker 200:40:05That's a huge part playing here. Another part is and you've heard us talk about this, it's kind of easy to categorize this as a buzzword, but the broader optimization of our business is really starting to show through. And as it pertains to CapEx, it's showing through in 2 main ways. 1, we've done a lot of really intentional directed focused work around extending equipment life for all the main components, for everything we're doing on a frac location. And the wins that we've seen there are really, really impressive. Speaker 200:40:38And that's due large part to our operations team, the focus and work that they've put in to really, really get better at that. Fluid ends, power ends, engines, transmissions, all these large components, if you make 10%, 20% of life improvements in each one of those, they have massive follow on effects. So that's one part of it from an optimization standpoint. The other part is what we're doing inside of our supply chain. We are really ramping up our sophistication, how we contract and transact with the whole value chain and trying to ensure that we're getting the best quality parts and services from our supply chain for the best prices. Speaker 200:41:21And there's a lot of wins that are showing through there. Speaker 400:41:25Yes, Scott, this is David. The only thing I would add there is that about 30% of our capital budget is related to growth or what we would consider non recurring investments. The rest of it is related to maintenance of our equipment and going forward. And as Sam mentioned, we've been getting much better in that arena and we've also been deploying assets that are less capital intensive. And so as we do that in our acquisition strategy as well as in our fleet conversion that we believe will continue to play out favorably. Speaker 1000:42:02No, it's good color. Certainly reducing the capital intensity of the base is a great trend to see. Just another question on contracting structure. You guys discussed the bonus payments on your Exxon contracts last call. How prevalent are bonus payments across your other contracts? Speaker 1000:42:30And just as you guys continue to deliver efficiency improvements for customers, are you thinking about incorporating bonus structures into more contracts going forward? Speaker 200:42:44Scott, if I'm reading your question right, you might be referring to like performance bonuses that we try and put in some of our agreements. Is that what you're referring to? Speaker 1000:42:52Yes, exactly. Just curious whether you're able to capture some extra margin from the efficiency improvement that you're delivering to customers? Speaker 200:43:03I'd say that part of our commercial architecture is pretty small. I don't want to say it's insignificant, but it's fairly small. It's small well, and each one of these contracts, I'd say each customer we contract with, the structure can look different from customer to customer. And I think that's one of our main advantages commercially without saying too much is trying to custom fit our services to the needs of our customers, right. This is not a set in stone structure that we just go kind of shove to people. Speaker 200:43:38This is a very collaborative effort with each individual customer. And I think that's where we greatly benefit from like a commercial transacting standpoint. But really what and I'd say why part of the reason why some of the performance bonus things, especially in the e fleets is relatively small is because most of our customers we're talking to about e fleets are chasing consistency and predictability. So they want that 20, 21, 22 pumping hours per day every day and they want their cost to look the same every single day. So if we can find kind of a window where we can both mutually benefit from that efficiency at a right price. Speaker 200:44:21We're not afraid to lock those prices in for considerable amounts of time with or without performance bonuses. Speaker 1000:44:32Got it. Appreciate the color, Sam. Speaker 200:44:35Yes. Thanks. Speaker 900:44:37The next Operator00:44:37question comes from wakar saeed from ATB Capital Markets. Please go ahead. Speaker 700:44:44Thank you for taking my questions. David, just a housekeeping question. What were the shares outstanding at the end of the quarter? Speaker 200:44:56106,000,000 Speaker 700:44:59Okay. So that's not the average for Q2, it's the shares outstanding at the end of the quarter, right? Speaker 600:45:08Let Speaker 400:45:11me no, actually, shares outstanding would be 104,000,000 at the end of the quarter. But the average shares for the quarter in terms of calculating EPS is 106. Speaker 700:45:26Okay, great. And then yes, sure. So Sam, on Aqua Prop, how many pumping crews are you currently catering to through AquaProp? And how would that change maybe in the second half and then into next year? Speaker 200:45:51Yes, we're basically at around 4 right now and that's likely headed north from there through the end of the year. We're trying to grow that as quickly as possible, LaCarr. So to say what the top end is throughout the tail end of the year is, I think a little bit too soon. But we're definitely trying to use that as a mechanism to increase profitability and cash flow, but also give our customers more reliability and more of an industrial solution. Speaker 700:46:21And what's the investor your customer reaction to it? What is the positive feedback? What is the negative feedback on this new solution? Speaker 200:46:33I think one of the things that we like and the customers that are using this the most is just its simplicity. Its simplicity and flexibility on location. So because we're not bound by a container, a silo or a box, we can really change the amount of sand we can store our location, therefore affecting how many trucks you need to service a job, things like that. So I think that's really what kind of drove us to make that decision, that acquisition to add it to our offering and integrate a little bit more in that direction. That said, I mean, let's be real with ourselves. Speaker 200:47:11I think the sand market, the sand market in general, the sand value chain is very, very dynamic and fast changing right now. I mean, I think people have found ways to mine more sand in more places. And I think that's causing quite a bit of disruption in the sand supply side. That's why we hesitate to invest in things like mines quite yet because as Speaker 1100:47:39soon as Speaker 200:47:39you stand up a mine somewhere, it could be quickly made inferior to another mine just down the road for just distance and geographical purposes. So we'll keep a close eye on that. And look, we're not expecting Aqua Prop to be on 100% of our frac locations and it to be adopted by every single customer we have. But we do think there's a legitimate growth opportunity and we'll continue to press into that into this year and going into next year. Speaker 400:48:07Yes. Walker, this is David. I think one thing just to add to that, we looked across our fleets and compared NPT related to Sand Containment and Logistics and there's a significant difference. And I think as we deliver value to customers, pumping efficiency and NPT is a key some key metrics that they look at. So we think that's a real sales opportunity and business development opportunity to continue to deliver value to ProPetro's customers. Speaker 300:48:45Yes, I would just add on to the MPT discussion. David says it's just not around the silos and trucking portion of it. It's also the frac from the blender, removing things like screws that have a lot of hydraulic failures on location that we see, that's been very beneficial too. Speaker 700:49:06Makes sense. Well, thank you very much. Appreciate the color. Operator00:49:10The next question comes from Kurt Hallead from Benchmark. Please go ahead. Speaker 1000:49:17Hey, good morning, everybody. Thanks so much for all the insight and color. Really appreciate that. Hey, I wanted to first get some clarity on something that I'm just a little bit confused on. So in the thinking your commentary, Sam, you referenced that you had an average of 15.5 fleets operating in the Q2 and then in a similar commentary you referenced 14 fleets. Speaker 1000:49:46Just want to make sure that I mishear that? Speaker 200:49:51No, you didn't mishear it. We're actually making a change this quarter from what we've done traditionally in the past, the way we disclose activity. I don't know if you remember Kurt, but dating all the way back to like 2017 maybe, we disclosed effective fleets by number of days worked in the quarter. So we previously defined an effectively utilized fleet is worth 25 days in 1 month or 75 days in 1 quarter because we thought that was normal. That's no longer normal. Speaker 200:50:27Normal is in excess of 25 days a month. So when you add up all the days for 2Q and you use that effective fleet utilization 75 days in a quarter, you get to 15.5, but we never ran more than 14 fleets during the quarter. So we're getting to a point where we thought that that was just an inaccurate way to describe our asset level activity. So going forward, we're just going to call out active fleets of which it was 14 in 2nd quarter. We believe it will be 14 again in the 3rd quarter. Speaker 200:51:01And then I think on a go forward basis, we'll just add commentary around that if we experienced any white space or if it was a full calendar. Speaker 1000:51:08That's great. I really appreciate you clarifying that. So second point of clarification, you guys And you were saying we haven't you haven't quite quantified that yet, and that's fine. But effectively, as a group here, investors and so on, we probably should not be thinking about 1st quarter profitability in the equation of how things might play out in the second. In other words, the way things are shaking out in the industry, it doesn't look like getting back to first quarter levels is something that could be even be remotely feasible in the second half of the year. Speaker 1000:51:51So we're thinking about working off a second quarter EBITDA base, not a first half 2024 EBITDA base. Is that a fair way to think about it? Speaker 400:52:02Yes, Kurt, this is David. I think that's right. And I think what we've tried to point to is really our confidence in our ongoing cash flow performance and consistency there. So, look, the market is going to do what it does. We have built a business that can thrive in a fairly stagnant market. Speaker 400:52:24We're building additional capabilities with some of the M and A activity and we'll continue to drive that business model going forward. Speaker 1000:52:33All right. That's awesome. And then just on that front end, David, right, how should we think about free cash conversion as a percent of your EBITDA? How are you guys thinking about targeting that free cash flow conversion? Speaker 400:52:49Well, I think that we've been aspiring to generate in the neighborhood of 50% plus EBITDA to free cash flow conversion. We've exceeded that year to date. And in the M and A front, we certainly are targeting businesses with higher EBITDA and free cash flow conversions. The fleet conversions that we're executing on we believe have higher levels as well. So I think 50% is what we would be targeting and we'll see how the market plays out and supports that. Speaker 1000:53:28That's awesome. Appreciate that color. Thank you. Speaker 400:53:32You bet. Operator00:53:37The next question comes from Don Crist from Johnson Rice. Please go ahead. Speaker 1100:53:43Good morning, guys. Thanks for squeezing me Speaker 600:53:45in here at the Speaker 1100:53:45end. Sam, I wanted to ask about power generation. Obviously, outside of the oil field, there's been a lot of discussions on data centers using turbines, etcetera. Are you finding it hard to find power for your new electric fleets? And do you see that as a bottleneck going forward if you wanted to add 5 or 10 more electric fleets in the future? Speaker 200:54:11To date, it has not affected or impeded our progress. I mean, maybe a day here and there as we're getting these first fleets stood up when we're getting new fleets stood up and deployed. But to say it's had a meaningful effect would be incorrect. Going forward, look, I think for some of the reasons you mentioned, there's just going to be a lot of demand on electricity and cost effective power generation of that electricity going into the future. I personally personal opinion, not a pro petro opinion, but I think the data center demand is a bit overhyped. Speaker 200:54:47That said, most of the data center demand will likely be in positions to pay more for some of the power generation maybe than some of the oilfield opportunities are. So it'll create some significant competition nonetheless. I think how we kind of manage through that is how we always have in a very collaborative kind of open manner with our entire value chain and supply chain, trying to make sure we're creating legitimate opportunities for people in our supply chain, chain, companies in our supply chain, not just picking up the phone on a minute's notice and expecting people to just appear out of thin air to service us. This is a very we have a very when we go to talk to a customer about a eFleet contract, which that's usually a long drawn out conversation over multiple months, if not a year. We like we very often have power providers under the tip with us as we're working on those contracts and those opportunities. Speaker 200:55:49So we'll continue to kind of leverage our creativeness flexibility on the commercial end to make sure that that doesn't become a problem. That said, I mean the supply chains from a build standpoint for generators are just full right now. So the more quickly you can make decisions about the future, the more likely you are to have what you need to service your customers. But to date, we've I think we've navigated that very, very well. Speaker 1100:56:21I appreciate that color. And taking it just one step further, several of your competitors have gone into the CNG space. Is the infrastructure on CNG keeping up with the demand shift towards natural gas burning equipment? And is that a potential investment opportunity for you all going forward? Speaker 200:56:45Yes, there's one thing that's definite. We can say this without a doubt, the gas is there. There's a lot of gas in the Permian Basin. The better question is, how do we get it to the right spot at the right price at the right time in the right quality. That's where the opportunities are. Speaker 200:57:01We've not made direct investments in that arena that we've worked with many people that have. And I've said this in times past that's an example of an integration opportunity that we keep a very close eye on. Probably much like we've kept an eye on last mile logistics and sand storage on location and we think that that reached a relative maturity point to make an investment like we did with AquaProf and we'll be waiting for that window if opportunities arise as it pertains to things like gas. I think CNG is an over simplistic way to think about gas as it pertains to powering frac equipment in the future. I think we should just be talking about gas in general because there's plenty of it and we just need to get it in the right quality and the right quantities in the right places. Operator00:57:57Are no more questions in the queue. This concludes our question and answer session. I would like to turn the conference back over to Sam Sledge for any closing remarks. Speaker 200:58:07Yes. Thanks everybody for joining us today. We appreciate your interest. Hope to talk to you and see you soon. Have a great day. Operator00:58:16The conference has now concluded. Thank you for attending today's presentation. You may now disconnect.Read morePowered by Conference Call Audio Live Call not available Earnings Conference CallProPetro Q2 202400:00 / 00:00Speed:1x1.25x1.5x2x Earnings DocumentsSlide DeckPress Release(8-K)Quarterly report(10-Q) ProPetro Earnings HeadlinesProPetro Announces First Quarter 2025 Earnings CallApril 3, 2025 | gurufocus.comProPetro Announces First Quarter 2025 Earnings CallApril 3, 2025 | businesswire.comTrump’s tariffs just split the AI market in twoTrump’s tariff just split the AI market – among others – in two. One group of AI companies—the ones relying on cheap foreign hardware—just saw their costs shoot through the roof. For the other group of AI companies, they were just handed a massive competitive advantage. Make no mistake, AI as a whole is still a game-changer for the global economy. But within the AI sector, Trump’s tariffs have created a huge divergence.April 26, 2025 | Traders Agency (Ad)Why ProPetro Holding Corp. (PUMP) is Gaining This Week?March 27, 2025 | msn.comWhy is ProPetro Holding Corp. (NYSE:PUMP) Losing This Week?March 21, 2025 | msn.comPropetro Holding (PUMP) Gets a Hold from CitiMarch 8, 2025 | markets.businessinsider.comSee More ProPetro Headlines Get Earnings Announcements in your inboxWant to stay updated on the latest earnings announcements and upcoming reports for companies like ProPetro? Sign up for Earnings360's daily newsletter to receive timely earnings updates on ProPetro and other key companies, straight to your email. Email Address About ProPetroProPetro (NYSE:PUMP) operates as an integrated oilfield services company. The company provides hydraulic fracturing, wireline, cementing, and other complementary oilfield completion services to upstream oil and gas companies in the Permian Basin. 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There are 12 speakers on the call. Operator00:00:00Good day, and welcome to the ProPetro Holding Corp. 2nd Quarter 2024 Conference Call. Please note this event is being recorded. I would now like to turn the call over to Matt Augustine, Director of Corporate Development and Investor Relations for ProPetro Holding Corp. Please go ahead. Speaker 100:00:18Thank you and good morning. We appreciate your participation in today's call. With me today is Chief Executive Officer, Sam Sledge Chief Financial Officer, David Schorlemer and President and Chief Operating Officer, Adam Munoz. This morning, we released our earnings results for the Q2 of 2024. Please note that any comments we make on today's call regarding projections or our expectations for future events are forward looking statements covered by the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act. Speaker 100:00:45Forward looking statements are subject to several risks and uncertainties, many of which are beyond our control. These risks and uncertainties can cause actual results to differ materially from our current expectations. We advise listeners to review our earnings release and risk factors discussed in our filings with the SEC. Also, during today's call, we will reference certain non GAAP financial measures. Reconciliations of these non GAAP measures to the most directly comparable GAAP measures are included in our earnings release. Speaker 100:01:13Finally, after our prepared remarks, we will hold a question and answer session. With that, I would like to turn the call over to Sam. Speaker 200:01:21Thanks, Matt, and good morning, everyone. As we've communicated previously, 2024 is a prudent year for ProPetro, and I'm pleased to report that we are delivering. In the Q2 of 2024, we demonstrated the effectiveness and resilience of our strategy. We have proven that despite a softer market environment, ProPetro can deliver and is delivering meaningful value for our customers, partners and shareholders. David will walk you through our financial results in a moment, but first I'd like to share some important business highlights from the Q2. Speaker 200:01:57Despite unexpected activity disruptions during the quarter, our focus on industrializing our business and prudent dynamic capital allocation has helped ProPetro deliver resilient free cash flow generation. We expect our strong free cash flow to continue, thanks to the investments we've made and the strategic decisions we've taken to position our business for sustainable long term value creation. Underpinning our strategy and our confidence are 3 core principles which you have heard us discuss previously. Let me walk you through each and share some details on our progress. First, our company is set up to drive free cash flow generation. Speaker 200:02:37We made meaningful investments through our fleet recapitalization and are now reaping the rewards. Demand for our next generation gas burning assets is strong and our transition towards a more efficient service offering that will remain relevant in our competitive market is progressing uninterrupted by market headwinds. We ended the 2nd quarter with 7 Tier 4 DGB dual fuel fleets with each bringing industry leading diesel displacement. The rollout of our forced electric fleet offering is well underway and the results we've seen so far make us highly confident that we're on the right path to deliver enhanced customer value and ultimately superior shareholder returns. This quarter we deployed our 3rd force electric frac fleet. Speaker 200:03:25This is the 1st force electric fleet we deployed with ExxonMobil as a part of our 3 year contract with the 2nd fleet expected to be deployed in the next few months. The agreement includes the deployment of 2 force electric fleets, wireline and pump down services in 2024 with an option for a 3rd force fleet with integrated wireline and pump down services to commence operations early in 2025. Our 3 year contract with ExxonMobil was a major milestone and in addition to other contracted electric equipment is a glimpse of ProPetro's future. Moreover, we will continue to allocate capital to our force electric offering and away from conventional diesel equipment, following the demand trends and the customer preferences we're seeing in the market. On that note, we have placed an order for our 5th force Electric fleet and we expect it to be in the field under contract in 2024. Speaker 200:04:28In addition to electrification, are evolving our business and capitalizing on our strengths in other ways as well. We have been executing committed contracts that help ProPetro deliver through cycle returns. We continue to work closely with our customers creating efficiencies tied to integrated services and higher equipment utilization. We are cultivating an incredibly talented and committed workforce and our progress and success to date are made possible by our 1st in class operating team in the field, all resulting in a business that has more durable and resilient future earnings profile. Putting all these factors together, we are proud to deliver valuable, more efficient and flexible services while reducing risks and costs for our customers. Speaker 200:05:14We are very confident that our business is poised for our continued growth and success, all made possible by our team here at ProPetro. Now moving to M and A, which has been and will continue to be an important strategic driver for our company. Our disciplined and opportunistic approach to deploying capital towards value accretive acquisitions remains a fundamental strength at ProPetro. Our Silvertip acquisition continues to be a strong tailwind for our earnings and free cash flow as does our acquisition of Par 5 Cementing, which is now fully integrated into our legacy cementing business. This quarter, we were pleased to complete the acquisition of AquaProp, an innovative provider of cost effective wet sand solutions. Speaker 200:05:58This acquisition is yet another example of our commitment to enhancing innovation and integration through thoughtful capital allocation. The addition of AquaProp is aimed squarely at further industrializing our operations with the ultimate goal of bringing more value to our customers and ProPetro through removing unnecessary equipment off location. Furthermore, it builds on a reputation of delivering best in class integrated completion services desired by operators in the Permian Basin. We will stay disciplined and opportunistic in our pursuit of accretive M and A and valuations that make sense. Indeed, ProPetra's stable and robust cash generation results allow us to advance our fleet transition and participate in accretive M and A all while maintaining a strong balance sheet. Speaker 200:06:48Importantly, it also provides optionality to return capital to shareholders. On that note and as we announced last quarter, our board approved an increase and an extension of our share repurchase program through May 31, 2025 with an additional $100,000,000 authorized for Speaker 300:07:08a total of $200,000,000 Speaker 200:07:11Since the inception of our plan in May of 2023, ProPetro has repurchased approximately 10% of outstanding common shares. David will add more on this in a minute, but let me just say that our actions on this front confirm our Board and management's confidence in ProPetro's continued earning growth and free cash flow generation. Returning capital to shareholders will continue to be among our top priorities. The success I just laid out and the initiatives we are pursuing showcase ProPetro's strength. Despite some turbulence in the market, our strong performance is why we believe ProPetro shares are a unique investment opportunity and that the investment thesis is apparent in the discrepancy between our equity value and the strong financial performance evident in our results. Speaker 200:08:00Yes, the 2nd quarter was challenging. Rig counts continued to move lower and pricing across our conventional diesel assets became more competitive. We experienced a weaker quarter sequentially in our wireline business due to shifting customer schedules and also saw significant weather impact as we had several uncharacteristically strong storms push through the Permian during May June. Yet our premium service offering coupled with our operational excellence, robust and blue chip customer base and superior service proved to be resilient as our dual fuel electric equipment remained highly utilized. We're also pleased to report another quarter of lower CapEx relative to our original budget, which will further support free cash flow and our capital allocation plans moving through the remainder of 2024 and beyond. Speaker 200:08:52We are confident in our ability to deliver strong financial results through the balance of this year and into 2025. Turning now to our market outlook. While ProPetro is of course not immune to the macro pressures facing our industry, we continue to take decisive action building out our high quality service offering and maintenance of our strong balance sheet designed to deliver meaning free cash flow generation. We remain optimistic about the strength of North American land oilfield services potential over the next several years and are confident that our industrialized model, geographic focus in the Permian Basin and the disciplined execution of our strategy will pay off despite the slow to no growth environment that exists today. Lastly and maybe most importantly, our pursuit of operational excellence allows us to effectively service our strong blue chip Permian focused customer base and is supported by our proven electric technology, which garners committed contracts. Speaker 200:09:51Our balance sheet is healthy and we have ample liquidity to be opportunistic in our capital allocation decisions. In sum, our evolving industrial model has proven to be effective and we look forward to achieving even greater success. We expect to continue elevating ProPetro as well as our entire industry for years to come. I'll now turn the call over to David to discuss our Q2 financial results. David? Speaker 400:10:18Thanks, Sam, and good morning, everyone. As Sam mentioned, despite broader market headwinds, we generated strong returns and continued to execute on our strategy. With our significant capital spend of the last few years behind us, we have transitioned to focus on higher free cash flows and consistent earnings. And today, we have results that evidence the turnaround we've discussed in prior quarters. In the 2nd quarter, revenues decreased 12% versus the Q1 to $357,000,000 net loss was $4,000,000 and adjusted EBITDA decreased 29% sequentially to $66,000,000 The decreases across our 2nd quarter financial metrics were mostly attributable to unexpected activity disruptions and softness across our conventional diesel equipment and wireline offerings, as well as significant weather impacts in the Permian Basin. Speaker 400:11:15Additionally, we incurred an operating lease expense related to our electric fleets of $12,000,000 for the quarter as compared to $9,000,000 in the prior quarter. Our effective frac fleet utilization for the 2nd quarter was 15.5 fleets, which was above the guidance range we had provided. Thanks to efficiencies exceeding our expectations from previous years, we are shifting away from reporting on fleet utilization based on days worked. Instead, we'll focus on guiding and reporting the number of active frac fleets, which we believe better represents asset utilization in our hydraulic fracturing business. During the Q2, 14 hydraulic fracturing fleets were active and we expect to run approximately 14 active fleets in the Q3 of 'twenty 4. Speaker 400:12:07Moving to our capital program. Net cash used in investing activities during the Q2 of 2024 was $57,000,000 of which $21,000,000 was related to the acquisition of AquaProp. As we shared last quarter, our supply chain and operations teams are scrutinizing our capital spend more than ever and we're also conducting supply chain assessments to maximize returns from our vendor relationships. I'm pleased to share that the work they are doing is already driving favorable results. And here's where the story we've discussed in recent quarters gets very interesting and encouraging. Speaker 400:12:46As Sam mentioned, despite a challenging environment and weaker financial results sequentially, the company delivered a 5th consecutive quarter of impressive free cash flow, achieving $48,000,000 which represents a 17% sequential improvement over the Q1. If we exclude cash used for acquisition consideration for AquaProp of $21,000,000 in the 2nd quarter, Free cash flow adjusted for acquisition consideration was $69,000,000 bringing total year to date free cash flow adjusted for acquisition consideration to $110,000,000 which represents 69% conversion ratio of adjusted EBITDA to free cash flow adjusted for acquisition consideration. This is the dramatic change we've been working to produce through dedication and diligent strategic execution. Our entire organization has been involved in this transformation and there remains work yet to be done. As we continue to demonstrate, the inflection point we reached in reduced capital spend is a strong tailwind for cash generation and is a testament to the success of our fleet transition and optimization of our business. Speaker 400:14:03Accordingly, we are now reducing our prior guidance of $200,000,000 to $250,000,000 for 2024 capital expenditures, down to a range between $175,000,000 to $200,000,000 Using the midpoint, the new guidance represents a 40% reduction compared to last year's capital spend of $310,000,000 dollars ProPetro's cash and liquidity position also remained strong. As of June 30, 2024, total cash was $67,000,000 and our borrowings under the ABL credit facility were $45,000,000 Total liquidity at the end of the quarter was $145,000,000 including cash and $78,000,000 of available capacity under the ABL credit facility. Moreover, the transformation of our fleet to more force electric fleets will drive an even greater decline in associated maintenance capital spend, resulting in increased free cash flow and more durable profitability, particularly with the multi year contractual coverage we are seeing for these fleets. In the remainder of 2024, we anticipate further validation of our strategy and a demonstration of the earnings enhancement resulting from our investments in the business. As Sam shared earlier, ProPetro's improved cash generation profile allows us to pursue our fleet transition while also participating in accretive M and A and maintaining a strong balance sheet. Speaker 400:15:38Importantly, it also provides optionality to return capital to shareholders. In the second quarter, we remained active in our share repurchase program, retiring another 2,500,000 shares. Since the inception of the program, we've retired approximately 11,300,000 shares, which equates to nearly 10% of shares outstanding as of the inception of the program in May 2023. This translates to the return of nearly $100,000,000 to shareholders. We will continue to opportunistically execute share repurchases under the increased and extended $200,000,000 repurchase program authorized by our Board in April 2024. Speaker 400:16:23We also believe that our strategy will continue to deliver and afford us the flexibility to stay dynamic, selective and opportunistic in our capital allocation approach. Each of the core principles Sam discussed plays a critical role in our success. We look forward to delivering for all of our stakeholders as we pursue our ongoing electric fleet conversion, organic and continued inorganic growth and the disciplined pursuit of increased shareholder value. In fact, in just the first half of this year, we've allocated 61% of our free cash flow adjusted for acquisition consideration to higher priority capital allocations with $45,000,000 in share repurchases and $21,000,000 toward targeted acquisitions that we expect to accelerate cash flows further. ProPetro's foundation upon which our strategy is built could not be more solid with our strong balance sheet, refreshed asset base and operational excellence positioning us for the long term. Speaker 400:17:30Our strategy is carefully crafted to drive success in the slow to no growth environment in which we are operating today. Without question, a consolidated industry and even more activity disciplined Permian customer base presents challenges. ProPetro is up to that challenge and we are thriving. The crux of our strategy is that it benefits not only ProPetro, but also our customers by delivering the very best commercial and industrial solutions for their completions programs. We believe that is a winning strategy to drive durable earnings and cash flows. Speaker 400:18:08With that, I'll turn the call back to Sam. Thanks, David. To build on what David just said, before turning to Q and A, I'd like to reinforce ProPetro's compelling investment thesis and the recent actions we've taken to sustain meaningful cash flow generation and to limit our Speaker 200:18:24capital spend, further accelerating our true earnings growth trajectory. We remain confident in our strategy and the future of our company. Despite the headwinds and the slow to no growth environment evident in the energy services space we operate in, our company is uniquely and favorably positioned. We've been successful in transforming our fleet, pursuing accretive M and A and executing on share buybacks, all while maintaining a healthy balance sheet and liquidity profile. The results you are seeing today are just the beginning. Speaker 200:18:54We will continue to build on our progress long into the future. Despite what you may be hearing across the oilfield services space, demand remains strong for our services. Our next generation fleet, operational excellence and strong blue chip Permian customer base will sustain the momentum we have. I'd also be remiss not to mention that the demand for our force electric fleet outpaces our current supply. Moving forward, you will continue to see us capitalize on these positive trends. Speaker 200:19:25We are clear eyed about the market pressures that persist, but also about the assets we have to navigate the turbulence. Our best in class commercial architecture supports our strategy and positions ProPetro to continue delivering strong free cash flow generation for the remainder of 2024 and beyond. Finally, I couldn't be prouder to lead an incredible ProPetro team. It is because of their dedication that we are able to confidently present and execute this roadmap. To the whole ProPetro team, I thank you for your commitment. Speaker 200:19:57It is what gives our leadership conviction that we have the right strategy and remain a leader in the Permian Basin. With that, I'll ask the operator to open up the line for questions. Operator? Operator00:20:09Thank you. We will now begin the question and answer session. Our first question comes from Luc Lamoine from Piper Sandler. Please go ahead. Speaker 500:20:38Hi, good morning. Speaker 200:20:40Good morning, Luke. Sam, you Speaker 500:20:41talked about the outlook for the second half of the year. Looking a lot like the first half. You had some variability in 2Q, which you wanted to detail about. I'm kind of guessing when you look at the back part of the year, maybe you're expecting some of these issues, transitory issues to go away in 3Q, a little bump in 3Q and then some seasonality in 4Q. But if you could just kind of maybe provide a little more detail and kind of frame up how you see the rest of the year unfolding, that'd be helpful. Speaker 200:21:12Yes, Luke. I mean, I think you described it pretty succinctly and pretty effectively. I'd say what you just described in terms of a little bump in 3Q and some seasonality in Q4 is likely the way we're looking at it. I think when we said back half looking similar to front half, we're probably that's probably more of an activity focused comment. That said, I think we're also the closer we get to 4Q every year, the more we find out about holiday seasonality around Thanksgiving and Christmas remains to be seen exactly what that looks like, but we're fairly confident that 4Q will be strong as well. Speaker 500:21:57Okay. And then, David, pretty big reduction in the CapEx, especially if you go from the high end to the low end of your revised guidance. Can you just talk about what changed there a little bit? Speaker 400:22:10Sure, Luke. We have seen as we have continued to transition our fleets from more conventional equipment, a decrease in the capital intensity required. And so that's part of it. The other part, if you look at our strategy slide, is optimizing our business and what operations is doing and I'll give a lot of credit to Adam and his team is extending the life of the equipment as we use it in the field. So those benefits, that effort that has been put in over the last 18 months is beginning to bear fruit along with the fleet transition from a conventional to electric equipment. Speaker 400:22:48And just to give you some sense of that, our hours, our pumping hours from Tier 2 diesel equipment dropped 25% sequentially during the quarter. The hours coming from electric went up 60% sequentially and Tier 4 DGB went up kind of mid teens. So we're seeing that transition that we've talked about. It's going to play out in our P and Speaker 200:23:14L and our cash flow more significantly as we go forward. Yes. And I think David said it well, Luke. The one thing that I would add is that this guidance change for us, which is fairly significant in our eyes, is not we're not deferring any CapEx here. We're we are still giving the business absolutely everything it needs to perform at the highest levels and into the future. Speaker 500:23:41Okay, got it. Thanks a bunch. Operator00:23:45The next question comes from Derek Podhauser from Barclays. Please go ahead. Speaker 600:23:51Hey, just wanted to ask about the pricing trends you're seeing out there. You said in the release, you're seeing some pricing pressure in the Tier 2 diesel assets, which makes sense. But have you seen any pressure leak into the Tier 4 DGB assets? And then where do you think we should bottom out here as far as pricing? Just your overall outlook on pricing would be helpful. Speaker 200:24:11I'd say for the our next gen assets that we're calling our dual fuel or electric assets, pricing remains very strong. On an individual case basis, is there a little bit of pressure here and there? But yes, but nothing material, I would say. The pricing story as we see it in the frac market in the Permian Basin is mainly a diesel pricing story. They're still on the fringes of a few irrational players that are pricing things pretty low and that can disrupt the diesel market, which is really a minority piece of the overall market. Speaker 200:24:45It's definitely a minority piece of our offering and that applies to the rest of the market too. So that's one of the reasons why although we're seeing some pricing pressures that part of the market, we remain super confident about ProPetro's prospects from just a general competitiveness standpoint and a profitability standpoint going into the future because that's a waning part of our portfolio. And we are likely accelerating decisions to wind down all investments in diesel equipment maybe a little sooner than we initially expected. So yes, the diesel market has been pricing affected. Also, yes, the remainder of the gas burning electric dual fuel market has been very strong. Speaker 600:25:35Got it. That's very helpful. And then maybe more on that point about the fleet transition. I mean, we're getting down to single digit tier 2 diesel fleets here. What do you expect to be at a 100% natural gas burning fleet? Speaker 600:25:47And then on top of that, it sounds like your 5th fleet 5th force fleet is coming in at the end of the year. You might have a 3rd option for Exxon next year, which sounds like would need to be a 6th fleet. So maybe more just about when you can get to 100 percent natural gas and also the cadence of e fleets, how we should think about it for 2025? Speaker 200:26:05Yes. Well, thanks for pointing that out on the force electric fleets. We did within the quarter pull the trigger on the 5th Force fleet, which is a new development from our last conference call. We pulled the trigger on that fleet and fit it within this lower CapEx guidance range. So we're pretty proud to be able to do that. Speaker 200:26:24That is accelerating, I think what the main And I think the biggest variable to get us there is probably what market demands are. Is 2025 come with higher activity overall in the industry? Does it have a greater demand pull on our entire portfolio? That likely maybe draws out the harvesting of some of these diesel assets for us. If the market remains kind of flat and muted, which we think it will, whether we have we use the term slow to no growth pretty often that we need to go out into the market and create our own wins through operational excellence and next generation assets that likely that diesel equipment might go away a little more quicker in that scenario. Speaker 200:27:24But will we be running diesel fleets this time next year? Yes, probably because we have relatively young high performing assets in that part of our portfolio that probably deserve a shot to earn a return on their way out. And that's kind of how we're looking at it. But investing in diesel is likely from a capital spend perspective, the lowest priority from a capital allocation standpoint. Speaker 700:27:50Got it. That makes sense. And just Speaker 600:27:52a quick clarifier on the 5th, 4th Force fleet is was that a purchase or is that another lease? Speaker 400:27:59That's a lease, Derek. And we are benefiting from our lease program. But keep in mind, there's a very different calculus there. We're replacing equipment that has shorter useful lives with assets that last materially longer to 3x the useful life of what we would consider from the conventional equipment. So it's a very different calculus. Speaker 400:28:24We think it's an investment in the long term viability of the company and we're seeing that the conversion is very much desired by our customers and generating very efficient and more higher margin profitability as we go forward. Speaker 800:28:43Great. Thanks, Sam Speaker 600:28:44and David. I'll turn it back. Operator00:28:47The next question comes from Arun Jayaram from JPMorgan. Please go ahead. Speaker 900:28:53Good morning, gentlemen. One of the things I'd love to hear about is just kind of a potential bridge to think about kind of Q3 profitability? And maybe we could start with what type of tailwinds do you expect from the Aqua Prop acquisition as well as the Exxon fleet? And maybe you could highlight maybe some of the quarter specific impacts that you felt in 2Q, maybe wireline as well as some of the weather? And again, just trying to bridge to thoughts on 3Q. Speaker 200:29:35Sure. I'll start and David can fill in the gaps. The last question you asked about 2Q, I think we outlined it pretty clearly in all of our materials. It was a product of 3 main factors weather, schedule disruptions and pricing. We probably won't give quantitative detail on which one of those was more and which one was less, Definitely a combination of all those three things. Speaker 200:30:02I'd like to just call out the schedule disruptions, maybe to give a little bit of commentary. We had during the quarter basically one customer that had 2 of our fleets make some last minute decisions to delay some work. So that creates some white space and some kind of jaggedness and uncertainty in the calendar. What we then do knowing that that work is coming back at a good price with good visibility is try to fill the gap with whatever we can to keep the crew, the equipment hot and to cover as much fixed cost as we can. That then has a knock on effect on something like pricing because going out looking for last minute work is not the most profitable way to run a frac business, we believe. Speaker 200:30:46So but those three things, weather, schedule, kind of unpredicted schedule disruptions in pricing. And then back to your I think what your first question was around where we go to 3Q, we do believe activity will stay relatively flat. We do think profitability will come up. We're still seeing a little bit of we did see a little bit of weather in July. So how much profitability comes up is we haven't quite totally quantified that, but we do expect overall Q3 to be up activity and the calendar look a little more strong. Speaker 200:31:24Wireline, I'd say both wireline and cementing are improving going into Q3, which is at certain times over 25% of our business. Those two businesses wireline cement, so they can't be discounted in the grand scheme of things. Speaker 400:31:40Yes. Arun, this is David. The only thing I would add there is that I think we're probably less sensitive to the month to month variability of the business and working on generating durable earnings and free cash flows over the longer term. And so I think that crew continuity is very, very important to our team and to our customers and also in generating the results of optimizing our business. And so that's what we're sticking to. Speaker 400:32:10And I think as it relates to cash flow performance going forward, we do see consistency moving into the second half of the year and beyond. Speaker 900:32:19Great. Just my follow-up. David, on the leasing of the Force Fleet new builds, at what time is the first time you can elect to exercise your buy option on the new builds? At what time post the start up of the lease payments does that option occur? And just maybe give us a sense of could you give us help us quantify how much what is the residual cost if you decide to buy out the leases? Speaker 400:32:57Sure, Arun. The initial term is 36 months. We do have options to extend beyond that should we so choose, but the purchase option at that time is in the neighborhood of $10,000,000 We do have some credits that we earn as we generate hours, but that's essentially where the number is. Speaker 900:33:21Great. Thanks a lot. Speaker 1000:33:23You bet. Operator00:33:24The next question comes from John Daniel from Simmons. Please go ahead. Speaker 800:33:31Hi, good morning. I guess, I'm Simmons back again. I guess, Sam, you made a statement that Q4 would be strong, I mean you're making that statement for ProPetro or is that a broader view on the Permian? Speaker 200:33:50That's probably more so for just us, John. And strong, I guess it's add on to that strong relatively maybe to what we've seen for other Q4s. In the last several years, you've seen Q4s that haven't skipped a beat quite literally and you've seen Q4s that have almost been cut in half across the industry. But as it pertains to us, I think the way we've positioned ourselves with our customers and this next generation gas burning equipment kind of puts us to the base load or the top of the heap of most of our customer portfolios, especially these e fleets, right. They have mechanisms in them that account for any white space and things like that. Speaker 200:34:34So is it a product of just us and our customer base? Maybe, but the more long term oriented just the entire E and P space gets around their activity and they contract things like e fleets and have stronger dedicated agreements for things like dual fuel fleets. It just bodes well for more stability throughout the year. That said, I mean, mean, we could always be surprised as it pertains to Q4, but conversations with our customers right now are pretty good from an activity standpoint going into the end of the year. Speaker 800:35:12Okay. And then sort of a pointed question here. Thanks for that. Just given the opportunities for additional electric fleets, because I'm imagining you're not going to stop at 5 just given the success. Do you buy any more Tier 4 DGB engines going forward? Speaker 800:35:29And as you look to 'twenty five, would you anticipate any Tier 2 rebuilds? Speaker 200:35:37Fantastic question on the Tier 4. I think we're trying to figure out that exact same thing right now. With the demand pull 2 things with the demand pull that we're seeing on our e fleets and our contract structure, coupled with things David mentioned earlier about the lower operating cost profile, lower maintenance CapEx that comes with these e fleets, it's very, very convicting to us to continue to push more aggressively into the eFleet space. And from an equipment standpoint, that is number 1 on the capital allocation list. It can be the best for capital. Speaker 200:36:25So I think that Tier 4 investments are dependent on what wins we can create in the eFleet space as it pertains to Tier 2 diesel. We're basically done there from a capital spending standpoint. So we have no reason or motivation to be doing things like rebuilding diesel engines at this time. Speaker 800:36:46Fair enough. The last one for me, I promise, is you have obviously 7 fleets that are Tier 4 dual fuel. Have any of those customers told you that they prefer the Tier 4 dual fuel solution over electric and if so, why? Speaker 200:37:06I think it's more the other way around. Honestly, the Tier 4 many of our Tier 4 customers are first time Tier 4 dual fuel customers. So we've been working together on what it looks like to use gas in our operations and kind of create fuel wins. That said, it's really a stepping stone or in a waiting line for electric equipment. Once we have some success with dual fuel with certain operator, you're blending 60 plus percent, which we think we're all but industry leading in the Permian Basin as it pertains to blending diesel displacement percentages, creates a lot of savings for our customers. Speaker 200:37:55And then the next step in the conversation is what does it look like to go to 100% gas, which is electric at this time. Adam, did you want to add to that? Yes. No, John, the only thing I would Speaker 300:38:06add to that is the customers that have been running the Tier 4 for a while now have seen and grown to love the efficiencies, 20 plus hours per day. And it's really Shelby and his team going in there and improving and showing them the results of our currently deployed force fleets and showing them that they won't lose any efficiency gains by switching over their only benefiting from the 100% fuel displacement, diesel displacement. So I think it's just showing them the proof is in the pudding. We're showing them data. We're showing them results from the current force fleets running. Speaker 300:38:44And that's getting them over the bridge there. Operator00:38:53The next question comes from Scott Gruber from Citigroup. Please go ahead. Speaker 1000:38:59Yes. Good morning. Good morning, Scott. Speaker 700:39:04I want to get Speaker 1000:39:04some more clarity on the CapEx drop, which is pretty impressive, just especially in light of the ordering of the 5th, 4th fleet. Was the drop mainly due to cut in the Tier 2 diesel fleet CapEx? Or was there also an element of slowing investment in your ancillary services? And if that was a factor, how should we think about ancillary service investment in 2025? Speaker 200:39:38Scott, I'll make just a couple of simple points first and David can add on if he needs to. This is tailwinds from a next generation equipment standpoint, number 1. A lot of maintenance CapEx tailwinds. Every day we have another electric fleet in the field. The more data and confidence that we have in its lower operating expense, lower maintenance CapEx. Speaker 200:40:05That's a huge part playing here. Another part is and you've heard us talk about this, it's kind of easy to categorize this as a buzzword, but the broader optimization of our business is really starting to show through. And as it pertains to CapEx, it's showing through in 2 main ways. 1, we've done a lot of really intentional directed focused work around extending equipment life for all the main components, for everything we're doing on a frac location. And the wins that we've seen there are really, really impressive. Speaker 200:40:38And that's due large part to our operations team, the focus and work that they've put in to really, really get better at that. Fluid ends, power ends, engines, transmissions, all these large components, if you make 10%, 20% of life improvements in each one of those, they have massive follow on effects. So that's one part of it from an optimization standpoint. The other part is what we're doing inside of our supply chain. We are really ramping up our sophistication, how we contract and transact with the whole value chain and trying to ensure that we're getting the best quality parts and services from our supply chain for the best prices. Speaker 200:41:21And there's a lot of wins that are showing through there. Speaker 400:41:25Yes, Scott, this is David. The only thing I would add there is that about 30% of our capital budget is related to growth or what we would consider non recurring investments. The rest of it is related to maintenance of our equipment and going forward. And as Sam mentioned, we've been getting much better in that arena and we've also been deploying assets that are less capital intensive. And so as we do that in our acquisition strategy as well as in our fleet conversion that we believe will continue to play out favorably. Speaker 1000:42:02No, it's good color. Certainly reducing the capital intensity of the base is a great trend to see. Just another question on contracting structure. You guys discussed the bonus payments on your Exxon contracts last call. How prevalent are bonus payments across your other contracts? Speaker 1000:42:30And just as you guys continue to deliver efficiency improvements for customers, are you thinking about incorporating bonus structures into more contracts going forward? Speaker 200:42:44Scott, if I'm reading your question right, you might be referring to like performance bonuses that we try and put in some of our agreements. Is that what you're referring to? Speaker 1000:42:52Yes, exactly. Just curious whether you're able to capture some extra margin from the efficiency improvement that you're delivering to customers? Speaker 200:43:03I'd say that part of our commercial architecture is pretty small. I don't want to say it's insignificant, but it's fairly small. It's small well, and each one of these contracts, I'd say each customer we contract with, the structure can look different from customer to customer. And I think that's one of our main advantages commercially without saying too much is trying to custom fit our services to the needs of our customers, right. This is not a set in stone structure that we just go kind of shove to people. Speaker 200:43:38This is a very collaborative effort with each individual customer. And I think that's where we greatly benefit from like a commercial transacting standpoint. But really what and I'd say why part of the reason why some of the performance bonus things, especially in the e fleets is relatively small is because most of our customers we're talking to about e fleets are chasing consistency and predictability. So they want that 20, 21, 22 pumping hours per day every day and they want their cost to look the same every single day. So if we can find kind of a window where we can both mutually benefit from that efficiency at a right price. Speaker 200:44:21We're not afraid to lock those prices in for considerable amounts of time with or without performance bonuses. Speaker 1000:44:32Got it. Appreciate the color, Sam. Speaker 200:44:35Yes. Thanks. Speaker 900:44:37The next Operator00:44:37question comes from wakar saeed from ATB Capital Markets. Please go ahead. Speaker 700:44:44Thank you for taking my questions. David, just a housekeeping question. What were the shares outstanding at the end of the quarter? Speaker 200:44:56106,000,000 Speaker 700:44:59Okay. So that's not the average for Q2, it's the shares outstanding at the end of the quarter, right? Speaker 600:45:08Let Speaker 400:45:11me no, actually, shares outstanding would be 104,000,000 at the end of the quarter. But the average shares for the quarter in terms of calculating EPS is 106. Speaker 700:45:26Okay, great. And then yes, sure. So Sam, on Aqua Prop, how many pumping crews are you currently catering to through AquaProp? And how would that change maybe in the second half and then into next year? Speaker 200:45:51Yes, we're basically at around 4 right now and that's likely headed north from there through the end of the year. We're trying to grow that as quickly as possible, LaCarr. So to say what the top end is throughout the tail end of the year is, I think a little bit too soon. But we're definitely trying to use that as a mechanism to increase profitability and cash flow, but also give our customers more reliability and more of an industrial solution. Speaker 700:46:21And what's the investor your customer reaction to it? What is the positive feedback? What is the negative feedback on this new solution? Speaker 200:46:33I think one of the things that we like and the customers that are using this the most is just its simplicity. Its simplicity and flexibility on location. So because we're not bound by a container, a silo or a box, we can really change the amount of sand we can store our location, therefore affecting how many trucks you need to service a job, things like that. So I think that's really what kind of drove us to make that decision, that acquisition to add it to our offering and integrate a little bit more in that direction. That said, I mean, let's be real with ourselves. Speaker 200:47:11I think the sand market, the sand market in general, the sand value chain is very, very dynamic and fast changing right now. I mean, I think people have found ways to mine more sand in more places. And I think that's causing quite a bit of disruption in the sand supply side. That's why we hesitate to invest in things like mines quite yet because as Speaker 1100:47:39soon as Speaker 200:47:39you stand up a mine somewhere, it could be quickly made inferior to another mine just down the road for just distance and geographical purposes. So we'll keep a close eye on that. And look, we're not expecting Aqua Prop to be on 100% of our frac locations and it to be adopted by every single customer we have. But we do think there's a legitimate growth opportunity and we'll continue to press into that into this year and going into next year. Speaker 400:48:07Yes. Walker, this is David. I think one thing just to add to that, we looked across our fleets and compared NPT related to Sand Containment and Logistics and there's a significant difference. And I think as we deliver value to customers, pumping efficiency and NPT is a key some key metrics that they look at. So we think that's a real sales opportunity and business development opportunity to continue to deliver value to ProPetro's customers. Speaker 300:48:45Yes, I would just add on to the MPT discussion. David says it's just not around the silos and trucking portion of it. It's also the frac from the blender, removing things like screws that have a lot of hydraulic failures on location that we see, that's been very beneficial too. Speaker 700:49:06Makes sense. Well, thank you very much. Appreciate the color. Operator00:49:10The next question comes from Kurt Hallead from Benchmark. Please go ahead. Speaker 1000:49:17Hey, good morning, everybody. Thanks so much for all the insight and color. Really appreciate that. Hey, I wanted to first get some clarity on something that I'm just a little bit confused on. So in the thinking your commentary, Sam, you referenced that you had an average of 15.5 fleets operating in the Q2 and then in a similar commentary you referenced 14 fleets. Speaker 1000:49:46Just want to make sure that I mishear that? Speaker 200:49:51No, you didn't mishear it. We're actually making a change this quarter from what we've done traditionally in the past, the way we disclose activity. I don't know if you remember Kurt, but dating all the way back to like 2017 maybe, we disclosed effective fleets by number of days worked in the quarter. So we previously defined an effectively utilized fleet is worth 25 days in 1 month or 75 days in 1 quarter because we thought that was normal. That's no longer normal. Speaker 200:50:27Normal is in excess of 25 days a month. So when you add up all the days for 2Q and you use that effective fleet utilization 75 days in a quarter, you get to 15.5, but we never ran more than 14 fleets during the quarter. So we're getting to a point where we thought that that was just an inaccurate way to describe our asset level activity. So going forward, we're just going to call out active fleets of which it was 14 in 2nd quarter. We believe it will be 14 again in the 3rd quarter. Speaker 200:51:01And then I think on a go forward basis, we'll just add commentary around that if we experienced any white space or if it was a full calendar. Speaker 1000:51:08That's great. I really appreciate you clarifying that. So second point of clarification, you guys And you were saying we haven't you haven't quite quantified that yet, and that's fine. But effectively, as a group here, investors and so on, we probably should not be thinking about 1st quarter profitability in the equation of how things might play out in the second. In other words, the way things are shaking out in the industry, it doesn't look like getting back to first quarter levels is something that could be even be remotely feasible in the second half of the year. Speaker 1000:51:51So we're thinking about working off a second quarter EBITDA base, not a first half 2024 EBITDA base. Is that a fair way to think about it? Speaker 400:52:02Yes, Kurt, this is David. I think that's right. And I think what we've tried to point to is really our confidence in our ongoing cash flow performance and consistency there. So, look, the market is going to do what it does. We have built a business that can thrive in a fairly stagnant market. Speaker 400:52:24We're building additional capabilities with some of the M and A activity and we'll continue to drive that business model going forward. Speaker 1000:52:33All right. That's awesome. And then just on that front end, David, right, how should we think about free cash conversion as a percent of your EBITDA? How are you guys thinking about targeting that free cash flow conversion? Speaker 400:52:49Well, I think that we've been aspiring to generate in the neighborhood of 50% plus EBITDA to free cash flow conversion. We've exceeded that year to date. And in the M and A front, we certainly are targeting businesses with higher EBITDA and free cash flow conversions. The fleet conversions that we're executing on we believe have higher levels as well. So I think 50% is what we would be targeting and we'll see how the market plays out and supports that. Speaker 1000:53:28That's awesome. Appreciate that color. Thank you. Speaker 400:53:32You bet. Operator00:53:37The next question comes from Don Crist from Johnson Rice. Please go ahead. Speaker 1100:53:43Good morning, guys. Thanks for squeezing me Speaker 600:53:45in here at the Speaker 1100:53:45end. Sam, I wanted to ask about power generation. Obviously, outside of the oil field, there's been a lot of discussions on data centers using turbines, etcetera. Are you finding it hard to find power for your new electric fleets? And do you see that as a bottleneck going forward if you wanted to add 5 or 10 more electric fleets in the future? Speaker 200:54:11To date, it has not affected or impeded our progress. I mean, maybe a day here and there as we're getting these first fleets stood up when we're getting new fleets stood up and deployed. But to say it's had a meaningful effect would be incorrect. Going forward, look, I think for some of the reasons you mentioned, there's just going to be a lot of demand on electricity and cost effective power generation of that electricity going into the future. I personally personal opinion, not a pro petro opinion, but I think the data center demand is a bit overhyped. Speaker 200:54:47That said, most of the data center demand will likely be in positions to pay more for some of the power generation maybe than some of the oilfield opportunities are. So it'll create some significant competition nonetheless. I think how we kind of manage through that is how we always have in a very collaborative kind of open manner with our entire value chain and supply chain, trying to make sure we're creating legitimate opportunities for people in our supply chain, chain, companies in our supply chain, not just picking up the phone on a minute's notice and expecting people to just appear out of thin air to service us. This is a very we have a very when we go to talk to a customer about a eFleet contract, which that's usually a long drawn out conversation over multiple months, if not a year. We like we very often have power providers under the tip with us as we're working on those contracts and those opportunities. Speaker 200:55:49So we'll continue to kind of leverage our creativeness flexibility on the commercial end to make sure that that doesn't become a problem. That said, I mean the supply chains from a build standpoint for generators are just full right now. So the more quickly you can make decisions about the future, the more likely you are to have what you need to service your customers. But to date, we've I think we've navigated that very, very well. Speaker 1100:56:21I appreciate that color. And taking it just one step further, several of your competitors have gone into the CNG space. Is the infrastructure on CNG keeping up with the demand shift towards natural gas burning equipment? And is that a potential investment opportunity for you all going forward? Speaker 200:56:45Yes, there's one thing that's definite. We can say this without a doubt, the gas is there. There's a lot of gas in the Permian Basin. The better question is, how do we get it to the right spot at the right price at the right time in the right quality. That's where the opportunities are. Speaker 200:57:01We've not made direct investments in that arena that we've worked with many people that have. And I've said this in times past that's an example of an integration opportunity that we keep a very close eye on. Probably much like we've kept an eye on last mile logistics and sand storage on location and we think that that reached a relative maturity point to make an investment like we did with AquaProf and we'll be waiting for that window if opportunities arise as it pertains to things like gas. I think CNG is an over simplistic way to think about gas as it pertains to powering frac equipment in the future. I think we should just be talking about gas in general because there's plenty of it and we just need to get it in the right quality and the right quantities in the right places. Operator00:57:57Are no more questions in the queue. This concludes our question and answer session. I would like to turn the conference back over to Sam Sledge for any closing remarks. Speaker 200:58:07Yes. Thanks everybody for joining us today. We appreciate your interest. Hope to talk to you and see you soon. Have a great day. Operator00:58:16The conference has now concluded. Thank you for attending today's presentation. You may now disconnect.Read morePowered by