Earnings call transcript: Ensign Energy Q2 2025 sees revenue dip, stock drops 8%

Published 08/08/2025, 17:48
 Earnings call transcript: Ensign Energy Q2 2025 sees revenue dip, stock drops 8%

Ensign Energy Services reported a decline in revenue for Q2 2025, falling short of expectations with an EPS of -$0.14, compared to the forecast of -$0.086. Despite this, revenue slightly exceeded projections at $372.4 million. The company’s stock reacted negatively, dropping 8.18% to $2.02 in pre-market trading, reflecting investor concerns over the earnings miss and the broader market conditions. According to InvestingPro data, the stock currently trades near Fair Value, with analysts setting price targets between $27 and $31.

Key Takeaways

  • Ensign Energy’s Q2 revenue decreased by 5% year-over-year.
  • EPS fell short of forecasts, resulting in a 62.79% negative surprise.
  • The stock price declined by over 8% following the earnings release.
  • The company continues to focus on debt reduction, aiming for $600 million by year-end.
  • Technological advancements in automated drilling systems show promise for future growth.

Company Performance

Ensign Energy Services experienced a challenging second quarter in 2025, with revenue dropping by 5% compared to the same period last year. The company attributed this decline to flat production in the U.S. market and challenging geological conditions. Despite these hurdles, Ensign maintained a strong position in the high-spec rig market, with nearly full bookings through 2026. InvestingPro analysis reveals the company maintains a healthy gross profit margin of 41.81% and has achieved a 5-year revenue CAGR of 6%, suggesting operational resilience despite market challenges.

Financial Highlights

  • Revenue: $372.4 million, a 5% decrease from Q2 2024.
  • EPS: -$0.14, missing the forecast of -$0.086.
  • Adjusted EBITDA: $81.4 million, down 19% from Q2 2024.
  • Debt Repayment: $19.7 million in Q2, with a year-to-date total of $42.9 million.

Earnings vs. Forecast

Ensign Energy’s actual EPS of -$0.14 fell short of the forecasted -$0.086, marking a 62.79% negative surprise. This miss is significant compared to previous quarters and contributed to the stock’s decline. However, revenue slightly exceeded expectations, coming in at $372.4 million against a forecast of $371.04 million.

Market Reaction

Following the earnings announcement, Ensign Energy’s stock dropped by 8.18%, trading at $2.02 in pre-market activity. This decline places the stock closer to its 52-week low of $1.73, reflecting investor disappointment with the earnings results and broader market pressures. InvestingPro data shows the stock has demonstrated significant volatility, with a beta of 1.26, while maintaining strong returns over both three-month and five-year periods. For deeper insights into the company’s valuation and future prospects, subscribers can access the comprehensive Pro Research Report, which covers over 1,400 US equities.

Outlook & Guidance

Ensign Energy remains focused on reducing its debt, targeting a $600 million reduction by the end of 2025. The company anticipates maintaining a steady rig count and expects margin recovery to 23-24%. Forward revenue contracts now total $1 billion, indicating potential stability in future earnings. InvestingPro’s Financial Health Score rates the company as "GOOD" with particularly strong scores in profit (3.84/5) and cash flow (3.3/5), supporting management’s optimistic outlook.

Executive Commentary

Bob Geddes, President and COO, highlighted the company’s strategic focus: "Looking forward, we continue to execute the plan of reducing debt whilst delivering the highest performing operations safely around the world." CFO Mike Gray emphasized the importance of financial discipline, stating, "The best deployment is probably towards the balance sheet as we see it right now."

Risks and Challenges

  • Continued flat production in the U.S. market could impact future revenue.
  • Geopolitical tensions and sanctions, particularly in regions like Venezuela, pose operational risks.
  • The company’s reliance on high-spec rigs may face challenges if market demand shifts.
  • Debt reduction targets are ambitious and may require stringent financial management.
  • Fluctuations in global oil prices could affect profitability and contract negotiations.

Q&A

During the earnings call, analysts focused on contract dynamics in the U.S. market and opportunities in international regions. Ensign’s management addressed concerns about pricing stability across rig types and reaffirmed their commitment to debt reduction strategies.

Full transcript - Ensign Energy Services Inc (ESI) Q2 2025:

Conference Operator: Morning, ladies and gentlemen, and welcome to Ensign Energy Services Inc. Second Quarter twenty twenty five Results Conference Call. At this time, all lines are now are in a listen only mode. Following the presentation, we will conduct a question and answer session. If at any time during this call, require immediate assistance, please press 0 for the operator.

This call is being recorded on Friday, 08/08/2025. I would now like to turn the conference over to Nicole Romanow, Investor Relations. Please go ahead.

Nicole Romanow, Investor Relations, Ensign Energy Services: Thank you, Ludi. Good morning, and welcome to Ensign Energy Services’ second quarter conference call and webcast. On our call today, Bob Geddes, President and COO, and Mike Gray, Chief Financial Officer, will review Ensign’s second quarter highlights and financial results, followed by our operational update and outlook. We’ll then open the call for questions. Our discussion today may include forward looking statements based upon current expectations that involve several business risks and uncertainties.

The factors that could cause results to differ materially include, but are not limited to, political, economic and market conditions, crude oil and natural gas prices, foreign currency fluctuations, weather conditions, the company’s defense of lawsuits, the ability of oil and gas companies to pay accounts receivable balances, or other unforeseen conditions which could impact the demand for services supplied by the company. Additionally, our discussion today may refer to non GAAP financial measures such as adjusted EBITDA. Please see our second quarter earnings release and SEDAR plus filings for more information on forward looking statements and the company’s use of non GAAP financial measures. With that, I’ll pass it on to Bob.

Bob Geddes, President and COO, Ensign Energy Services: Thanks, Nicole. Good morning, everyone. The second quarter was a little bumpy as we witnessed a higher concentration of repairs and maintenance expense, specifically in our Canadian business unit, as rigs came off their busy winter programs with work scheduled for right after break up. In addition, we had a few rigs come down unexpectedly in Latin America due to OFAC sanctions which negatively impacted the end of the second quarter. Generally though, we continue to deliver through the second quarter executing on key points.

Those being we further reduced debt in the quarter and we expect to deliver on the $600,000,000 debt reduction we targeted by the 2025. We held a tight rein on maintenance CapEx through the quarter aligning with the challenging macro environment. We grew our market share in Canada by 3%, whilst industry was down 9%. We maintained market share in The US in a market where industry activity dropped off 4%. At the very end of the second quarter, we transferred out of Canada one of our largest rigs, an ADR 3,000, down into Wyoming for a major long term contract there.

Our Middle East team successfully closed the deal for two additional ADRs in Oman with a major on a five year deal where the operator sponsored the upgrade and reactivation costs. We continue to expand our Drilling Technology Solutions app penetration by 25% year over year, and we ended the quarter with our best safety performance in the company’s history. Over to Mike for a financial summary of the second quarter. Over to you, Mike.

Mike Gray, Chief Financial Officer, Ensign Energy Services: Thanks Bob. Volatile oil prices and geopolitical events have reinforced producer capital discipline over the near term, impacting certain operating regions. However, despite these short term headwinds, the outlook for oilfield services is relatively constructive and has supported steady activity in several other regions. Overall operating days were slightly down in the 2025 in comparison to the 2024. The company saw a 1% increase in The United States to two thousand nine hundred and forty three operating days, and a 2% increase in Canada to two thousand four hundred and ninety four operating days.

The offsetting increase was a 14% decrease internationally to ten eighty one operating days. For the first six months ended 06/30/2025, overall operating days declined, with The United States recording a 5% decrease and international recording a 13% decrease in operating days. Offsetting the decrease was a 5% increase in our Canadian operating days when compared to the same period of 2024. The company generated revenue of $372,400,000 in the 2025, a 5% decrease compared to revenue of $391,800,000 generated in the second quarter of the prior year. For the six months ended 06/30/2025, the company generated revenue of $808,900,000 a 2% decrease compared to revenue of $823,100,000 generated in the same period of 2024.

Adjusted EBITDA for the 2025 was $81,400,000 19% lower than adjusted EBITDA of $100,200,000 in the 2024. Adjusted EBITDA for the first six months ended 06/30/2025 totaled $183,700,000 16% lower than adjusted EBITDA of $217,700,000 generated in the same period of 2024. The 2025 decrease in adjusted EBITDA was primarily a result of lower revenue rates and one time expenses related to activating, deactivating and moving drilling rigs. Offsetting the decrease in adjusted EBITDA was a favorable foreign exchange translation on USD denominated earnings. Depreciation expense in the first six months of twenty twenty five was $164,700,000 a decrease of 4% compared to $170,800,000 in the first six months of twenty twenty four.

General and administrative expenses in the 2025 were 17% lower than the 2024. G and A expenses decreased primarily as a result of non recurring expenses incurred in the prior year. Offsetting the decrease was annual wage increases and the negative translation of converting USD denominated expenses. Interest expense decreased by 27% to $18,600,000 from $25,500,000 The decrease is the result of lower debt levels and effective interest rates. During the 2025, 19,700,000.0 of debt was repaid, and a total of $42,900,000 was repaid during the 2025.

The company is on track to achieve its stated debt reduction target of $600,000,000 from the period beginning 2023 to the 2025. The remaining amount of debt to be repaid to achieve this target is $119,800,000 If industry conditions change, this target could be increased or decreased. Total debt net of cash has decreased $68,500,000 during the 2025 due to debt repayments and foreign exchange translation of converting USD denominated debt. Net purchases of property and equipment for the 2025 totaled $49,200,000 consisting of 13,300,000 in upgrade capital and $37,400,000 in maintenance capital, offset by dispositions proceeds of $1,500,000 Our 2025 maintenance capex budget is set at approximately $154,000,000 and selective upgrade capital of 30,500,000.0 Outputs $19,000,000 is customer funded. The increase in upgrade capital expenditures in 2025 is due to a recent awarded five year contract for two rigs in the company’s Amman operating region, as well as the rig being relocated from Canada to The United States.

On that note, I’ll pass

Bob Geddes, President and COO, Ensign Energy Services: the call back to Bob. Thanks Mike. So I’ll start with an operational update. As mentioned earlier, we have seen a slow climb out of the Canadian breakup as a result of the heavy rains. Globally today we sit with 95 drill rigs and 34 well servicing rigs active.

We will be increasing rig count of rig a week globally through in the fourth quarter and expect to hit roughly 105 drill rigs by the end of the year. In our well servicing group, we expect to see an increase in our rig count there from 45 currently to 55 well service rigs by year end. Let’s focus specifically on Canada for a moment. Our Canadian drilling team, which operates a high spec fleet of 86 rigs, continues to gain market share quarter over quarter and year over year with a 3% increase in market share, again while industry saw a 9% drop. We hit a peak of 55 rigs in the first quarter and peaked at 34 rigs over breakup, a 50% increase over breakup from last year.

And today we said having accident breakup with 48 active today with contract visibility to 50 plus in the third quarter. Over breakup, we had five of our ADR high spec super singles, which are fully booked in the shop for repairs and recertification, which pushed the R and M expense up for the quarters I mentioned before. We typically don’t see that many ADRs coming to the shop at once, but because they all have immediate work to go to, it was urgent that they’d be cycled through the shop quickly while breakup was upon us. Over breakup, we also upgraded a couple of our high spec super single ADRs to higher capacity units and tied them up on two year contracts to feed the very active Clearwater Mandeville play. We’re also seeing operators already contract their preferred rigs out up to two years into 2027 with rates in the high 30s, those would be the high spec triples of course.

Our fleet of roughly 20 high spec triples in Canada are expected to be fully booked through the 2026, and we have roughly 95% of the high spec single fleet booked through into the 2026, with some contracts taking us into 2027. The high spec single ADR market has really tightened up for us. We have a few more idle ADRs that can be upgraded to fill into this need. Of course, we continue to look for multi year contracts and rates on those rigs into the mid to high twenties all in. Notwithstanding, day rates remain well below any new build metrics.

Rates need to be in the fifties, high fifties before we will see new build super spec triples, and for the high spec singles and high spec doubles, rates need to be in the very high thirties before investment could be made in new builds with a reasonable rate of return. We’re also seeing continual growing interest in our Edge Autopilot in our Canadian business unit, with specific apps such as the automated drill system, which we call the ADS, which charges out at a thousand dollars a day, and soon our AutoDriller Max, which provides higher penetration rate increases, will be finished its beta testing in The US and is about to start beta testing in Canada next month. That provides upside of about a $1,500 a day margin at the rig level. Our well servicing business in Canada, operates a fleet of 41 well service rigs, including slant rigs and an automated well service rig, which we call our ASR, had an active breakup with roughly 11 rigs operating. The OWA work is starting to get going again, which will provide visibility to 19 well servicing rigs running at the end of the third quarter.

Our rental fleet of tubulars, tanks and other high margin ancillary equipment continues to grow as more and more specialty equipment is called for, usually high torque tubulars to attach to our high spec ADR drilling rigs. Moving to international, we have a fleet of 26 drill rigs that operate in six different countries around the globe, of which 11 are under contract and active today. In The Middle East, we have 90% of our high spec ADR fleet actively engaged in long term contracts, and with half of them on PPI contracts now, we’re able to get paid for the performance our high performance drilling team provides when coupled with our EDGE Autopilot drill rig control systems. We have three rigs currently active on long term contracts in Oman. As pointed out earlier, our Middle East team successfully negotiated a five year contract with a major to reactivate and upgrade two of our ADRs in the country.

The first of these two rigs should get on the payroll in December with the second not far behind in January 2026. In Argentina, we had one of our two rigs come down right at the beginning of the third quarter for some unplanned repairs and we fully anticipate that rig to be back up and running in mid September. We see a building market for our high spec 2,000 horsepower rigs in this area. We had two rigs active in Venezuela through most of the second quarter only to see OFAC shut everything down on May 27. There were some costs that hit the second quarter related to the shutdown along with the loss of a month of revenue on the two rigs, which negatively impacted second quarter results.

We are awaiting instructions from our client as to the current OFAC directive, which suggests release and start up potentially in mid September. We’ll wait and see what transpires. Australia seems to be stuck in neutral as we currently still only have four of our 13 rigs in the country active today. We have a line of sight on one, possibly two going back to work early fourth quarter. Moving to The United States, we have a fleet of 72 high spec ADRs in The US stretching from the California market into the Rockies and main focus back down in the Permian.

We have held market share through the second quarter and sit at give or take 7% today while industry fell off 4% in the quarter. We are sitting at 37 rigs today active and we are expecting to add a few rigs to this camp between now and the end of the year. It’s interesting to start hearing from operators that the geologic headwinds are stronger than the tailwinds from technology and operational efficiency gains of the last five years. When we look at the generally flat production output of The US over the last few years and the flattish rig count and low DUC count over that same period, and putting that last statement into context, more rigs will need to start coming back on if the goal is to hold production. Our U.

S. Business unit continues to expand its PVI contract base and now has over half the fleet on a PVI contract to some degree that builds off our high performance and highly trained field teams coupled with our Edge Autopilot drill and rig control system

Mike Gray, Chief Financial Officer, Ensign Energy Services: technology. Not only do

Bob Geddes, President and COO, Ensign Energy Services: we get a superior rate for Edge Autopilot technology, we capture the upside value generated to the operator through performance metrics. Everybody wins. The operator delivers ball bores for lower costs and we help de risk that with our PBI contract form at higher margins. Our US business unit, our well servicing business unit specifically, is focused primarily on the Rockies in California well servicing market, and they continue to enjoy high utilization north of 70%, and they delivered a quarter slightly below expectations due to temporarily reduced activity in those areas. Although we are seeing some signs of positive activity growth in California, if one can imagine that.

Our our directional drilling business, which is essentially a mud motor rental business that utilizes proprietary technology, continues to provide some of the best motors with high quality rebuilds and the longest runs in The Rockies. We’re expecting another solid year in that business unit. Going to our technology suite, our EDGE Autopilot Drill and Rig Control System. In our last call we reported that we successfully beta tested our Ensign EDGE ATC, auto tool phase control, in conjunction with a directional guidance system. This paves the way for seamless control of automated directional drilling from those operators who utilize remote operating centers and utilize in house DGS systems.

I’m happy to report that we’re now commercial with our Edge ATC and are charging that on four rigs today with the possibility of placing that on a fifth rig for the same operator. We also continue the beta testing of our enhanced AutoDriller called the AutoDriller Max, which will further increase P rates and will be charged out with a base daily rate of $1,000 a day plus a variable per meter or per foot cost, so that we can start capturing the upside in the cost and operational efficiencies that our technology enhancements provide. We continue to grow and deploy Edge Autopilot onto our active rigs across the globe with a 25% year over year growth rate. This high-tech component of our business continues to grow at a rapid pace and with 100% efficacy with reduced 12 times and increased p rates, it helps differentiate Ensign from our competitors. With that, I’ll turn it back to the operator for questions.

Conference Operator: Thank you. And ladies and gentlemen, we will now begin the question and answer session. If you’re using a speakerphone, please pick up your handset before pressing any keys. To withdraw your question, please press star followed by the number 2. Once again, please press star one to ask a question.

And your first question comes from the line of Aaron MacNeil with TD Cowen. Please go ahead.

Aaron MacNeil, Analyst, TD Cowen: Hey. Good morning, Thanks for taking my questions. I noticed that many of the contracts currently in portfolio are shorter duration in nature, which I’m sure is also typical of your peers. And I just wanted to focus on The U. S.

Market. Can you speak to contract churn, pricing dynamics and ultimately what your strategy is here in terms of whether you’re prioritizing price or utilization?

Bob Geddes, President and COO, Ensign Energy Services: Right. So it’s yeah, we’ve got a couple of things, a couple of dynamics happening globally. We increased our forward contract book by approximately $250,000,000 over our last call. So we now have close to a billion dollars of forward revenue booked under contract. Now we break that down into segments to your question specifically on The US.

I would suggest that The US is probably engaged more in six month contracts, which is fine. We start to see when operators in troughs start to ask for longer term contracts, that’s when we start to sense that they feel that the market has troughed out. We’re starting to get to the edge of that. We’re probably maybe a few months away from that firming up a little bit more. But generally most of our contracts, we’ve been able to hang on and gain market share again while industry has dropped by going and doing one or two wells for different people.

So our client base has expanded. We’ve also expanded our rig count with a couple of majors as well on top of that, but I would say the macro in The US is still a very competitive market, but it feels like we’re not having to drop the price like we had in the first half of the year.

Aaron MacNeil, Analyst, TD Cowen: Makes sense. And then maybe one for Mike. Do you see any issues as it relates to your sort of regular cadence of step downs on the credit facility? Are you sort of happy with the progression there? And is debt reduction still the target once you hit your $600,000,000 goal?

Mike Gray, Chief Financial Officer, Ensign Energy Services: Yeah, the cadence we’re quite happy with. I mean, made the adjustment back in Q1, but pushed the step downs into Q3 and Q4 as well. So we’re happy with how that’s progressing. As to what happens after our $600,000,000 target, I think we’ll continue to deleverage. Our net debt to EBITDA ratio is getting better and better and should be sub-two in 2026.

So we’ll continue to deleverage. We look at opportunities to deploy capital in the industry right now. The best deployment is probably towards the balance sheet as we see it right now. So we’ll continue focusing on that.

Aaron MacNeil, Analyst, TD Cowen: Great. Thanks, everyone. I’ll turn it back.

Mike Gray, Chief Financial Officer, Ensign Energy Services: Thanks, Aaron.

Conference Operator: Your next question comes from the line of Keith McKee with RBC. Please go ahead.

Keith McKee, Analyst, RBC: Hey. Good morning. Bob, can you just take us around some of the international regions a little bit more? I know that you added a couple of contracts in Oman, but there certainly are some areas where your rigs, I would say, are underutilized. Can you just talk through what you’re seeing over the next six months in terms of tendering and potential activity that might get the regions to be a little bit more normalized?

Or do you think that there certainly are some areas that will just do better than others over the next six to twelve months?

Bob Geddes, President and COO, Ensign Energy Services: Yeah, yeah. Well, let’s start with Argentina. As I mentioned, we had some unplanned repairs on a rig there that shut us down for a few months back up and running here mid September. So you’ll see that with some talk of a third rig perhaps coming into that area in 2026. Venezuela is, I can only talk to what we know today because that may change tomorrow.

So that’s plus or minus two rigs. When the rigs are running, we make good money. When the rigs are not running, we have a few costs. We go down to a minimal skeleton crew there to keep things going. But shifting into The Middle East, Bahrain, we have one of the two rigs down.

It’s being bid out to a couple places right now in The Middle East with probably high success rate that that rig goes back to work in the fourth quarter. Amman we touched on, all of our rigs in Amman are currently busy and we’re adding two more and that was operator funded upgrades and a five year contract generating over $120,000,000 of revenue over its term. Australia is a challenge. Australia seems to have some overcapacity and although the bed activity was a little rapid in the last quarter, it seems to have settled off again. A lot of tire kicking, but Australia is our focus area for improvement for sure.

Keith McKee, Analyst, RBC: Got it,

Bob Geddes, President and COO, Ensign Energy Services: Understood. And Kuwait, just yeah. Just to finish the lap. Kuwait is we’ve got our two rigs recontracted into into well at the 26 and talk of that going even further. So Kuwait is those those two big rigs are are just cranking along.

Keith McKee, Analyst, RBC: Yeah, it. Got it. And you touched on it a little bit in the last question I think, but you know your US outlook is relatively I would say constructive for the back half the year with rig count increasing. We certainly are seeing a bit of divergence amongst operators in terms of rig counts in the next couple of quarters. Can you just talk about what’s driving your expectations to increase your U.

S. Rig count over the back half of the year?

Bob Geddes, President and COO, Ensign Energy Services: Yeah, we’ve got a couple of increases with a couple of our major accounts. We’re finding that operators are continuing to take the opportunity to high grade their fleet. You probably saw the Innovus report of the 25 top rigs in all of The United States, Ensign has 12 of the top 25, so we get swept into that benefit. We’re also seeing in California, Newsom has suggested that if you cap a couple of wells you can go drill a well. That will help us on both well servicing and the drilling side as well.

And so we’re already starting to see some chatter of increased activity there. So we think we’ll be adding a couple of rigs between now and the end of the year in our California business unit as well. Plus as we mentioned, know we’re seeing Wyoming get busy for the big rigs. These are our 3,000 horsepower rigs. We transferred one from Canada which have been down over five years down to The US.

I don’t think there’s going to be a rapid migration. First of all, that was the biggest rig in Canada, there’s not very many of those types of rigs and those are 60 plus million dollar rigs to go build. So that’s the that kind of manifests itself into the comment where we see us building up one or two rigs through from now to the end of the year.

Keith McKee, Analyst, RBC: Got it. Okay. Super helpful. That’s it for me. Thanks very much.

Mike Gray, Chief Financial Officer, Ensign Energy Services: Thank you.

Conference Operator: And your next question comes from the line of Waqar Syed with ATB Capital Markets. Please go ahead.

Waqar Syed, Analyst, ATB Capital Markets: Good morning. Bob or Mike, you mentioned that margins were impacted in Q2 because of some of the pay and maintenance costs. Is there a way to quantify the impact, the cost impact on margins?

Mike Gray, Chief Financial Officer, Ensign Energy Services: It’s probably, I mean, 200 bps maybe. If you look at Q1, our margins were about 23.45%. We’re sitting at 21.84%. So yeah, I’d probably say around 200 bps.

Waqar Syed, Analyst, ATB Capital Markets: Okay. So you expect them to go back to that 23 to 24% kind of level in Q3?

Mike Gray, Chief Financial Officer, Ensign Energy Services: Yeah, the activity starts to pick up. We believe that’s where they should be probably headed towards.

Waqar Syed, Analyst, ATB Capital Markets: Okay, that’s right. Sounds good. And then Bob on the drilling rig pricing side, David side, are you seeing stability? And then for your own fleet, do you see that this big 3,000 horsepower rig, this starts working, does it move the needle on average day rates for The U. S?

Or is it just on the margin some positive impact?

Bob Geddes, President and COO, Ensign Energy Services: Yeah, I think that 3,000 horsepower rig is maybe perhaps a little unique because of its rig type. And the answer lies in the rig types. The super spec triples that can rack 30,000 feet of pipe are generally hanging on to prices and you know we’re in the low 30s in Canada, same situation, the high spec triples were quickly running out of them into the 2026 and you know, we’ve got a couple of clients going after like one rig, so pricing opportunity there. We’re in the mid thirties all in easily with those. And now we’re starting to look for term.

This is this is what we’ve just started introducing in the last couple of weeks is an operator group that are willing to accept that conversation as well. So the high spec triples, yes, I would say stable pricing in The US. In Canada, would say stable to slightly upward pricing. On the high spec singles, same situation in Canada, of course, the high spec singles in The US aren’t as a dynamic rig type demand as it is in Canada. In Canada, we’re basically sold out of our high spec singles, they’re in the low to mid twenties, and we’ve got a couple more rigs that were what we basically call our idle rigs that have been cold stacked, that are part of our active fleet that can be upgraded for not a lot of capital and we’d be looking for the operator to either fund that or to give us a longer term contract where we see payout of our capital within a year.

Again, being conscious our debt reduction targets continuing into the future. I mean that’s continuing to be our goal. Hold maintenance CapEx and growth CapEx, of course we look to be funded by the operator or paid for within one year of EBITDA. That’s kind of the marching order. On doubles of course we don’t have that many in The US, we’ve got a few singles, conventional singles in California that still work and they still generate positive EBITDA quite nicely in Canada.

The conventional doubles and conventional singles are a very, very competitive market. There’s some smaller players that are trying to hang on to business, but that’s a very small part of our EBITDA proportion in Canada. And then the rest of the world, I can touch on that if you want, but I think you know the metrics there.

Waqar Syed, Analyst, ATB Capital Markets: That makes sense. Just on the Canadian market with this Canada LNG now up and running, that creates some incremental demand for natural gas but on the other hand storage is pretty full in Canada for natural gas. Where do you see the project, know, the start up of the project having an impact on activity of natural gas drilling activity?

Bob Geddes, President and COO, Ensign Energy Services: Yeah, good question. I think that, I mean, gas is a very scalable product in the area that we drill. I mean, know what they can get out of every well that they want to add, they add it to your point. There is some backup there. But I think the bigger question is when does the second pipeline come?

And that would be at least three years out. See the demand starting maybe in ’27 for that type of construct for LNG. I’m seeing our demand on high spec triples in 2026 and through the rest of 2026 as not being directly related to that comment you made about LNG growth. Yeah, I I see that’s a further further down the road.

Waqar Syed, Analyst, ATB Capital Markets: Sounds good. Thank you very much. I appreciate all the comments.

Bob Geddes, President and COO, Ensign Energy Services: Thanks,

Conference Operator: Your next question comes from the line of John Gibson with BMO Capital Markets. Please go ahead.

John Gibson, Analyst, BMO Capital Markets: Good morning, all. Just had one on the debt repayment here. Obviously, you’ve done a really good job of meeting your targets over the past few years, but the cadence of repayment appears to have slowed here in the first half of the year. I’m just wondering, maybe can you walk through some of the puts and takes to get you to that $600,000,000 number by year end, just as we’re thinking about the back half of the year.

Mike Gray, Chief Financial Officer, Ensign Energy Services: Yes, there’s about $120,000,000 left of that goal to be achieved. We have about $105,000,000 of mandatory repayments with the term loan as well as the step down. So when we look at activity, working capital, and the additional factors on the balance sheet, we’re confident with that step down and with that target. Yeah, I said, So things could change drastically. Mean if the industry $50 oil hits us and something like that in Q3, Q4, I mean that target could definitely be down a little bit.

But from what we see right now we’re confident.

John Gibson, Analyst, BMO Capital Markets: Sorry?

Mike Gray, Chief Financial Officer, Ensign Energy Services: Interest expense continues to decline, so we’re running about 18 a quarter, which was down from 20,000,000 in Q1, down from $25,000,000 in Q2 twenty twenty four. If operations do decline a bit, we do have a bit of a pickup just with the interest rate reductions that we’ve seen as well as the debt reductions over the last couple of years have helped generate some free cash flow.

John Gibson, Analyst, BMO Capital Markets: Great. I’ll I’ll turn it back. Appreciate the response. Thanks.

Conference Operator: Alright. Thank you. And I’m showing no further questions at this time. I would like to turn it back to Bob Giddish, president and COO, for closing remarks.

Bob Geddes, President and COO, Ensign Energy Services: Thanks for joining the call this morning. Let me just close off by saying the last few months have been a roller coaster with the global markets unsettled with tariff negotiations. Looking forward, we continue to execute the plan of reducing debt whilst delivering the highest performing operations safely around the world. We increased our forward contract book by roughly $250,000,000 and now have close to $1,000,000,000 of forward revenue booked under contract. With that, we expect to continue the steady run rate of 100 to 105 Ensign drill rigs and roughly 50 to 55 well service rigs operating daily both sides of the border.

One third of our drill rigs under contract are on long term contracts with contract tenure of about one year and roughly 30% of those contracts are on a performance based contract base. With that, we have excellent visibility for sustained free cash flow with consistent margins, a very predictable maintenance CapEx plan, and expected redundant real estate disposals in 2025, all of which will provide the ability to continue executing on our debt reduction plan of clipping off $600,000,000 over the three year period ending 2025. Again, the focus continues to be maintain our debt reduction goals into some short term headwinds for the drilling and well servicing business globally. I’d like to thank our highly professional crews and all our employees in the field, along with our customers, for helping Ensign achieve the performance and industry leading milestones that industry recognize us for. Look forward to our next call in three months’ time.

Stay safe.

Conference Operator: Thank you, presenters. And ladies and gentlemen, this concludes today’s conference call. Thank you all for attending. You may now disconnect.

This article was generated with the support of AI and reviewed by an editor. For more information see our T&C.

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