Earnings call transcript: Flotek Industries Q3 2025 sees revenue rise, stock surges

Published 05/11/2025, 17:34
Earnings call transcript: Flotek Industries Q3 2025 sees revenue rise, stock surges

Flotek Industries Inc. reported a robust performance in its Q3 2025 earnings call, showcasing significant growth in revenue and profitability. The company's stock reacted positively, with an 8.67% increase in premarket trading. Flotek's revenue climbed 13% year-over-year, while gross profit surged by 95%. The company also announced increased guidance for total revenue and adjusted EBITDA for 2025.

Key Takeaways

  • Flotek's total revenue increased by 13% year-over-year.
  • Gross profit rose by 95%, with a gross profit margin reaching 32%.
  • The stock price increased by 8.67% in premarket trading.
  • The company raised its 2025 revenue guidance by 6%.
  • International revenue saw a 122% increase, reaching $10 million year-to-date.

Company Performance

Flotek Industries demonstrated strong performance in Q3 2025, with significant improvements across various financial metrics. The company's focus on data analytics and international expansion contributed to these gains. The launch of new products, such as the PowerTech fuel management platform, and expansion in digital valuation and flare monitoring solutions, further solidified its market position.

Financial Highlights

  • Revenue: Increased by 13% year-over-year.
  • Gross profit: Up 95% compared to Q3 2024.
  • Gross profit margin: 32%.
  • Net income: $20.4 million.
  • Adjusted EBITDA: Increased by 142% year-over-year.
  • International revenues: Up 122% to $10 million year-to-date.

Market Reaction

Flotek's stock price saw a notable increase in premarket trading, rising 8.67% to $18.04. This surge reflects investor confidence in the company's growth trajectory and successful execution of its strategic initiatives. The stock is currently trading near its 52-week high of $18.96, indicating strong market sentiment.

Outlook & Guidance

Flotek Industries raised its 2025 total revenue guidance by 6% and adjusted EBITDA guidance by 3%. The company projects PowerTech revenues to reach $27.4 million in 2026, with plans to double the PowerTech fleet by the end of 2026. Data analytics is expected to contribute over 50% of the company's profitability in 2026.

Executive Commentary

CEO Ryan Ezell stated, "We are committed to shaping the industry's digitalized future by leveraging chemistry as the common value creation platform." He also highlighted the company's strategic focus on growing the data analytics segment through upstream applications, which is gaining traction.

Risks and Challenges

  • Supply chain disruptions could impact product delivery timelines.
  • Market saturation in certain segments may limit growth opportunities.
  • Macroeconomic pressures could affect overall demand for energy solutions.
  • Currency fluctuations could impact international revenues.
  • Competition in the data analytics space may intensify.

Q&A

During the earnings call, analysts inquired about Flotek's digital valuation unit deployment strategy and the PowerTech sales process. The company addressed challenges in chemistry sales with ProFrac and clarified strategies for international revenue growth and working capital management.

Full transcript - Flotek Industries Inc (FTK) Q3 2025:

Conference Operator: Good morning, ladies and gentlemen, and welcome to the Flotek Industries Third Quarter 2025 earnings conference call. At this time, all lines are in listen-only mode. Following the presentation, we'll conduct a question-and-answer session. If at any time during this call you require immediate assistance, please press star zero for the operator. This call is being recorded on Wednesday, November 5th, 2025. I would now like to turn the conference over to Delbert Rose. Please go ahead.

Delbert Rose, Investor Relations, Flotek Industries: Thank you, and good morning. We're thrilled to have you with us for Flotek's Third Quarter 2025 earnings conference call. Today, I'm joined by Ryan Ezell, Chief Executive Officer, and Bon Clement, Chief Financial Officer. We will start with a pair of remarks covering our business operations and financial performance. Following that, we will open the floor for questions. Yesterday, we announced our Third Quarter 2025 results and an updated earnings presentation, both of which are available on the investor relations section of our website. This call is being webcast with the replay available on our website shortly after its conclusion. Please note that the comments made on today's call may include forward-looking statements, which include our projections or expectations for future events. Forward-looking statements are subject to a number of risks and uncertainties, many of which are beyond our control.

These risks and uncertainties can cause actual results to differ materially from those projected in forward-looking statements. We advise listeners to review our earnings release and most recent 10-K and 10-K filings for a more complete description of risk factors that could cause actual results to materially differ from those projected in forward-looking statements. Please refer to the reconciliations provided in the earnings press release and investor presentation, as management will be discussing non-GAAP metrics on this call. With that, I will turn the call over to our CEO, Ryan Ezell. Thank you, Delbert, and good morning. We appreciate everyone's interest in Flotek and for joining us today as we discuss our Third Quarter of 2025 operational and financial results.

In the third quarter, we saw North American operators maintain the cautious posture initiated in the second quarter as they continued to navigate the return of OPEC Plus spare capacity and persistent global trade uncertainty. Despite the dynamic geopolitical and macroeconomic challenges that have injected uncertainty within the market, the Flotek team remains steadfast at the execution of our corporate strategy, driving transformation and delivering our 12th consecutive quarter of adjusted EBITDA improvement. As referenced on Slide 4, Flotek extended its track record of transforming the company into a data-as-a-service business model as our industrial pivot continues to gain momentum while expanding the total addressable market for future growth of the company. Furthermore, we increased market share in both of our complementary business segments with an unwavering commitment to service quality and value creation for our customers and shareholders through the convergence of innovative data and chemistry solutions.

With that, I'd like to touch on some key highlights for the quarter referenced on Slide 7 that Bon will discuss later in the call. Total revenue during the quarter rose 13% versus Third Quarter 2024, highlighted by a 232% increase in data analytics revenue, which is our strongest quarter ever. A 43% increase in external chemistry revenue. Gross profit climbed 95% versus Third Quarter 2024, with Third Quarter 2025 gross profit margin rising to 32%. Net income totaled $20.4 million, while adjusted EBITDA was up 142% versus Third Quarter 2024 and up more than 20% sequentially. On October 29th, 2025, Flotek announced that the Expect Analyzer was the first optical spectrometer to comply with oil and gas custody transfer standards known as GPA 2172, further empowering our ability to build high-margin revenue backlog in the data analytics segment.

Finally, we increased our 2025 total revenue and adjusted EBITDA guidance ranges by 6% and 3%, respectively. Above all, these milestones were achieved with zero lost-time incidents in the field of operations. I also want to spotlight our differentiated prescriptive chemistry management service team, which has remarkably maintained over 3,500 days with no OSHA recordables or lost-time incidences. We combine that with the recent achievements at MTI, and the third quarter 2025 saw Flotek achieve its lowest EMR score in company history. I'd like to thank all of our employees for their hard work and commitment to safety and service quality in achieving these outstanding results. Now, turning to the larger picture for the energy and infrastructure sector shown on Slide 9, we share the vantage point that the fundamentals for hydrocarbon demand will continue to grow over the long term.

Substantial investment will be required to maintain current production levels, much less to increase production sustainably to meet expanding requirements of power and demand driven by AI, data centers, and industrial reshoring, combined with the reliability issues of an aging transmission infrastructure. As our legacy pressure pumping customers diversify into the power generation business to capitalize on this demand opportunity, Flotek is poised to support them and emerging customers with products and services that help protect their investment in power generation equipment. With multi-year waiting lists for turbines and reciprocating engines, protecting these capital-intensive investments is critical, along with enabling reliability standards that exceed the greater than 99% uptime requirements. With this outlook in mind and referencing Slide 10, I've never been more invigorated about Flotek's future as we strengthen our position as a technology leader, spearheading innovation and delivering tailored data and chemistry solutions that meet our customer-specific needs.

We are committed to shaping the industry's digitalized future by leveraging chemistry as the common value creation platform. Now, let's dive into details, referencing Slide 11 of the earnings investor deck. Today, I want to spotlight the remarkable progress in our data analytics segment, which saw service revenues increase 625%. In Q3 2025 versus Q3 2024, elevating gross profit to 71% in Q3 2025 versus 44% in the same quarter a year ago. This transformational growth in data-driven service revenue is empowered by three upstream technology applications: power services, digital valuation, and flare monitoring. All of which are fueling significant advancements for our organization while generating recurring revenue backlog. The first is our transformative power services, which has evolved from a novel analytical approach into a transformative solution for the energy infrastructure sector that we call PowerTech.

What began as advanced analytics has grown into a comprehensive end-to-end fuel management platform, redefining performance standards and operations within the sector. Looking at Slide 12, at the heart of PowerTech is our Varex Analyzer, which goes beyond data collection to deliver custody transfer grade measurements. It provides precise BTU, methane number, and volume reporting for royalties, invoicing, and performance guarantees. Complementing this is our patented ESD Trailers that actively remove liquids and contaminants, conditioning high BTU hydrocarbon feeds to meet exact turbine or engine performance specifications. Because every site and grid condition are unique, we have integrated Coriolis metering, automated CNG blending, and seamless backup connections, allowing operators to switch fuels or go off-grid with a single button, resolving major constraints to the development of data center and grid power infrastructure. PowerTech is more than just technology. It's about control.

Operators interact effortlessly through an on-trailer HMI or a unified web portal that is accessible on desktop, tablet, or smartphone. Our cloud-based portal enables the monitoring of live BTU trends, H2S alerts, Coriolis flow meter readings, and automated CNG blend controls, combined with custom alarm thresholds to automatically isolate all spec hydrocarbon feeds and protect high-value turbines or engines from catastrophic damage, thus minimizing downtime and operational risk while enhancing safety. All data flows securely through our patented edge-to-cloud pipeline, ensuring zero manual intervention, end-to-end encryption, full audit trails, and compliant custody transfer record keeping. Finally, our over 35 data analytics patents position Flotek as a leader across the natural gas value chain. When considering our capabilities for advanced fuel blending, zero-emissions analytics, custody transfer grade flow cell measurements, wireless ESD actuation, and secure edge-to-cloud data transmission, we deliver unmatched monitoring, control, and safety for field gas operations.

In April of 2025, we acquired 30 patented real-time gas monitoring and dual-fuel optimization assets. We are proud to report that the integration of these assets has gone seamlessly, and all units are in service as of today, which is ahead of our original schedule. Now, let's transition to Slide 13, where we'll dive into our second upstream application, digital valuation. This groundbreaking use case sets a new standard in the oil and gas industry, delivering unprecedented transparency and minimizing enterprise risk for producing wells like never before through a real-time digital twinning of the custody transfer processes. By monitoring hydrocarbon quality and composition in real time, we have unlocked a new market for the industry and for Flotek. On October 29, 2025, Flotek reported a historic milestone in natural gas measurement.

The Expect Analyzer became the first optical instrument to achieve the stringent reproducibility and repeatability requirements of the oil and gas industry standard for custody transfer, GPA 2172, and API 14.5. The Expect measurement unit is designed to enable more accurate volume and compositional data, thereby delivering greater transparency for royalty owners, operators, and midstream companies than traditional methods. We believe the Expect speed, accuracy, durability, and qualification under the rigorous measurement standards outlined in GPA 2172 will provide a significant advantage in discussions with prospective customers as we aggressively expand its manufacture and field deployment. Let's move to our third upstream application, the Veracal Flare Monitoring Solution. We continue to see operational demand in the third quarter of 2025 as we navigate the rapidly changing regulatory landscape by partnering with operators and flare developers to deliver value that goes beyond just compliance.

It unlocks new efficiencies and environmental benefits to our clients. It is clear that our transformational strategy to grow the data analytics segment through upstream applications is gaining traction. What is most important is what it means for our stakeholders and investors. Our dash-driven strategy ensures predictable recurring revenue and cash flow, delivering stability and long-term value. Our proprietary data technologies and superior measurement accuracy enable velocity and decision control that establish a high barrier to entry, secure client loyalty, and support our value-based service model. In long time, high-margin subscriptions position Flotek for sustained growth and margin expansion, driving significant shareholder value over time. Lastly, our chemistry technology segment continues to deliver robust performance, driven by the differentiation of our prescriptive chemistry management services and our expanding international presence.

Slide 17 underscores the resilient performance of our chemistry segment, with 54% growth in external chemistry revenues and a 21% increase in total chemistry revenues, with three months ended in 2025 versus three quarters or nine months ended in 2024, despite a 24% decline in active frac fleets during the same period. While we anticipate potential commodity price volatility through the remainder of 2025, we do see indicators for cautious optimism in 2026. This presents a strategic opportunity to expand our market share by accelerating the adoption of our prescriptive chemistry management solutions and enhancing asset value for our customers. It's evident that our chemistry team has executed our strategy flawlessly, despite the near-to-medium-term headwinds. While uncertainties around near-term activity levels persist due to macro factors that could affect the completion chemistry market.

We remain focused on defying these challenges, delivering differentiated chemistry and data services to provide our customers with industry-leading returns on their investment. We're confident that our expanding suite of services positions us to deliver superior solutions to a variety of our industry's most challenging problems while maximizing our customers' value chain. Now I'll turn the call over to Bon to provide key financial highlights. Thank you, Ryan. Good morning, everyone. I'm excited to discuss our third quarter numbers released yesterday afternoon. Our results were positively impacted by the first full quarter of cash flow contribution from our PowerTech assets. The $6.1 million in PowerTech revenues during the quarter drove a 50% sequential increase in data analytics revenue. Data analytics gross profit margin totaled 71% during the quarter. That was up 800 basis points sequentially, as gross margins relative to the PowerTech assets specifically came in at 89%.

The increased data analytics contribution, along with an increase in the chemistry shortfall penalty, combined to raise total company gross profit margin to 32% for the quarter. As noted in the release, all of the PowerTech assets are now in service, so we expect fourth quarter revenues to increase further to approximately $6.8 million. As shown on Slide 11 in yesterday's deck, since closing the acquisition in April, our PowerTech assets are a clear catalyst for margin and profitability expansion, driving improvements not only within the data analytics segment but also at the corporate level. Emphasizing PowerTech's impact, and as shown on Slide 6, during the third quarter of last year, the data analytics segment contributed just 13% of total company gross profit versus 35% during the third quarter of this year.

As a reminder, based on the contractual terms in the lease agreement, PowerTech revenues in 2026 are expected to be north of $27 million, or an approximate 70% increase from 2025. We fully expect these assets to be a significant part of our 2026 results. Looking at the quarter, revenue during the quarter was up 13% from the year ago, and as Ryan said, was driven by the data analytics segment. As compared to the year-ago quarter, we saw a massive increase in service revenues driven by PowerTech. Data analytics segment revenue represented 16% of total company revenue in the third quarter, which is up from 5% in the year-ago quarter. In addition, third quarter revenues from the data analytics segment equaled the entire segment revenue for all of 2024.

During the quarter, total chemistry revenues were flat versus the 2024 quarter, but on a year-to-date basis, as shown on Slide 17, total chemistry sales are up 17% from last year. More importantly, we have made substantial progress in diversifying our chemistry sales. Excluding the chemistry order shortfall penalty, 53% of third quarter 2025 chemistry sales were to external customers, and that's up from 35% in the year-ago quarter. As it relates to international sales, they totaled $10 million through the first nine months of 2025, which is up about 122% from the year-ago period. SG&A costs during the quarter were up versus the third quarter of last year due to higher personnel costs, including stock comp, as well as increased professional fees, some of which are related to the company's first-time requirement for an integrated audit.

On a percentage of revenue basis, G&A was 13% this quarter versus 11% in the year-ago quarter. We do expect G&A to trend down in the fourth quarter as compared to the third quarter. Net income for the quarter totaled $20.4 million, or $0.53 per diluted share, as compared to $2.5 million, or $0.08 per share in the year-ago quarter. Current quarter net income did include a $12.6 million tax benefit, primarily associated with the partial release of the company's valuation allowance on its deferred tax assets. While the tax benefit is non-cash, it is a positive development that illustrates the company's expectation of future profitability, along with its outlook on utilizing deferred tax assets. As shown on Slide 8, during the third quarter, we continued our streak with respect to growing adjusted EBITDA.

Our third quarter 2025 adjusted EBITDA was 24% higher sequentially, and through the first nine months, adjusted EBITDA is running more than 110% higher than the nine-month 2024 period. Similar to the gains we saw in gross profit margin, our third quarter adjusted EBITDA margin increased by 500 basis points sequentially, primarily as a result of the increased contribution from our mobile power support assets, PowerTech. In yesterday's release, we increased our 2025 guidance ranges on both total revenue and adjusted EBITDA, which we've summarized on Slide 8. The midpoint of our revised guidance implies 2025 revenue growth of 19% and adjusted EBITDA growth of 85% as compared to last year. Again, using the midpoint of both metrics, it implies a 17% adjusted EBITDA margin for 2025 as compared to 11% in 2024, further underscoring the positive margin impact attributable to the PowerTech assets.

Wrapping up my comments on the financials, the third quarter built upon a very strong second quarter, highlighted by continued growth in margins and profitability. We remain focused on continuing to rebalance our profitability mix, transitioning from chemistry technologies as the primary contributor today to data analytics as the leading driver in the near future. With that, I'll turn the call back to Ryan for closing remarks. Thanks, Bon. The third quarter 2025 results build upon our now multi-year track record of consistently posting improved financials as we successfully transform the organization into a new data-driven frontier. Our 2025 guidance points to the execution of our corporate strategy, leveraging chemistry as the common value creation platform.

Looking at Slide 18, I remain convinced we are still in the early innings of Flotek's transformation as we continue to grow and maximize returns for our customers and shareholders across the entire value chain of the energy landscape. Our transformative and strategic entry into the energy infrastructure sector is expected to provide a significant increase in high-margin data analytics revenue and cash flow for years to come. Through the growth of our upstream applications, we anticipate the data analytics segment will contribute to over half of the company's profitability in 2026. We continue to secure long-term contracts for both our chemistry technologies and data analytics segments, bolstering confidence in Flotek's ability to deliver stable revenue and profitability while effectively shielding our business from the impacts of commodity price fluctuations.

Finishing with Slide 19, we believe no other company in our industry is better positioned to deliver the cutting-edge technologies needed to tackle the unique challenges of our energy and infrastructure sectors. I'm incredibly proud of our progress and confident in our team's ability to execute moving forward. Given the growth potential for our chemistry technologies and data analytics segments, we see Flotek as a compelling investment opportunity. Thank you for your continued support, and we're eager to share our vision for Flotek's future and look forward to updating you on our progress in the quarters ahead. Operator, we're ready to open the floor for questions. Thank you, ladies and gentlemen. We will now begin the question-and-answer session. Should you have a question, please press the star followed by the one on your touch phone. You'll hear a prompt acknowledging that your hand has been raised.

Should you wish to withdraw your request, please press the star followed by the two. If you're using a speakerphone, please lift the handset before pressing any keys. One moment, please, for your first question. Your first question comes from Jeff Gramp with the company Northwind. Please go ahead. Good morning, guys. Morning, Jeff. I wanted to start first on digital valuation. So I saw on the slide deck there's a goal to get to 25-35 units by year-end, and then there's over 200 installations, kind of, I guess, in the pipeline, if you will, with those customers. What's the major factor from your guys' perspective determining the cadence of that ramp to get from that 30-ish to, it sounds like, the goal is kind of over 200? I don't know if that's near-term, medium-term. Just open for a little more granularity on those data points. Thanks. Yeah.

Jeff, this is Ryan. We look at it as there's kind of two to three, I wouldn't say hurdles, but progressions that have to take place in terms of what we do from digital valuation. We spoke on in earlier quarters this year around some of the successful pilot programs that we had ongoing in three-plus basins here in the North American land. We've seen those all turn over and are no longer in pilot phase. They're more in commercial phase. That's one of the driving factors that we'll now start to see multiple unit deployment starting here at the back part of Q4, and that'll roll into some of these 200-plus sites we see in 2026. There's also a little bit of a piece of.

Looking at the exact location for where they go because the different operators are looking at two to three different things they do well. A big value creation point is where when we bring on the production wedge component there at a gathering site, that's one key location that's typically garnering the initial most interest. We move into the actual pure 2172 addressing method around custody transfer pieces. It's kind of like walking over that hill to turn over. The pilot phases are complete. We've now seen full commercialization. We've increased the level of manufacturing. We don't feel we'll have any issues addressing the total number. We've already pre-bought all of the materials and are completely building now. What we're doing now is working out final Ts and Cs on customer rollout.

We expect it to be steady output closing this year into 2026 with increases in total number quarter by quarter, if that gives you a little bit of better granularity. Yeah, that's perfect, Ryan. And just to, I guess, make sure I was understanding one of your comments, right? It sounds like the issue is—issue is not the right word—but the inflection point more pertains to customer decisions around where exactly to deploy these, not if to deploy these. Is that a fair characterization? That is correct. Yeah, that is correct. You look at it as in, and it kind of goes through a progression, right? The big input we first see is when they're bringing new wells on production because we can see every minute change in production quality. Then it goes into monitoring the well over a long period.

It is kind of like, as you can imagine, each customer, operator, and/or midstream client is looking for the maximum ROI on the initial deployments, and then it works its way down the value chain. That is mostly what we are doing. We will pick up a customer. It takes a few weeks to go through the technical install pieces, test out how it does. Typically, production wedges are the big pieces we look at first, and then we move into the day-to-day monitoring or what we call creating a—you are essentially making, Jeff, a digital twin of the manual custody transfer sampling process, which is faster, more accurate, and more durable in the long term, and actually cheaper in the long term as well. Yeah. Those are great details. I appreciate that. My follow-up is on the PowerGen side with PowerTech.

Can you update us on kind of customer conversations for third-party power services and any kind of outlook on when you can get some deployments there? Yeah. I would say, Jeff, excluding what we've done on the PowerTech deal with our initial contract. Year to date, we've done an additional $2.1 million of revenue secured already after just having the equipment for a quarter. I'd like to reference you to slide 12. We tried to give a little bit of a schematic to where what's going on in the business location in terms of how our sales process works. That first step is proving the measurement out.

That $2.1 million has been solely related to us sending Varexes or Expect to location to monitor the gas and prove the fact to most of these people who are running either turbines or reciprocating engines that, "Look, we can see your gas quality coming in and out of any type of current manual treatment that you're doing and improve that." Those have gone really well. We've actually seen six new customers outside of our deal with ProFrac adopt that already in Q3 with multiple units testing for each one of them. The next phase of that goes into control, where they look at applying a Smart Filtration Skid or an ESD monitoring unit, and we determine do they need H2S, do they need CO2, do they need an MRU, do they need these different pieces, at what level of conditioning they need.

The final piece is issuing distribution and full control. We've seen great success at working directly, feeding information directly to reciprocating engines and adjusting temperature and gas quality for turbines. We're making great progress, in my opinion, on this. What's also interesting, Jeff, is that these sales work a little different depending on the vertical within power generation that you're working and how fast a sale takes place. I would say they have a little slower turnover period than our traditional frac monitoring, PowerGen, and/or chemical sales, which work on a pretty quick sales cycle, almost pad to pad in some cases. I think you'll see some of the other, I would say, power service providers commenting on the sales cycle is a little bit different. The pursuit's a little bit different.

If you look at what we laid out here on slide 12, we really laid a pathway of sales out, and we made great progress in our first phase of the measurement, and we're now transitioning to control the multitude of those clients. I would say those client bases are legacy pressure pumping type customers, data center development and building customers, and also biogas generation customers. Working in a multitude of verticals depending on the installation type and the equipment provided. Great. Those are all super helpful details, Ryan. I appreciate the time, guys. I'll turn it back. Thanks. Yep. Our next question comes from Jerry Sweeney, Roth Capital Partners. Please go ahead. Good morning, Ryan and Bon. Thanks for taking my call. Morning, Jerry. I apologize. I was jumping back between a couple of calls here, so I may have missed some stuff.

Bon, I think you said how much did you say PowerTech is projected to do next year? Was it $26 million or $27 million? Yeah. It's $27.4 million next year and for each of the next five or so years. In the sixth year of the lease agreement, it reverts to whatever the prevailing market rates are. For the first five, it's fixed rates, and the math is $27.4 million a year of revenue. Gotcha. That was just for the acquired assets with your partner. That obviously doesn't apply any growth for the power side. That's correct. That excludes the $2 million that Ryan just mentioned on the previous question relative to non-PowerTech power services, which is not included in that number. That's just the 30 trailers. Got it. Obviously. What was it?

I still call it custody control, but I think you've sort of renamed it. Obviously, I think that's the focus. How do you start expanding into the power side? Do you have enough skids, monitors, etc., manufacturing capacity, sales? Can you walk us through sort of how you start to drive additional growth on that front? Yeah. Kind of alluding, but I go back to referencing slide 12 again, Jerry, our first step is proving out what the heart of PowerTech and power generation services is. That's our ability to do the real-time gas measurement. Now, depending on the type of equipment, whether it's a reciprocating engine and/or a turbine, is what measurement, whether you're looking at BTU number, methane number, WABI index, different components, high heating value, low heating value, etc., our equipment does all of that.

It is proving out what the brain of PowerTech does as our initial step. As I told Jeff earlier, we picked up five new customers for that in Q3 alone and are testing multiple Varex and/or Expect units on location to drive that part. The next piece is once we get a defined point of gas quality, we move into the next part of control, as in the ESD trailers or smart filtration skids or H2S monitoring, all different pieces that bolt on to really condition that gas to optimum output for the turbine and/or reciprocating engine. We have also moved into being able to, because we can see BTU or methane number in real time, we have the capabilities to automatically tune a reciprocating engine, which has never been done in the industry before. We have been working that aggressively in Q3.

That is where it leverages into the next point of the sale. Finally, our state-of-the-art distribution trailers. It takes a—it is like a methodology that we go through doing it. We progress through what I call phase one pretty aggressively in Q3, and we will see further expansion into control and distribution in Q4 and all of 2026. Now, addressing capital needs, we have got plenty of measurement devices. We kind of preloaded Expect and Varex units for that. We have built an initial four ESD trailers that are coming out, and we will be issuing POs for additional distribution trailers here in Q4. We have got probably the most—well, not probably—the most aggressive capital delivery plan in Flotek probably in the last decade as we roll into 2026 to drive the deployment to ensure that we can.

Address the needs of the growing customer base of not only some of our legacy pressure pumping customers that's made that transition, but also some new and emerging customers that are out there than the pure mobile power generation piece. We look at the fixed installation and the biogas treatment facilities as well. Got it. Jumping it back to the custody control. Custody transfer, I'm sorry, the GPA 2172. There's a little bit of talk about maybe getting regulations moved around, change that would be beneficial for Expect and custody transfer. Does that, clearing that hurdle, GPA 2172, help that and maybe give a little bit of details, maybe what the opportunity is? Yeah. The GPA 2172, that also relates to API 14.5, was the specific hurdle that had to be addressed.

It is the backbone of what actually allows you to say, "We have a true digitized or digitalized custody transfer model," in that it sets the standard of, "Hey, you can use gas chromatography or another acceptable method, which is the optical spectroscopy." For the optical spectroscopy to be allowed, it has to meet reproducibility and repeatability of what a GC standard is. We exceeded all of those capabilities with the Expect unit, which is pretty amazing, being it's the first optical spectroscopy unit in the world to be able to do that. That kind of takes away. A majority of a lot of, particularly the midstream guys ask us, "Hey, is it compliant with 2172?" It is now. That was a big deal about being able to do that. In all honesty, we had to progress.

In a lot of our pilot testing earlier in the year to get access to be able to do that to live streams. That was some of the big parts that we were able to close up here in the quarter. We are extremely excited about it. Got it. Super helpful. I'll jump back in queue. Thanks. Our next question comes from Don Crist Johnson Rice. Please go ahead. Morning, guys. Most of my questions on the power side or the data analytics side have been answered. I did want to ask about on the chemical side, particularly international chemicals. Your customer got a big contract with Saudi the other day and didn't know how that would kind of play into your future relationship with them.

It seems like they're going to be growing rapidly and don't know if y'all are going to participate in any meaningful way there. Yeah. No, that's great insight. And a great question as our head teams are over in ADIPEC and following this week in Saudi as well to discuss the impacts of the business expansion with what I consider to be our largest customer in the Middle East. If you look at, we mentioned around that international revenues year to date are up 122%. Getting ready for some of this initial work is what led up to those revenue increases. We saw that slow down as that mega tender for Aramco was completed. With our customer picking up the majority, well, I guess 100% of that hydraulic fracturing scope, we do expect to see business pick up in the back half of.

Q4 and heavily in 2026, which is. You talked to Bon and I. And acknowledging over this for the past year. This is what we've been positioning Flotek for. Is this type of growth in the Middle East. We haven't given any guidance on specific expectations around there, but we do expect it to be very positive for us. I appreciate the call, and I think everything else has been answered from my side. I'll turn it back. Thanks, Don. Yeah. Our next question comes from Josh Jayne, Daniel Energy Partners. Please go ahead. Thanks for taking my questions. Good morning. First question is just on Expect. I think in the press release that you sent over. Could you elaborate a bit more on the cost and efficiency gains for the customer? That the real-time analysis happens every 15 seconds. How does that alter decision-making for the customer and.

Much? Yeah. Yeah. I'll talk about a couple of things. Let me talk a little bit around efficiency, right? Sure. Being the fact that we're now past the GPA 2172, we are now able to deliver a custody transfer-level grade measurement to a resource owner, an operator, or a midstream first buyer potentially almost every five seconds versus what was taking three to six months to turn those over. More importantly is, because you get such a regularity of measurement at such high resolution, we're able to resolve a multitude of the potential manual sampling bias that takes place on the production, which removes a layer of, I would say, fog around it, provides a lot of transparency over what the true production and production quality out of each individual target location is. Typically, what we've seen is anywhere from 3-5% bias.

What's also important is the fact that we can measure the direct flow line. Removes the process of manual sampling. You see cost reduction there. Manual sampling is never done the same way by anybody. It changes lab to lab. There is a variance, typically or error, introduced by the type of sampling that's done, whether it's pressure drop, temperature issues, etc. We remove all those components. There are significant improvements in measurement quality, accuracy, resolution, and reduction in variability. In terms of cost, traditionally speaking, we expect overall, between CapEx and maintenance, almost a 50% reduction in cost overall through the process.

As you can see, I mean, this is a transformative step in creating what I would consider to be a digital twin of, in a real-time digital twin of the custody transfer process and creating significant efficiency, accuracy, and cost gains for the customers. That's very helpful. Thank you. I did want to hit the chemistry business. Continuous fracturing has been discussed on some recent E&P calls. Maybe could you just discuss what you're seeing with respect to what's left for efficiency gains on the pumping side? I think you highlighted the revenue growth against declining frac count in the chemistry business. Is there maybe just you could speak to your outlook for U.S. land in 2026, the ability to grow chemistry revs, even if we're sort of flat to down from a fleet standpoint?

Do you see more customers using chemistry in the current environment trying to get more out of less with respect to acreage? Thanks. Yeah, that's a lot to unpack. I'll try to do it in four or five main points. The first thing is around our ability to grow chemistry. Number one, the efforts that we put into stabilizing our revenue streams domestically and internationally is going to provide a solid runway to grow. I think, as we kind of alluded to, the potential impact of the expansion of our Middle East, potential impact of our Middle East business is going to be huge for us to provide growth in 2026.

Also, some other countries that we have opportunities in, in Latin America and as well as Asia-Pacific, I think, are going to be positive, but probably not nearly as, I would say, material as what the Middle East will be. Secondly, as we move to the domestic component of it, everything that the oil and gas operations from the operator and the oilfield service companies are doing right now plays into the strength of Flotek. They want efficiency. They want maximum return on invested capital. They want maximum returns, and they want cost options that digitalize their entire value chain. That is where the next frontier for Flotek is the tip of the spear at moving. We have not only been able to improve efficiency just by quality of our PCM services on location, the advanced chemical technologies, but we have moved into complete automation by looking at.

Real-time water quality. We've got our own chemical pumps on location that can adjust on the fly to water quality. We're able to pump concentrates. Instead of spotting 8 to 10 ISOs, we can bring 7 totes out to location. We're doing a multitude of things that impact the overall progress. The efficiency there overall that, to me, we're hoping to do is bridge that gap between tier one and tier two type acreage, right, where you get similar returns out of the tier two production. Because we look at it from an overall transition, although pumping hours and everything has increased, we've seen a relatively flat utilization of water. I think we're kind of at the floor. We see indicators of positive movement in 2026.

For us to really do that, we've got to continue to be sharp on our game and deliver differentiated technologies that allow us to gain that, what do you say, really competitive market share that we're going to go after. I will tell you the thing that, when I look at it on the long term, is right now, even with all the efficiency gains, even all the technology things that we've seen here in North America land and the capital discipline, the fact of the matter is that we're still at a level of underinvestment. For us, just to maintain current production, 90% of the spend right now is going just to do that. The quality of the production has been steadily declining overall since probably the end of 2021.

Sooner or later, we're going to hit a discontinuity that's going to require a shift in terms of investment going back in there. I do believe that the differentiated capabilities of Flotek from our data-driven real-time monitoring services combined with our innovative chemistry solutions is going to put us in a great place to help the industry bridge that gap. I think that gap's getting closer to the point when it's going to kick off. I think we're in a good position there. I hope that gives a little bit of color around kind of how I think about that in terms of, one, we've got plenty of room to grow. We're advancing technology. It's going to continue to drive efficiency and get maximum ROI at every well that these operators that work with us are drilling.

There is going to be a demand shift that is going to require not only just to maintain production but also fuel the demand created by electrification, onshoring, reshoring of industrialization, and infrastructure support. Thanks for the thoughtful responses. I'll turn it back. Our next question comes from Tom Bishop, BI Research. Please go ahead. Hi. Good morning. It sounds like a lot of the components and add-ons that are available for the PowerTech units. Just in terms of the PowerTech units themselves, I mean, do you have a projection of how many additional units you might build and install in 2026? We have not given any particular guidance on those numbers yet. When I look at the health of our pipeline and the continuous expansion of it, our goal would be.

We say this loosely to get into doubling the size of our paired fleet by the end of 2026. I think that's a reasonable goal and one that we could potentially exceed. When we start to look at capital outlay, we're looking pointed in that direction. Doubling that size and some sensitivity pluses and minuses in that direction just to kind of start off. I think you'll come to see with us as we wrap up the year, we start to understand the impacts of natural gas and some of this transition. We'll give a little bit better guidance towards the end of the year. Sure. To be clear, the $27.24 million is a starting point. Yeah. That's just the base contract with the 15 pairs. Our goal would be to work towards doubling that in 2026 in terms of pairs and applications. Okay.

Given the deferred tax credit valuation release event, the $12.6 million in Q3, does this mean the company in the future will be showing maybe a larger tax rate for GAAP reporting? Yeah. Yeah, Tom, that's exactly right. We'll go back to a more normalized tax rate now that we've got a forecast of realizability of deferred tax assets. Can you give us, analysts are going to need this, what kind of a percentage maybe we'd be looking at? I'd say somewhere in the 20% range. Okay. And why is ProFrac not able to use the amount of chemistry that they contracted for when your other customers show 43% growth, which is amazing, by the way, given the decline in fleet crews? It sounds like. Yeah. I think they're. I'm sorry. Go ahead. Sorry.

It sounds like you booked the revenue at the minimum contract requirement leading to that 28% figure. Included in the $27 million. And is that then what they pay. As an offset to the PowerTech asset purchase price or what they actually pay? So there's two separate agreements we're talking or you're talking about here. We have the lease agreement with PowerTech, and then we have the chemistry supply agreement. Under the chemistry supply agreement, ProFrac is obligated to purchase a requisite amount of chemistry on an annual basis. So what we do at each quarter, we assess where they are from a trajectory perspective, and we effectively book a receivable and revenue for. What we believe they're going to be under at the end of the year.

That receivable builds up at the end of the year, and then it gets released in the first quarter of the following year. There is really no tie-in per se between the chemistry shortfall penalty, if you will, and the lease agreement, other than we do have some offset rights as it relates to some leverage that ProFrac extended in connection with the PowerTech acquisition. Earlier, you had said you might offset that against the PowerTech acquisition price, I thought. Is that still the plan? I mean, is that what happened when you released it? Yes. Sorry. We have got a deferred liability on the balance sheet for $7.2 million, which was effectively a loan against the 2025 shortfall penalty. When the order shortfall penalty gets settled up in the first quarter of next year, we will knock off $7.2 million.

As effectively part of the consideration from the PowerTech assets. Okay. Good. Why is it that ProFrac can't get to this? He's always running behind. Is this minimum likely to get renegotiated at some point? That's a great question. What I would say is, when you look at the way the minimums were calculated, it was on volumes of chemistry pumped by an average fleet. Times a certain number of fleets is where we got to these numbers from. Earlier in the contract, when you saw high hydraulic fracturing fleet demand, we were actually meeting and exceeding the revenue numbers on a monthly basis. In the back half of 2023, we started to see a correction, efficiency gain in fleet count, but also just a slowing down of the market. We feel like we're at the trough of where it is right now.

We do expect the chemistry sales to ProFrac to improve in Q4. As we picked up quite a bit more work with those guys. What's interesting is during that shift between the end of 2023 to where we sit today, there was a massive influx at the earlier part into the Permian Basin. The buyers in the Permian Basin run significantly simpler hydraulic fracturing formulations and traditionally basically separate the chemical buy from the pressure pumper, particularly in markets where there's an oversupply of equipment and the demand for the horsepower is down. They don't necessarily or they're not able to enforce the will, per se, as selling a particular type of chemistry.

As we've seen the fleet counts go down, the biggest change in fleet count number has been away from the Permian and into more of these gas-rich basins, being the Hanesville, the Northeast, etc., where our differentiated solutions make a huge difference. Our technology deployment has gotten better, and we'll get better through the back half of this quarter and when we roll into 2026. A lot of it has to do with buying behaviors of the operator, the geographic location of those operators, and where we are in the cycle on hydraulic horsepower demand and leverage pieces. What was unique about this 10-year contract is we kind of tried to model and build in that robustness.

There's capability years through the cycle to where they'll exceed and it'll actually tick away and can tick away at sometimes OSP that are gained at different pieces. At this point in time, there's been no discussions on changing anything related to that supply agreement or that asset for the company. Just trying to give you a little bit of color on the way the cycle influences the buying powers of the chemistry providers and operators. Tom, it's important to note that ProFrac did get a significant portion of equity in Flotek in conjunction with that transaction. That shortfall penalty was always meant to protect the other shareholders in terms of preserving the value of the contract that was exchanged for equity. Oh, okay.

Before I let you go, you said the international revenue was up 122%, but what's the dollar amount that that is running on an annual basis? Yes. Year to date, it's $10 million. Right at $10 million international revenues. Okay. How much do you expect from the optical spectrometry unit, the X—I forget what all the letters are. XPEST. XPEST. I don't know how big a business that is in terms of dollars and what you expect there. That business, not segment, but that application, if you will, generated its first dollars of revenue in the second quarter of this year. We're effectively first at bat in the first inning of the game on that business. Oh, I see. Okay. Hopefully, it's going to amount to a fair amount. All right. Thank you very much. Yep. Sure.

As a reminder, if there are any further questions, please press star one at this time. Our next question comes from Gashi Sri, Singular Research. Please go ahead. Good morning, guys. Can you hear me? Yeah. We got you. Oh. Yeah. Just on the data analytics, can you give us a sense of where that analytics gross margin would normalize as the installed base kind of matures and the recurring revenues outweigh one-time setup and integration costs? You're talking about our expectation going forward? Yes. Yeah. So this year, we'll do. We haven't given guidance, really, on 2026 as it relates to the various components that drive data analytics revenue. But one thing I'll point you to is. This year, we're going to do, call it $16 million under that PowerTech agreement. We know those are 89-90% margins. Next year, that number jumps by 70%.

Obviously, more revenue from this high-margin business is going to, I think, continue to move margins. It's hard to say what the other contributing factors are for revenue next year because we don't have anything like this big long-term contract that's driving the margin growth this year. I would expect if the PowerTech business is a meaningful part of next year's revenue, it's going to drive the weighted average gross margins higher than 70%, perhaps even closer to 80%. Gotcha. Just the post-sale customer support for this product installation is there, so you don't foresee any resource constraints or additional costs that you'll need for continued future renewal rates? Not at this point in time. I think that we've begun to invest in inventory of the actual measurement devices, whether it be in the Varex or Expect units.

I think we've preloaded and started building out from the PowerTech aspect. Multiple ESD and Smart Filtration Skids, and we'll be transitioning to additional build-outs of our distribution skids, trying to keep a healthy risk weight into what we put in the pipeline and what we prebuild versus what's delivered by contract. Luckily for us, even if we had a large, I would say, tender or award come through that would exceed the capacity, most of these pieces of equipment we can build in five weeks or less. On the big pieces of equipment, we can typically turn expected Varex units out within a few days once we get an order. We should be able to, at this point in time, keep up.

I will tell you this: we have looked at, when we look at capital outlay and manufacturing production, we're looking at this on a 36 and 60-month landscape in terms of bottlenecks that could potentially be created by our current facility capacity, more than personnel and/or availability of equipment. That is some of the things that we're looking at is potential expansions to our facilities in the coming months. Gotcha. On the external chemistry side, as your mix kind of shifts, how are the payments for delays or from the non-Anchor clients compared to your legacy business? I would say, all things considered in this components of the market, our North America land customers pay pretty well. We have relatively, I would say, low DSOs compared to the industry. As expected, our international customers, particularly in the Middle East, typically pay a little slower.

Most of the time because the payment terms with some of the service companies we work over there with are already extended due to payment terms from ADNOC or Aramco or the KJO, etc., over there. It kind of adds 20-25 days additional on the average DSO. Right now, the cash flow has been relatively consistent. I will think we're going to, if we see these significant ramps in our Middle East business, that will consume a little bit of working capital to get that stabilized. We'd see that pool come in in the first half of 2026 and hopefully stabilize by mid-Q2. We are looking very carefully at that if we see an accelerated ramp for that business with a little bit longer payment term.

I would say that's probably the big thing on the radar is just the working capital to complete the ramp. Gotcha. Just my last question. On that working capital, if these order volumes kind of spike, would you need any alternative backup for working capital facilities, or do you have headroom in the lending capacity? Yeah. I think we're pretty good right now as it relates to capital. I mean, keep in mind, in the first quarter, we will receive a cash payment relative to the OSP, which I don't know what that's going to be, but net of the $7 million offset could be $20-$25 million cash infusion that comes to see us. We've got plus or minus $15 million of availability under our existing ABL.

We currently have very low leverage, so if we needed to, we could explore some capital raising options in the debt markets. At the end of the day, the stock's done very well. If we chose to, we have options relative to the equity. We have a lot of optionality as it relates to liquidity build, but we think just in terms of managing the initial working capital draw potential on expanded international business, the OSP cash payment in one Q is going to be fine. Okay. Awesome. Thank you so much, guys. That's all I had. Thanks, man. Thank you. There are no further questions at this time. I will now turn the call over to Delbert Rose. Please continue. Yes. Thank you. Join us at some of our upcoming events. The Permian Basin Barbecue Kickoff, November 11th to 12th in Midland, Texas.

The Invest Houston Second Edition Event on November 20th at the JW Marriott in Houston, Texas. Daniel Energy Partners Executive Series, December 3rd in New York City, New York. The 14th Annual Roth Deer Valley Event, December 10th through the 13th in Park City, Utah. We will participate in Northland's Virtual Growth Conference on December 16th. Thank you, everyone, for joining us today, and we look forward to keeping you abreast of the growth and execution of our digitalization strategy. Ladies and gentlemen, this concludes today's conference call. Thank you for your participation. You may now disconnect.

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