Investor Presentation
Transcription
Investor Presentation
Investor Presentation May 2010 Enterprise ● Energy ● Endurance 1 Table of contents 1. Company Overview 2. Company Financials 3. Key Highlights 4. Company Highlights 2 Section 1: Company Overview Genesis of Great Offshore Limited (GOL) Started as a business division of the Great Eastern Shipping Co. Ltd. (Pre Oct-06 ) 1 • • Demerger into a separate listed company (Oct-06 – Apr-09) 2 • • • 3 Great Offshore Limited (GOL) was a division of the Great Eastern Shipping (GES) Since commissioning its operations in 1983, Great Offshore has serviced major E&P operators in India as well as in the international waters of the North Sea, the Middle East, South Africa and South East Asia Through a Scheme of Arrangement, GOL was demerged into a separate company Demerger Scheme: for every 5 shares in GES, 4 shares of GES & 1 share of GOL was allotted December 2006 - GOL lists at the stock exchanges Emergence of Bharati Shipyard as the single largest shareholder (May-09 – Present Day) • • • • May 09 – Personal pledge invoked of erstwhile promoter 14.89% of the total shareholding transferred to Bharati Shipyard Limited Two bidders ( Bharati Shipyard and ABG Shipyard) make simultaneous Open Offer to minority shareholders Bharati Shipyard emerged as the single largest shareholder in GOL GOL has a tremendous track record of over 25 years of operational experience 4 Stable and supportive shareholders to drive growth Market Data ( 19 May, 2010) • Market cap (USDm) • 52 week H (INR) • 52 week L (INR) 359 584 245 Prom oters 16.0% Others 28.9% Bharati Shipyard 44.3% Others 55.7% MFs 1.3% FIIs 7.0% Others 84.0% March 31, 2009 Bharati Shipyard 49.0% Insuranc e Cos. 2.0% Jan 19, 2010 ABG Shipyard 11.8% March 31, 2009 Post completion of Open Offer Emergence of a Bharati Shipyard Limited as a strong principal shareholder – Stability derived from strength of the principal shareholder entity – Continuity of the Management Team throughout the transition phase Note: 1. USD1 : INR 46, RBI reference rate as on May 19, 2010 2. Bharti Shipyard holds GOL through its entities : Natural Power Ventures Private Limited and Dhanashree Properties Private Limited 3. Source: BSE, SEBI 5 India's prominent integrated offshore oilfield services provider Offers a broad spectrum of services to upstream oil and gas producers Offshore Drilling Scale(1) Offshore Marine Logistics Marine Engineering & Projects Port and Terminal Support Air Logistics • 3 Rigs − Jack –up − Kedarnath − Amarnath − Barge − Badrinath Diverse fleet of 28 assets : • 12 AHTSV • 7 Platform Supply Vessels • 2 FFSV • 4 Anchor Handling Tugs • 1 Multi Support Vessel • 2 Supply Vessels • 1 Hook up Accommodation Barge on spot charter • 1 Heavy Lift Vessel • 1 Construction Barge • 12 assets operating with private sector and public sector ports / terminals • 6 Helicopters • Offshore drilling experience of 2 decades • Current asset base of 3 drilling rigs – One Drill Barge and two Jack Up • Of the total 28 assets, 15 are capable to operate in deep waters • Currently 6 assets operate globally • Demonstrated track record in executing diverse projects on turnkey basis • EPIC contract scope : Surveys, Detailed Design Engineering , Procurement , Fabrication Transportation , Installation , Hook up and commissioning • One of the largest organized player in India • High safety record provides comfort and potential for repeat business • Operates on both the east and the west coast of India • Clients include PSU and private names • 26% JV with United Helicharters Key highlights All assets are held in the Balance Sheet of Great Offshore Limited GOL is equipped to provide complete solution to all the oil services need of E&P companies EPIC: Engineering, Procurement, Installation and Commissioning Note: 1. Does not include “1 Floating Dry Dock” which is used across business segments 2. Information pertaining to fleet as of March 31, 2010 6 Disciplined fleet expansion Ability to identify acquisition opportunities throughout the oil & gas cycle Construction Barge, 1 Rigs, 2 Construction Barge, 1 Rigs, 2 Construction Barge, 3 FDD, 1 Rigs, 3 Harbour Tugs, 9 OSVs, 16 Harbour Tugs, 11 FY2000 – 28 assets OSVs, 18 Harbour Tugs, 12 OSVs, 28 FY2010 – 47 assets FY2005 – 32 assets 15 assets are capable of operating in deep water In addition, we have entered into new build contracts and placed orders for an MSV and a 350 feet Jack up Rig 50 47 No. of Assets 40 30 32 33 2005 2006 39 40 2007 2008 43 28 20 Rapid growth in assets during the period 2005-2010 10 0 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2009 2010 Over the years GOL has built a diversified base of high quality assets Note: 1. Asset position as of financial year ending March 31st 7 GOL is uniquely positioned in the industry Great Offshore Great Offshore Great Offshore Great Offshore Great Offshore Greatship (India) Offshore Assets (1) • 47 assets (3 rigs) Rigs 9 Marine Engineering Services 9 Port and Terminal Support 9 Financials FY 2009(3) FY 2010(2) • Rev – USD255m • EBITDA – USD110m • EBITDA Margin - 43.2% • D/E Ratio – 1.28x • Mcap – USD359m • 19 assets (includes floaters, drill ships and jack-up rigs) • 12 assets • 9 assets • 16 assets (2 rigs) 9 8 8 9 8 8 9 8 8 8 8 8 FY 20093) • Rev – USD751m • EBITDA – USD465m • EBITDA Margin – 61.9% • D/E Ratio – 9.53x • Mcap – USD664m FY 2009(3) • Rev – USD36m • EBITDA – USD20m • EBITDA Margin – 54.1% • D/E Ratio –2.80x • Mcap – USD73m FY 2009(3) • Rev – USD77m • EBITDA – USD28m • EBITDA Margin – 36.5% • D/E Ratio – 1.56x • Mcap – USD106m FY 2009(3) • Rev – USD55m • PAT – USD11m • D/E Ratio – 0.52x • Unlisted company Great Offshore is the only domestic player providing the entire spectrum of E&P services Note: 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. Offshore Assets position for GOL as of FY2010, for other companies the asset position is as per the company’s website/ media reports Limited Review FY2010 financials for GOL Source: FY 2009 Annual Report/ Earning Release, Financials (consolidated) as FY 2009 for companies other than GOL, D/E (consolidated) = (Share Capital + Reserves)/ Total Debt USD1 : INR 46, RBI reference rate as on May 19, 2010 Market Cap data as on May 19, 2010 (BSE) 8 Serving the entire E&P value chain Leading to lower cyclicality in performance 5 yrs Exploration Drilling Drilling Seismic 15 yrs 20 yrs Sampling Exploration Drilling Production Drilling Engineering Fabrication/ Construction Great Offshore is present across major Product & technology portion of the Assembly E&P value chain therefore Installation Heavy Lift there is limited Subsea Construction impact on its performance Production Platform supply Abandonment Production & Operations Maintenance & Modifications Heavy Lift Decommissio ning due to oil price volatility E&P value chain 9 Diversified geographic operational base Leading presence in the international markets Strong presence base across boundaries ABERDEEN SAKHALII WEST COAST OF INDIA MAURITIANA EAST COAST OF INDIA VIETNAM PERSIAN GULF TRINIDAD SOUTH COAST OF INDIA MALAYSIA INDONESIA MOZAMBIQUE JAKARTA CAPE TOWN Diversified presence in high E&P growth locations 10 Unique presence in Marine Engineering Business Diversification into a capex light business Scope of the service provided Projects Completed / Under Execution (FY 2009) • Services provided by Great Offshore − Brown field projects − Top side process revamp projects − Structural revamp projects − Clamp on project − Process module project • GOL has successfully undertaken various types of projects both in India and internationally with customers like L&T, ONGC, SMOE, Mubarak Marine LLC and Hyundai Engineering Recent Projects Include • NC Platform Revamp Project in consortium with Supreme Offshore Construction & Technical Services Ltd. • GOL owns and operates the construction barge Gal Constructor with a complementing anchor handling tug, designed to provide a integrated services to the offshore construction industry Source: Annual Report • Execution of the lump-sum turnkey engineering contract awarded by ONGC at a value of INR 240 Cr. Source: Annual Report Recent Assignments (FY 2010) ONGC – BBBLRPII Project (Riser Protector) ONGC – BBBLRPII Project (Barge Bumper) Demonstrated tack record in successful completion of diverse marine engineering and construction projects 11 Experienced leadership and management team Soli C. Engineer Executive Director • Mr. Soli C. Engineer has four decades of experience in the shipping and offshore sectors. • He has been with Great Offshore since 1978 • In 2009, Mr. Engineer was appointed as Executive Director of Great Offshore Limited. PK Sah General Manager – Drilling • A graduate in Mechanical Engineering, Mr. Sah has over 33 years of rich experience in the field of Drilling. • He has been associated with organizations such as ONGC, Reliance Industries, and Rohtas Industries amongst others. • Having joined us in 2006, Mr. Sah has pioneered the drilling division of the company. Currently heading the Drilling division, Mr. Sah oversees the functioning of the two rigs Kedarnath & Badrinath. Ram Choudhary Head – Engineering Services • Mr. Choudhary is a Mechanical engineer with an MBA from IGNOU. His technical qualifications include the Aeronautical Engineering course and Certified Engineer’s course on Mi – 17 Helicopter. • He joined the Great Eastern Shipping company in the year 1997 in the Air – OGD department. • Today as the Head of the Engineering Services he is currently pioneering the expansion of business in the area of marine engineering services Chetan Parulekar General Manager – Business Development & Operations • A Bachelor of commerce from the Mumbai University, Mr. Parulekar pursued a double Diploma in Export Import and in Material Management. • His prolific expertise includes Ship Management, Agency Operations, Chartering and logistics. • He joined Great Offshore Ltd. in 2004 and plays a key role in enhancing the company prospects Mr. Anil Rao General Manager – Head Fleet Management • A Marine Engineer from the esteemed DMET and a holder of First Class Certificate of Competency, Mr. Rao has over 30 years of experience. • Mr. Rao has over a decade of sailing experience on all types of vessels • Helps in the smooth functioning of the large fleet sailing across the globe, as well as the successful conversions carried out by his team. Mr. Rajat Dutta General Manager – Corporate Affairs • Mr. Dutta is a Fellow of the Institute of Chartered Accountants of India, & Institute of Company Secretaries of India and a Law Graduate • In a career spanning over 25 years, he has been associated with organizations such as RBI, TORRENT, CRISIL, GE Shipping Company Ltd. and All Cargo Global Logistics Ltd. • Mr. Dutta handles the corporate affairs of Great Offshore and assists the Office of the Executive Director of the company Well balanced team of highly capable individuals Independent management: Increased fleet by 6 assets in a period of significant promoter uncertainty (FY10) 12 Section 2: Company Financials Consolidated Financials Total Income (USDm) Operating EBITDA (USDm) 400 200 350 CAG 300 .6% R : 19 248 255 150 250 200 59.8% 58.2% 54.3% 137 138 FY2009 FY2010 97 178 100 150 100 50 50 0 0 FY2008 FY2009 FY2008 FY2010 PBT (USDm) PAT (USDm) 100 100 26.7% 28.2% 21.3% 24.6% 24.1% 17.3% 70 60 50 54 48 50 44 44 0 0 FY2008 FY2009 FY2010 FY2008 FY2009 FY2010 Margins Note: 1. Consolidated entities include: Great Offshore Fujairah LLC-FZC, Deep Water Services (India) Ltd, Great Offshore (International) Limited, KEI-RSOS Maritime Ltd, Rajamahendri Shipping and Oil Field Services Ltd. 2. FY 2008 Audited, FY 2009 : Audited: FY 2010 [Limited Review] 3. USD1 : INR 46, RBI reference rate as on May 19, 2010 14 Return and Financial Ratios (Consolidated) Return on Average Networth (%) 40% 14% 33.8% 35% 30% Return on Average Capital (%) 12.6% 26.9% 10% 21.7% 25% 20% 8% 6.5% 6% 15% 4% 10% 2% 5% 0% 0% 2008 2009 2010 2008 Networth (USDm) 2009 2010 Total Capital (USDm) 300 754 800 244 250 200 11.9% 12% 700 611 600 192 500 162 150 397 400 300 100 200 50 100 0 0 2008 2009 2010 2008 2009 2010 Note: 1. Consolidated entities include: Great Offshore Fujairah LLC-FZC, Deep Water Services (India) Ltd, Great Offshore (International) Limited, KEI-RSOS Maritime Ltd, Rajamahendri Shipping and Oil Field Services Ltd. 2. FY 2008 Audited, FY 2009 : Audited: FY 2010 [Limited Review] 3. USD1 : INR 46, RBI reference rate as on May 19, 2010 4. Return on Average Networth = (PATcurrent year)/ (Networthcurrent year +Networthprevious year)/2 , Return on Average Capital = (PATcurrent year)/ (Total Capitalcurrent year +Total Capitalprevious year)/2 15 Revenue Statement (consolidated) Year ended March 31 (USDm) 2008 2009 2010 Operating Income 162 235 253 Operating EBIDTA Operating Margin % 97 59.8% 137 58.2% 138 54.3% Other Income 12 13 2 Depreciation 21 25 31 Interest & Finance Charges 15 23 25 PBT 48 70 54 PAT 44 60 44 24.61% 24.10% 17.28% Margin % 16 Balance Sheet (consolidated) Year ended March 31 (USDm) 2008 2009 2010 Shareholders’ Funds 192 162 244 Loan Funds 206 448 509 Sources of Funds Deferred tax liability (net) Total 1 397 611 754 Fixed Assets 302 514 678 Net Current Assets 90 75 55 Goodwill 0 20 20 Investments 4 – – Deferred tax assets 1 1 – 397 611 754 Application of Funds Total 17 Section 3: Industry Highlights Positive Industry Trends Driven by demand push from emerging economies and supply constraints In ‘000s of barrels per day unless otherwise stated Europe 2007-08 Former Soviet Union 60 2008-09 161 (32) 2009-10 10 (787) North America (238) 136 Middle East 561 (1300) (913) 320 124 Asia Latin America 225 401 191 55 Africa 114 470 137 106 29 Global demand growth (million barrels per day) (0.29) (1.33) (1.44) • Global oil demand is expected to pick up to 86.3 mb/d in 2010 from 84.9 mb/d in 2009 • Countries outside of the organisation for economic cooperation and development will lead 2010 demand recovery • Demand in Asia and the Middle East, which are the key geographical segments in which the GOL operates, is expected to lead the recovery Positive long term industry fundamentals driven by demand from growth of developing economies Source: International Energy Agency Report 2009 19 Supported by strong long term demand projections World Oil Demand Breakup 3% World Oil Demand Projection 10% Agriculture 35% 120 Non OECD Consumption (In Mn bpd) 100 OECD Consumption (In Mn bpd) Industry 80 Transportation 60 Residential 40 Others 20 35.8 40 43.4 47.8 52.2 56.6 34.5 41.4 49.5 49.2 46.3 47.2 48.1 48.9 50 1990 2005 2006 2010 2015 2020 2025 2030 25.3 0 46% 6% % ): 3.4 FY30 – 0 1 R (FY CAG 3.1 2.7 2.5 2.4 4.0 3.0 4.7 3.9 4.3 2.0 1.2 1.0 0.0 1990 2005 2006 2010 2015 China – oil demand projection Million Barrels Per Day Million Barrels Per day India – oilfor demand projection Transportation accounts a sizeable chunk of the demand 5.0 CAG % ): 1.1 FY30 – 0 1 R (FY 2020 2025 2030 20.0 15.0 CAG 10.0 5.0 6.7 R 3% 0): 2. –FY3 0 1 Y (F 7.2 8.5 13.8 15.3 12.1 10.0 2.3 0.0 1990 2005 2006 2010 2015 2020 2025 2030 Emerging markets, especially India and China to lead the oil demand growth , leading to long term growth in oil demand Source: eia – U.S. Energy Information Administration , Independent Statistics and Analysis 20 Strong supply side fundamentals Global spare capacity to tighten by 2011-12 OPEC share in global supply rising PEC spare capacity 7 10% 6 93 92 60 8% 91.5 5 91.5 50 4 3 4% 2 91.0 91.2 91.0 91.0 6% mb/d mb/d Global oil supply OPEC supply as % of total Non-OPEC supply as % of total 70 Spare cap. as a % of dem and 91 40 90 30 89 20 88 10 87 2% 1 Mbl/d 2012 2011 2010 2009 2008 2007 2006 2005 2004 2003 2002 2001 0% 2000 0 86 0 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 CY2007 CY2008 CY2009 CY2010E CY2011E CY2012E Non OPEC 50.9 50.7 51.3 51.5 50.8 50.0 OPEC 31.2 31.0 28.7 29.6 31.3 33.0 Aggregate 82.1 81.7 80.0 81.1 82.1 83.0 Oil supply is tightening, which combined with long term growth in demand, imply stable to increasing oil prices Source: eia – U.S. Energy Information Administration , Independent Statistics and Analysis Morgan Stanley 21 Huge initiatives by the Indian Government Spearhead massive investment in domestic E&P industry E&P in India – Opportunity galore NELP a strong boost to growing energy demand India has 16% of the global population and 0.5% of the petroleum reserves India is the 4th largest consumer of oil in the world - ~80% of crude oil is imported ( ~35% of total India import bill) Indian sedimentary basins with low drilling density require technology & capital intensive accelerated exploration NELP to spur demand for offshore rigs and OSv’s NELP introduced in the year 2000 USD50bn of estimated investment required in the next 15-20 years Source: ONGC reports Significant increase in blocks awarded to E&P players Deep water 60 50 40 Shallow water Onshore 30 20 10 0 NELP- I NELP- II NELP III NELP - NELP - V NELP IV VI NELP V11 High growth potential~ 21% of the total acreage has been explored or is under exploration Ministry of Petroleum & Natural Gas Demand for rigs to firm up on account of old and new NELP work commitments Eight rounds of NELP implemented till date Led to 25 companies in E&P business (previously 2 national oil company) Source: Broker Research Energy security and growing energy demand provides immense growth opportunities to E&P and allied sectors 22 Section 4: Company Highlights Great Offshore – Key Company Highlights Long Track Record of Providing Offshore Oilfield Services 1 • Operational experience of over 25 years – one of the largest offshore logistics companies in India 2 3 Integrated Offshore Services Provider with a Diversified Asset Fleet • • • • Only Indian company operating in all segments of offshore oil filed services spectrum Largest fleet of offshore supply vessels in India Demonstrated track record in successful completion of diverse marine engineering and construction projects Foray into port management and single point mooring business through the inorganic route Strong Contract Offshore Services Backlog • Time charters ensures earnings visibility and risk diversity 4 Strong Customer Relationships • Significant business and enviable track record with India’s largest NOC - ONGC • International presence in high E&P growth markets (North Sea & Middle East) 5 Professional Management Team • Extensive experience in the offshore services sector 24 25