Attached files

file filename
8-K - FORM 8-K - TIDEWATER INCd266330d8k.htm
EX-99.2 - TRANSCRIPT OF THE PRESENTATION - TIDEWATER INCd266330dex992.htm
Dec. 6, 2011
Dec. 6, 2011
Dec. 6, 2011
DEAN E. TAYLOR
DEAN E. TAYLOR
Chairman, President and CEO
Chairman, President and CEO
JOSEPH M. BENNETT
JOSEPH M. BENNETT
Executive VP  and Chief
Executive VP  and Chief
Investor Relations Officer
Investor Relations Officer
Exhibit 99.1
CAPITAL ONE SOUTHCOAST
6
TH
ANNUAL ENERGY CONFERENCE
CAPITAL ONE SOUTHCOAST
6
TH
ANNUAL ENERGY CONFERENCE


2
Phone:
504.568.1010
Fax:
504.566.4580
Web:
www.tdw.com
Email:
connect@tdw.com
FORWARD-LOOKING STATEMENTS
FORWARD-LOOKING STATEMENTS
FORWARD-LOOKING STATEMENTS
In accordance with the safe harbor provisions of the Private Securities Litigation
Reform Act of 1995, the Company notes that certain statements set forth in this 
presentation provide other than historical information and are forward looking.
The actual achievement of any forecasted results, or the unfolding of future
economic or business developments in a way anticipated or projected by the
Company, involve numerous risks and uncertainties that may cause the
Company’s actual performance to be materially different from that stated or
implied in the forward-looking statement. Among those risks and uncertainties,
many of which are beyond the control of the Company, include, without
limitation, volatility in worldwide energy demand and oil and gas prices; fleet
additions by competitors and industry overcapacity; changes in capital spending
by customers in the energy industry for offshore exploration, field development
and production; changing customer demands for vessel specifications, which may
make some of our older vessels technologically obsolete for certain customer
projects or in certain markets; uncertainty of global financial market conditions
and difficulty in accessing credit or capital; acts of terrorism and piracy;
significant weather conditions; unsettled political conditions, war, civil unrest and
governmental actions, such as expropriation, especially in higher risk countries
where we operate; foreign currency fluctuations; labor influences proposed by
international conventions; increased regulatory burdens and oversight following
the Deepwater Horizon incident; and enforcement of laws related to the
environment, labor and foreign corrupt practices. Readers should consider all of
these risk factors as well as other information contained in this report.


3
KEY TAKEAWAYS
KEY TAKEAWAYS
KEY TAKEAWAYS
Culture of safety & operating excellence
Macro picture improving with increased working rigs
History of earnings growth and solid returns
Unmatched scale and scope of operations
World’s largest and newest fleet provides basis for
continued earnings growth
Strong balance sheet allows us to act upon available
opportunities


4
SAFETY RECORD RIVALS
LEADING COMPANIES
SAFETY RECORD RIVALS
SAFETY RECORD RIVALS
LEADING COMPANIES
LEADING COMPANIES
0.00
0.10
0.20
0.30
0.40
0.50
0.60
0.70
0.80
2002
2003
2004
2005
2006
2007
2008
2009
2010
CALENDAR YEARS
TIDEWATER
DOW CHEMICAL
CHEVRON
EXXON/MOBIL
TOTAL RECORDABLE INCIDENT RATES


5
Source: ODS-Petrodata and Tidewater
GOM
accounts
for
31
of
the
36
working
jackup
count
variance
from
June
2008
(Peak) to November 2011 (post-Horizon)
GOM Semi & Drillship count drops by 3 units (from 31 to 28) between April 2010
and
November
2011;
offset
by
an
increase
of
30
units
in
the
rest
of
world
Jackups
Semis
Drillships
Total
June 2008
(Peak)
379
145
30
554
Late-April 2010
(pre-Horizon)
323
150
46
519
Nov. 2011
(post-Horizon)
343
169
54
566
WORKING RIG COUNTS
“Peak to Present”
WORKING RIG COUNTS
WORKING RIG COUNTS
“Peak to Present”
“Peak to Present”


6
Source: ODS-Petrodata and Tidewater
As of early-November 2011, there are approximately 447 additional AHTS
and PSV’s (~17% of the global fleet) under construction.
Global
fleet
estimated
at
2,686
vessels,
including
345
vessels
that
are
30+ yrs old
(13%),
and
another
402
vessels
that
are
25-29
yrs
old
(15%)
Vessels > 25 years old today
THE WORLDWIDE OSV FLEET –
THE WORLDWIDE OSV FLEET –
RETIREMENTS
RETIREMENTS
EXPECTED TO EXCEED NEW DELIVERIES
EXPECTED TO EXCEED NEW DELIVERIES
(Includes AHTS and PSV’s only) Estimated as of November 2011
0
50
100
150
200
250
300
1965
1970
1975
1980
1985
1990
1995
2000
2005
2010


7
**
EPS in Fiscal 2004 is exclusive of the $.30 per share after tax impairment charge. EPS in Fiscal 2006 is exclusive of the $.74 per share after tax gain from
the sale of six KMAR vessels. EPS in Fiscal 2007 is exclusive of
$.37 per share of after tax gains from the sale of 14 offshore tugs.  EPS in Fiscal 2010 is
exclusive of $.66 per share Venezuelan provision, a  $.70 per share tax benefit related to favorable resolution of tax litigation and a $0.22 per share
charge for the proposed settlement with the SEC of the company’s FCPA matter. EPS in Fiscal 2011 is exclusive of total $0.21 per share charges for
settlements
with
DOJ
and
Government
of
Nigeria
for
FCPA
matters,
a
$0.08
per
share
charge
related
to
participation
in
a
multi-company
U.K.-based
pension plan and a $0.06 per share impairment charge related to certain vessels.
Adjusted Return
On Avg. Equity    4.3%            7.2%
12.4%
18.5%            18.3%
19.5%             11.4%             4.0%
HISTORY OF EARNINGS GROWTH
AND SOLID THROUGH-CYCLE RETURNS
HISTORY OF EARNINGS GROWTH
HISTORY OF EARNINGS GROWTH
AND SOLID THROUGH-CYCLE RETURNS
AND SOLID THROUGH-CYCLE RETURNS
$2.40
$5.20
$7.89
$1.03
$1.78
$3.33
$5.94
$6.39
$0.00
$2.00
$4.00
$6.00
$8.00
Fiscal
2004
Fiscal
2005
Fiscal
2006
Fiscal
2007
Fiscal
2008
Fiscal
2009
Fiscal
2010
Fiscal
2011
Adjusted EPS**
Adjusted EPS**


8
OUR GLOBAL FOOTPRINT
Vessel Distribution by Region
(excludes stacked vessels –
as of 9/30/11)
OUR GLOBAL FOOTPRINT
OUR GLOBAL FOOTPRINT
Vessel Distribution by Region
Vessel Distribution by Region
(excludes stacked vessels –
(excludes stacked vessels –
as of 9/30/11)
as of 9/30/11)
In 2Q
FY
2012,
<5%
of
vessels/revenue
was
generated
in
U.S.
GOM;
however,
39
total
U.S.-flagged vessels provide good optionality to a recovery in the U.S. GOM.
Americas
66
(25%)
SS Africa/Europe
125 (48%)
MENA
37
(14%)
Asia/Pac
32
(12%)


9
Vessel Count
Estimated Cost
AHTS
103
$1,805m
PSV’s
88
$1,842m
Crewboats & Tugs
71
$301m
TOTALS:
262
$3,948m
(1)
.
At 9/30/11, 201 new vessels were in our fleet with ~5.2 year average age
Vessel Commitments
Jan. ’00 –
September ‘11
(1)
$3,446m (87%) funded through 9/30/11
THE LARGEST MODERN OSV FLEET
IN THE INDUSTRY….
THE LARGEST MODERN OSV FLEET
THE LARGEST MODERN OSV FLEET
IN THE INDUSTRY….
IN THE INDUSTRY….


10
Count
AHTS
16
PSV
19
Crew and Tug
5
Total
40
Vessels Under Construction*
As of September 30, 2011
* Includes 12 new vessel purchase commitments at 9/30/11
Estimated delivery schedule –
20 in FY ‘12,  13 in FY ‘13 and 7 thereafter.
CAPX of $306m in remainder of FY ‘12, $164m in FY ‘13 and $32m in FY ’14.
…. AND MORE TO COME
…. AND MORE TO COME
…. AND MORE TO COME


11
RECENT VESSEL COMMITMENTS
RECENT VESSEL COMMITMENTS
RECENT VESSEL COMMITMENTS
0
2
4
6
8
10
12
9/30/09
Qtr
12/31/09
Qtr
3/31/10
Qtr
6/30/10
Qtr
9/30/10
Qtr
12/31/10
Qtr
3/31/11
Qtr
6/30/11
Qtr
9/30/11
Qtr
Amounts depict vessel count and total cost in quarter commitment
was made to acquire (not when delivery or payments were made)
$96M
$55M
$72M
$179M
1 MPSV
1 PSV
4 AHTS
6 AHTS
6 AHTS
3 PSV’s
53 vessels over last 2+ years with
a total capital cost of $982 million
$177M
4 PSV’s
4 AHTS
1 PSV
9 AHTS
$139M
$101M
2 PSV’s
4 PSV
3 AHTS
$139M
$24M
1 AHTS
4 CREW


Over
a
12-year
period,
Tidewater
has
invested
$3.8
billion
in
CapEx
($3.3
billion
in
the
“new”
fleet),
and paid out $995 million through dividends and share repurchases.  Over the same period,
CFFO and proceeds from dispositions were $3.4 billion and $690 million, respectively
$ in millions
CFFO
Fiscal Year
FLEET RENEWAL & EXPANSION
FUNDED BY CFFO THROUGH FISCAL 2011
FLEET RENEWAL & EXPANSION
FLEET RENEWAL & EXPANSION
FUNDED BY CFFO THROUGH FISCAL 2011
FUNDED BY CFFO THROUGH FISCAL 2011
$0
$100
$200
$300
$400
$500
$600
$700
2000
2001
2002
2003
2004
2005
2006
2007
2008
2009
2010
2011
CAPX
Dividend
Share Repurchase
12


13
Senior Unsecured Notes
$590 million
Average Life to Maturity (as of 9/30/11)
~ 8.5 years
Weighted Average Coupon
4.30%
Term Loan
$125 million
Revolving Line of Credit
$450 million
Remaining Term
~ 4½
years
Interest Rate
LIBOR plus 1.5% to
2.25%, based on leverage
~ $40 million in senior notes maturities in Fiscal 2012 (July)
RECENT FINANCINGS WILL FUND GROWTH
AT AN ATTRACTIVE RELATIVE COST
RECENT FINANCINGS WILL FUND GROWTH
RECENT FINANCINGS WILL FUND GROWTH
AT AN ATTRACTIVE RELATIVE COST
AT AN ATTRACTIVE RELATIVE COST
Private Placement Financings:
Private Placement Financings:
New Credit Facilities:
New Credit Facilities:


14
As of September 30, 2011
Cash & Cash Equivalents
$302 million
Total Debt
$825 million
Shareholders Equity
$2,513 million
Net Debt / Net Capitalization
17%
Total Debt / Capitalization
25%
~$900
million
of
liquidity
as
of
9/30/11,
including
$575
million
available
under
bank
credit facilities.
STRONG FINANCIAL POSITION
PROVIDES STRATEGIC OPTIONALITY
STRONG FINANCIAL POSITION
STRONG FINANCIAL POSITION
PROVIDES STRATEGIC OPTIONALITY
PROVIDES STRATEGIC OPTIONALITY


15
WHERE COULD FISCAL 2014 FIND US?
Potential for Earnings Acceleration
WHERE COULD FISCAL 2014 FIND US?
WHERE COULD FISCAL 2014 FIND US?
Potential for Earnings Acceleration
Potential for Earnings Acceleration
Avg. Dayrates
$14,190*
$15,609
(+ 10%)
$17,170
(+ 10%)
82.4%*
85.0%
90.0%
271 vessel assumption (201 current new vessels + 40 under construction + ~ 20 additional new
vessels per year for two years).
* 9/30/11 YTD actual stats
This info is not meant to be a
prediction of future earnings
performance, but simply an
indication of earning sensitivities
resulting from future fleet
additions and reductions and
varying operating assumptions
~$3.00
EPS
~$5.15
EPS
~$8.70
EPS
~$375M+
EBITDA
~$500M
EBITDA
~$700M
EBITDA


16
FINANCIAL STRATEGY FOCUSED
ON CREATING LONG-TERM
SHAREHOLDER VALUE
FINANCIAL STRATEGY FOCUSED
FINANCIAL STRATEGY FOCUSED
ON CREATING LONG-TERM
ON CREATING LONG-TERM
SHAREHOLDER VALUE
SHAREHOLDER VALUE
Maintain
Maintain
Financial Strength
Financial Strength
EVA-Based Investments
EVA-Based Investments
On Through-cycle Basis
On Through-cycle Basis
Deliver Results
Deliver Results


Dec. 6, 2011
Dec. 6, 2011
Dec. 6, 2011
DEAN E. TAYLOR
DEAN E. TAYLOR
Chairman, President and CEO
Chairman, President and CEO
JOSEPH M. BENNETT
JOSEPH M. BENNETT
Executive VP  and Chief
Executive VP  and Chief
Investor Relations Officer
Investor Relations Officer
CAPITAL ONE SOUTHCOAST
6
TH
ANNUAL ENERGY CONFERENCE
CAPITAL ONE SOUTHCOAST
6
TH
ANNUAL ENERGY CONFERENCE


18
APPENDIX
APPENDIX
APPENDIX


19
Unique global footprint
50+ years of Int’l experience
International (non U.S.) markets generally
characterized by:
More growth
Longer contracts
Better utilization
Higher dayrates
Solid customer base of NOC’s and IOC’s
INTERNATIONAL STRENGTH
INTERNATIONAL STRENGTH
INTERNATIONAL STRENGTH


20
Source: ODS-Petrodata and Tidewater
Tidewater
Competitor #2
Competitor #3
Competitor #4
Competitor # 5
Competitor #1
Avg.
All Others (1,966 total
vessels for
350+ owners)
Tidewater
AHTS
and
PSV
fleet
includes
147
vessel
additions
since
2000
VESSEL POPULATION BY OWNER
(AHTS
and
PSV’s
only)
Estimated
as
of
November
2011
VESSEL POPULATION BY OWNER
VESSEL POPULATION BY OWNER
(AHTS
and
PSV’s
only)
Estimated
as
of
November
2011
300
200
100
0
258
146
109
76
67
64
5
400


21
FLEET CASH OPERATING MARGINS
FLEET CASH OPERATING MARGINS
FLEET CASH OPERATING MARGINS
Traditional Vessels
New Vessels
Cash Oper Margin   38.6%          37.6%          46.5%         
41.9%           36.9%         38.7%            49.1%         
54.6%            51.9%           51.3%            46.8%       
39.3%
Note:
Cash
operating
margins
are
defined
as
vessel
revenue
less
vessel
operating
expenses
Fiscal Years
$0
$100
$200
$300
$400
$500
$600
$700
$800
2000
2001
2002
2003
2004
2005
2006
2007
2008
2009
2010
2011


Fiscal Year
Actual vessel deliveries through 9/30/11; estimated vessel deliveries based on commitments
to build or acquire as of 9/30/11
Through 9/30/11, vessel
commitments include 262 vessels
with a capital cost of $3.948 billion
THROUGH-CYCLE, EVA-BASED  INVESTMENT;
BALANCE BETWEEN “BUY”
and “BUILD”
THROUGH-CYCLE, EVA-BASED  INVESTMENT;
THROUGH-CYCLE, EVA-BASED  INVESTMENT;
BALANCE BETWEEN “BUY”
BALANCE BETWEEN “BUY”
and “BUILD”
and “BUILD”
22


23
Six Months Ended
9/30/11
9/30/10
Revenues
$506
$530
Net Earnings*
$42
$59
EPS*
$0.81
$1.15
Net Cash from Operations
$87
$153
Capital Expenditures
$155
$391
* Excludes $22.1 million, or $0.43 per share, goodwill impairment charge in September 2011
$ in Millions, Except Per Share Data
RECENT FINANCIAL RESULTS
REFLECT CYCLICAL DOWNTURN
RECENT FINANCIAL RESULTS
RECENT FINANCIAL RESULTS
REFLECT CYCLICAL DOWNTURN
REFLECT CYCLICAL DOWNTURN


24
Other Operators
Top 10 Customers
Tidewater’s top 10 customers contract ~24% of the working worldwide
jackup fleet and ~50% of the working worldwide floater fleet
Jackups
(343 Working Rigs)
Floater Rigs
(223 Working Rigs)
81
262
110
Source: ODS-Petrodata and Tidewater
Other Operators
Top 10 customers
113
RIGS CONTRACTED BY OUR
TOP 10 CUSTOMERS
(Estimated as of November 2011)
RIGS CONTRACTED BY OUR
RIGS CONTRACTED BY OUR
TOP 10 CUSTOMERS
TOP 10 CUSTOMERS
(Estimated as of November 2011)
(Estimated as of November 2011)


25
CURRENT REVENUE MIX
Quality of Customer Base
CURRENT REVENUE MIX
CURRENT REVENUE MIX
Quality of Customer Base
Quality of Customer Base
Our top 10 customers in Fiscal 2011 (5 Super Majors,
3 NOC’s and 2 large independents) accounted for 63% of our revenue
Super Majors
36%
NOC's
28%
Others
36%


SIGNIFICANT AVERAGE
AGE IMPROVEMENT
SIGNIFICANT AVERAGE
SIGNIFICANT AVERAGE
AGE IMPROVEMENT
AGE IMPROVEMENT
Assumptions:
1)
Average
45
vessel
disposals
per
year
in
future
(versus
an
average
of
52
vessel
dispositions
per
year
over
last
3
years).
20
16
6
26
2) Includes 40 vessels under construction, including 12 vessel purchase commitments (based on current estimated
delivery schedule), plus additional newbuilds/acquisitions of ~20 vessels per year (approximately $500
million in new capital  commitments per year). Tidewater is not committed to spending $500 million
annually,
but
we
use
this
assumption
in
estimating
average
fleet
age
in
the
future.


VESSEL DAYRATES BY SEGMENT
VESSEL DAYRATES BY SEGMENT
VESSEL DAYRATES BY SEGMENT
27


VESSEL UTILIZATION BY SEGMENT
VESSEL UTILIZATION BY SEGMENT
VESSEL UTILIZATION BY SEGMENT
28


OSX 42%
S&P 500 14%
DJIA 27%
TDW 18%
RETURNS vs the MARKET
FIVE YEAR STOCKHOLDER RETURN
RETURNS vs the MARKET
RETURNS vs the MARKET
FIVE YEAR STOCKHOLDER RETURN
FIVE YEAR STOCKHOLDER RETURN
29
TDW
DJIA
S&P 500
OSX