Awesome FGII story by my pal Mavis (please forgive me for breaking the copyright law)
Top Stories: Friede Backers Optimistic Ahead of Next Week's Earnings
By Mavis Scanlon Staff Reporter 4/23/98 9:38 AM ET
Friede Goldman (FGII:Nasdaq) will have much to discuss with analysts and investors on its earnings conference call next week. Tuesday, the Jackson, Miss.-based offshore rig design and outfitting company announced its fifth rig upgrade contract from Noble Drilling (NE:NYSE).
Friede also recently announced the opening of North American operations of its newly purchased subsidiary, Brissonneau & Lotz Marine (BLM).
But participants in next Wednesday's conference call (earnings will be released at or near next Tuesday's close) may be more curious about another recent Friede announcement, as well as the Mississippi Gulf Coast's tight labor market, which caused an analyst Tuesday to downgrade his rating on Friede. Last week, Friede confirmed months-old rumors that it had entered into a joint venture with a Norwegian consortium to retrofit and upgrade The Ilion, a semisubmersible baredeck hull recently arrived in Pascagoula, Miss. from a shipyard in Vyborg, Russia. In a January research report, Jefferies & Co. said the joint venture values the hull at $48 million.
As Friede's bean counters tally up a new backlog figure on the heels of the Noble deal, analysts and investors are fully confident Friede will have no problem meeting its numbers. Friede, whose business primarily consists of offshore rig conversion, retrofitting and repair work, is actually one of the few oil service companies whose earnings have not been affected by the crude oil price drop. Its First Call first-quarter consensus earnings estimate, at 21 cents -- a 250% jump from the 6 cents reported in the first quarter of 1997 -- has not been touched. First-quarter and full-year 1998 and 1999 estimates for many companies in the sector -- from drillers to oilfield service companies -- have been whittled by at least 2% to 5%.
The outcome of Friede's joint venture may still depend on what happens with crude oil prices, if, as observers say, Friede and its partner, Dyvi and Kvaerner Maritime -- a separate joint venture between Oslo-based shipping company Jan-Erik Dyvi and Kvaerner, Norway's biggest privately-held industrial group -- try to sell the refurbished rig to a drilling contractor. It's a long shot that dayrates will decrease in the tight deepwater drilling market, but, if they do, pressuring returns on equity, drilling contractors may think twice before adding equipment capacity.
Friede has been more than guarded in the information it has released on its plans for The Ilion, citing its ongoing discussions concerning its joint venture. John Alford, Friede's executive vice president, says only that Friede is interested in bringing in a drilling contractor. The upgrade and retrofitting of The Ilion is expected to be completed in 1999 and will allow the rig to drill in water depths up to 5,000 feet in the Gulf of Mexico, West Africa or South America. A typical retrofitting job may include improvements in the rig's technical capabilities and drilling systems, as well as enhancements to the stability capabilities of the rig, mooring systems and living quarters.
Observers are convinced that Friede has taken an opportunistic step in acquiring a valuable asset in the tight market for offshore equipment, and some see a sale in the making to one of Friede's loyal customers, such as Noble or Falcon Drilling (FLC:NYSE).
Since the majority of the focus in the oil drilling industry is on deepwater, "if you have an asset like that, it's like gold in your hand," says Mickey Brivic, an equity analyst who covers the oil service industry for USAA Investment Management. "These assets are very hard to come by."
"They're close enough to a contract that I think they are not really building it on spec," says Brent Rakers, who follows the firm at Morgan Keegan & Co. in Memphis. "They have an opportunity to get this thing at a very attractive price -- they will start the process and negotiate a sale," he says, given how tight the deepwater drilling market is. Morgan has not performed underwriting for Friede.
Labor Situation of Some Concern
Rakers remains bullish on the company, saying in a Tuesday research note that there may be some upside to his near-term estimates (he estimates FGII will earn 22 cents in the first quarter and 28 cents in the second quarter). But he believes the rise in Friede's stock has brought it to an excessive valuation. He has not changed his earnings estimates. FGII's stock, trading at 38 13/16 Wednesday, is up about 30% year to date and about 40% in the past month.
The downgrade is really no reflection on the company, Rakers says. "I'm really just concerned about the tight labor market on the Mississippi coast," he says.
Unemployment in Jackson, Harrison and Hancock counties has not been lower in decades, according to the Mississippi Employment Security Commission (MESC), the equivalent of a state Department of Labor. February rates of unemployment have dropped in Jackson and Harrison counties to 4.0% and 3.5%, respectively, from 4.3% and 3.7% in January. The rate in Hancock county has remained stable at 3.4%. All three counties are near the lowest rates in the state and are well below the state average of 5.8%.
The lower rates are attributable as much to the rise of Mississippi's casino industry as to a resurgence in the marine construction industry, which has been such an integral part of the Gulf Coast economy for so long, says Bill McNeece, a labor market analyst with MESC.
This has caused an upswing in the number of contract labor employment agencies, which employ workers on their own payrolls and hire them out to shipyards. Friede got out of the contract labor business in May of 1997, according to its 10-K, and now employs all employees directly, touting its benefits, training and bonus and vacation packages, along with the lure of steady work (in December, its backlog stood at $324.6 million).
Friede employs over 1,100 people in its Pascagoula yard and added nearly 1,000 more between its recent acquisitions of the Marystown shipyards in Newfoundland and the BLM companies. In response to TheStreet.com's questions on the labor situation at Friede, Alford says that on top of the 115 people the company hired in the past seven business days, it has 112 people in its training program. Its press release on The Illion stated 500 people would be hired.
Joe Agular, who follows the company at Johnson & Rice in New Orleans, is not concerned about a tight labor market, especially as it may affect Friede's earnings. He points out that a lot of the new hires have come from Ingalls Shipyard, which, although still Mississippi's largest employer with 11,000 people, has downsized tremendously in recent years.
The upshot of hundreds of new hires in the area is higher hourly rates for those who work on a contract basis. Several ads placed in the online edition of The Sun Herald in Gulfport, the daily which covers the Gulf Coast, boast pay up to $18 and $19.50 per hour for shipfitters and welders, the most sought-after positions.
"There are not enough people to go around," says Wayne Davis, co-owner of one of the newer contract labor shops in the area, B&D. "Right now, the workers go to the highest bidder." B&D supplies workers to Halter Marine (HLX:NYSE), which builds a variety of vessels for government and commercial use, as well as the energy industry. Over 2,000 of Halter's 2,720 employees are paid on an hourly basis. Earlier this month, Halter announced a $170 million contract to build two new semisubmersible drilling units. Ingalls, a unit of Litton Industries (LIT:NYSE), also announced a large contract to build marine service vessels earlier this month.
Investors Not Worried
A competitive environment for workers actually boosts investor confidence in the strength of the oilfield service industry.
"I'm pretty confident in management," says Brivac at USAA, whose Aggressive Growth fund, with a one-year return of 51.2%, owns about 200,000 shares of FGII, as well as shares in Halter. "They're not going to go out and start paying $18 to $19 per hour and not get compensated for it on the revenue side." He adds that although the situation might be a short-term negative, it confirms that people are not pulling out of plans due to a low oil price environment.
See Also
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