Aker Solutions ASA: First-Quarter Results 2014

April 30, 2014

Financial Highlights

  • Sales rose to NOK 11.2 billion in the first quarter of 2014 from NOK 10.3 billion in the first quarter of 2013.

  • Earnings before interest, tax, depreciation and amortization (EBITDA) gained to NOK 1.05 billion in the quarter from NOK 767 million in the year-earlier period when earnings were impacted by losses in the umbilicals and OMA business areas and increased costs at the Ekofisk Zulu project.

  • The EBITDA margin improved to 9.3 percent in the quarter from 7.4 percent a year earlier.

  • Earnings per share (EPS) were NOK 1.12 in the quarter, compared with NOK 1 a year earlier.

  • The order intake was NOK 8.7 billion in the quarter, compared with NOK 25 billion a year earlier.

  • The order backlog was NOK 55.6 billion at the end of the quarter. The year-earlier backlog was NOK 68.7 billion and included a Category B rig contract worth NOK 11 billion that was canceled in June 2013.

Key Developments
Aker Solutions` revenue rose to NOK 11.2 billion in the first quarter of 2014 from NOK 10.3 billion a year earlier, driven by sales of subsea products and services, single drilling equipment and umbilical systems in the U.S. and Norway. Revenue also increased in the process systems unit, bolstered by strong demand in Norway, the Americas and the Asia Pacific, and in OMA, which had three vessels on charter in the quarter.

EBITDA rose to NOK 1.05 billion in the quarter, helped by stronger project execution, particularly in the subsea and umbilicals areas, as well as increased capacity utilization for the engineering division in London and the U.S. umbilicals plant.

The EBITDA was NOK 767 million in the same quarter of last year, when earnings were affected by costs at the Ekofisk Zulu project and losses in the umbilicals and oilfield services and marine assets (OMA) businesses.

The EBITDA margin increased to 9.3 percent in the quarter from 7.4 percent a year earlier.

"Demand for our subsea products and services remained strong and our engineering unit boosted its activity as employees were mobilized in London and Oslo to start work on the Johan Sverdrup contract awarded by Statoil in December," said Øyvind Eriksen, executive chairman of Aker Solutions. "In contrast, the offshore maintenance and modification market slowed down in Norway and an oversupply of drilling rigs curbed new-building activity globally."

Subsea, the biggest business area, had a record-high EBITDA margin of 11.5 percent in the quarter, up from 10.6 percent a year earlier. The engineering unit`s margin was 8.7 percent, compared with 7.2 percent a year earlier. The maintenance, modifications and operations (MMO) unit`s margin narrowed to 6.2 percent from 6.6 percent, and the drilling technologies margin weakened to 9.1 percent from 10 percent. Oil companies scaled back spending on maintenance and drilling activities amid concern over rising costs and stagnant oil prices.