Good afternoon, and welcome to the presentation of Akastor's first quarter results. My name is Øyvind Paaske, CFO, and I'm joined today by our CEO, Karl Erik Kjelstad. Before we start, a brief practical note. Following the successful IPO completed in April, HMH is now a listed company and reports independently. HMH held its own Q1 earnings call last week, including a full operational and financial walk through. For those interested in more detail on HMH specifically, their Q1 release, as well as webcast replay, are available on their webpage. As a result, today's presentation from Akastor includes less detailed coverage of HMH operations. We'll take questions at the end of the session, and you can submit them at any time through the online Q&A function. To kick things off, Kalle will walk us through the headline developments for the quarter. Kalle, over to you.
Thank you, Øyvind. Good afternoon, and thank you to all for joining us today. Let me start with the key highlights on slide number 2. Akastor continues to be in a solid financial position. We maintain a positive net cash position and have no drawings on our corporate RCF. Against this backdrop, we are pleased to announce another cash distribution of NOK 1.5 per share, supported by the successful mentioned IPO with HMH on Nasdaq. That generated a significant cash proceeds to Akastor. This marks our fourth consecutive quarterly distribution to our shareholders. Over the past year, we have distributed NOK 722 million or NOK 2.65 per share to our shareholders. This fully confirms our strategy of returning excess capital while maintaining a sound capital structure.
Turning to HMH, the company completed its IPO after the end of this first quarter, generating total cash proceed of $53 million to Akastor in the second quarter. Following the IPO and after the greenshoe, Akastor now owns about 36% of HMH Holding. As mentioned by Øyvind, HMH released its Q1 on May 6 and continues to deliver solid operational and financial performance. In the quarter, HMH reported an EBITDA of $30 million, and that corresponds to an EBITDA margin of 18%. Importantly, order intake increased by 10% year-over-year, which is an encouraging signal of improving market activity across HMH product and service segments. For further operational and financial details, I will encourage you, as Øyvind mentioned, to review HMH own first quarter report that is available on their website.
The value of our ownership in HMH can now be observed on a day-to-day basis in the public market. For reference, the carrying value on this slide reflects Akastor's book value of NOK 3.4 billion at the end of the first quarter, equivalent to NOK 12.6 per Akastor share. With HMH now listed following the IPO early in this quarter, we believe we will be evaluating how we present value in our portfolio going forward, including a potential shift towards a more NAV-based approach for HMH. AKOFS Offshore. AKOFS Offshore delivered the stable operations across the fleet with a strong utilization and uptime. Utilization on Aker Wayfarer was impacted on a planned and scheduled class renewal survey, which was completed on time and within budget.
Aker Wayfarer was also formally awarded a new 4-year SESV contract with Petrobras expected to commence in the 3rd quarter of 2027. AKOFS remain carried at conservative book value and does not reflect the underlying asset values or improved contract positions. We continue to see clear upside in AKOFS over time. DDW Offshore. DDW Offshore completed the sale of Skandi Atlantic in the quarter at $22.75 million, significantly above the vessel's book value at approximately $10 million. Post the quarter, DDW announced an additional vessel sale, Skandi Emerald, for $23 million. Finally, during the quarter, we realized our shareholding in Maha Capital, generating cash proceeds to Akastor of NOK 40 million. Let's move to slide 3 with some more facts about the HMH IPO.
The transaction marks a key milestone for Akastor, establishing a public market for our largest investment and improving the liquidity going forward. The offering was priced at $20 per share, implying a market capitalization of approximately $880 million. Including the greenshoe, we reduced our ownership to around 36% while retaining a significant position in the company. The transaction generated total cash proceeds, as mentioned, of $53 million to Akastor. That's strengthening our financial flexibility and also enable us to do this distribution that we announced today. Overall, the IPO was received well in the market, it represent an important step in enabling future value realization for Akastor. Let's move to slide 5. Turning briefly to the portfolio overview. This slide shows our portfolio and our ownership positions, which are largely unchanged from the last quarter.
The main change is HMH, which I know mentioned several times has been listed and our ownership thereby has been reduced to 36%. Let's move on to slide 6, HMH. Most of the IPO details have already been covered. Let me briefly reiterate our ownership agenda for HMH. First, we continue to support HMH strategy to drive profitable growth and value creation. Second, we want HMH to re-maintain a strong market position through technology leadership and customer-focused innovation. Thirdly, we will actively manage our ownership over time, leveraging on improved liquidity following the IPO. Turning to the quarter, HMH delivered a solid performance with a good margin supported by disciplined cost management and a favorable product mix. Order intake was strong, exceeding revenue and supporting backlog growth and improved visibility into the second half of 2026.
HMH management expects a stronger second half supported by improved market activity and the mentioned strengthened backlog. With HMH now listed, more detailed financial and operational disclosure is available through the company's own reporting. Let's move on to slide 7, NES Fircroft. The company continues to deliver solid performance. Underlying EBITDA increased year on year, supported by improved earnings mix, higher contract activity, and continued cost discipline, partly offset by softer permanent recruitment. NES also delivered strong cash generation and continued deleveraging. In addition, the company has agreed to the acquisition of Haleon, strengthened technology and digital talent capabilities, and supporting further diversification of the company. From an ownership perspective, our agenda remains to support continued value creation and optimize value at exit, and we will revert with updates as and when there is important clarity on strategic alternatives for NES Fircroft.
Time to slide 8, covering AKOFS Offshore. AKOFS Offshore delivered a revenue of $42 million and an EBITDA of NOK 40 million in the quarter. Operational performance was solid. Aker Wayfarer and AKOFS Santos achieved revenue utilization of 75% and 99% respectively, with Wayfarer impacted by the mentioned completion of the class renewal survey. AKOFS Seafarer delivered a technical uptime of 94%, supported by stable operations. Commercially, and also highlighted previously, an important milestone was reached with Aker Wayfarer formally being awarded a 4-year contract with Petrobras that we expect to commence in Q3 2027. Slide 9, DDW Offshore. Operational performance was solid, with Skandi Peregrino delivering 98% utilization during the quarter. The sale of Skandi Atlantic was completed in the quarter at a price significantly above book value, supporting both earnings and cash generation.
In addition, the announced sale of Skandi Emerald in this quarter further supports the continued value realization and portfolio simplification for Akastor. Finally, let's look at slide 10, summarizing the key priorities for Akastor going forward. That is more or less unchanged from previously. Akastor's strategy remains firmly in place. We focus on active ownership and value creation across our portfolio, enabling equity over time and returning capital to our shareholders following realizations, while maintaining a sound capital structure. The successful listing of HMH, the DDW Offshore vessel sales at values above book value, and the realization of more capital are clear example of continued execution on that strategy and a disciplined capital allocation. With that, Øyvind, I turn it over back to you, and you can take us through more on our financial performance in the first quarter.
Thank you, Karl. I will start with slide 12 on our net capital employed. HMH, of course, remains our largest investment and is, as Karl mentioned, reflected based on our 50% shareholding as per end of March, meaning that Akastor's net capital employed at the end of Q1 corresponds to 50% of the book equity value as it stood in HMH at that point. The carrying value decreased by NOK 83 million versus Q4, driven by primarily FX effects in the period. In Q2, the IPO will affect our accounting with an expected net smaller negative impact related to IPO pricing and the sell-down from Akastor. Going forward, HMH will be accounted for as an associated company using the equity method and our post-IPO ownership share. DDW Offshore's net capital employed decreased during the period, driven by the realization of Skandi Atlantic in January.
AKOFS remains carried at zero in net capital employed, reflecting the prior reduction of the equity investment. We do continue to carry shareholder receivables provided to the company at full value, totaling NOK 422 million at period end, which are then included in our reported net interest-bearing debt. The value of other, which now includes ABL alongside smaller financial investments, pension accruals, and provisions, increased by NOK 15 million in Q1, reflecting working capital normalization and value appreciation of ABL, partly offset by the realization of Maha Capital. In total, our net capital employed decreased by NOK 207 million in the quarter. Over to our net debt movement during the quarter. In Q1, our net cash position increased by NOK 132 million to a cash positive position of NOK 219 million at period end.
This was primarily driven by proceeds from the sale of Skandi Atlantic and shares in Maha Capital, partly offset by the dividend payment of NOK 0.4 per share, corresponding to NOK 109 million paid out in February. The Q1 net cash position includes net debt of NOK 68 million in DDW Offshore, down from NOK 195 million in the previous quarter, driven by the realization of Skandi Atlantic. Total net interest-bearing items at quarter end stood at the net cash position of NOK 965 million. This includes interest-bearing position related to AKOFS Offshore and HMH, including the shareholder loans towards HMH of USD 27 million, which were fully settled and received in cash in April.
Looking ahead to Q2, the net cash position is expected to improve further driven by HMH IPO proceeds and the planned realization of Skandi Emerald, partly offset by the approved dividend scheduled for later this month. An overview of our external financing facilities. At the end of Q1, our $30 million corporate RCF remained undrawn. In connection with the HMH IPO and the associated share sale, we agreed with the banks to suspend availability on this facility as it included a pledge over HMH shares and the security package needs to be updated post-IPO. We are working with the banks to reestablish the facility or alternatively establish other type of structures, including potential solution more directly linked to the HMH shares which are now listed. That said, based on our current liquidity position and capital allocation strategy, we do not foresee a need for additional financing.
For DDW Offshore, the reducing revolving credit facility was reduced to $16 million following the sale of Skandi Atlantic completed then in January with NOK 11 million drawn as per end of March. Following the sale of Skandi Emerald expected to close later in Q2, the facility will be further reduced to NOK 8 million. At quarter end, our total available liquidity amounted to NOK 328 million, including NOK 41 million of cash held within DDW Offshore. This excludes the suspended corporate RCF. Liquidity increased significantly in April following receipt of proceeds from the HMH IPO and is expected to increase further upon completion of the sale of Skandi Emerald in DDW Offshore. This increase will of course partly be offset by the announced dividend payment in May. Our consolidated P&L.
As a reminder, most of our holdings are not consolidated, and as a result, our consolidated revenue and EBITDA represent a very limited portion of our total values. DDW Offshore delivered total revenues of NOK 182 million in the quarter, including NOK 132 million related to the gain on the sale of Skandi Atlantic. Operationally, Atlantic was sold in early January and therefore delivered only a limited contribution, while Skandi Peregrino remained on contract throughout the period. Skandi Emerald was in yard for its class renewal survey and generated no revenues in Q1. EBITDA amounted to NOK 140 million, driven by the gain related to Skandi Atlantic. Other revenues were NOK 1 million, while other EBITDA was negative NOK 617 million and as a result, consolidated revenue and EBITDA for the quarter amounted to NOK 182 million and NOK 123 million respectively.
A closer look at our net financials. Financial investments contributed positively by NOK 31 million, driven by share price increases in ABL and Maha, with Maha then fully realized during the period. FX accounting effects were negative by NOK 62 million, while net interest-bearing income of NOK 11 million and other financial income of NOK 3 million partly offset this, resulting in a total net financial items of negative NOK 17 million for the quarter. Share on net profit from equity accounted investments contributed negatively by NOK 6 million, including a true-up effect related to 2025 results for HMH following completion of their audit. Sorry. With that, we are through the presentation and we move over to the Q&A session. We'll take a very short break in order for listeners to provide questions. Thank you. We'll go through a couple of questions received.
First, there's a question regarding NES Fircroft, the caller that I'll refer to you. Have you seen increased interest in NES since the Q4 report? either from IPO investors or potential buyers, and what are the key factors determining timing for potential realization?
We see continued interest for NES Fircroft following the strong performance and the strong market position of the company. We are continuously together with our co-owners evaluating different alternatives in order to maximize value of our investment in this NES Fircroft. Difficult to say anything about timing, but it will, as in all M&A transaction, depend on the market. We need to be aligned with our co-owners, and also that potential outcome really reflects the underlying values of the NES Fircroft business. I'm quite confident that we will end with a good solution for NES Fircroft, both value-wise and also when it comes for the company itself, post our ownership.
Thank you. A question regarding Akastor's ownership in HMH. How should we think about Akastor's ownership in HMH going forward?
The good thing now is, of course, that following the IPO, we have a good liquidity and a flexibility for ownership in HMH. But at the same time, HMH remains a core investment for us, and our key focus will be to support the continued value creation in HMH. We strongly believe that there is an interesting value creation journey for the company in the coming years. Then we will have to assess our ownership position over time in line with our overall strategy of realizing values when we think timing is optimal or appropriate.
Great. Finally, I think, how should we think about further shareholder distributions going forward?
When it comes to shareholder distribution, we will remain consistent with what we have communicated and also what we have delivered on and that is that we will return excess capital to our shareholders following realizations. At the same time we have to maintain a robust balance sheet. I think the recent distribution, supported by the proceed received of the HMH IPO, is a good example of this, and how we plan to proceed when we do future realizations.
Thank you very much. I believe that concludes our session. We'll just like to thank you all for your attention and look forward to welcoming you back for the presentation of our second quarter results in August. Thank you very much.