Welcome to the third quarter 2025 results conference call and webcast for ATCO Limited . As a reminder, all participants are in listen-only mode, and the conference is being recorded. After the presentation, there'll be an opportunity to ask questions. To join the question queue, you may press star, then one on your telephone keypad. Should you need assistance during the conference call, you may reach an operator by pressing star, then zero. I would now like to turn the conference over to Mr. Colin Jackson, Senior Vice President, Financial Operations. Please go ahead, Mr. Jackson.
Thank you, and good morning, everyone. We are pleased you could join us for ATCO's third quarter 2025 conference call. On the line today, we have Katie Patrick, Chief Financial and Investment Officer, and Adam Beattie, President of ATCO Structures. Before we move into today's remarks, I would like to take a moment to acknowledge the numerous traditional territories and homelands on which our global facilities are located. Today, I am speaking to you from our ATCO Park head office, which is located in the Treaty 7 region. This is the ancestral territory of the Blackfoot Confederacy, comprised of the Siksika, the Kainai, and Piikani Nations, the Tsuut'ina Nation, and the Stoney Nakoda Nations, which include the Chiniki, Bearspaw, and Goodstoney First Nations. I also want to recognize that the City of Calgary is home to the Métis Nation of Alberta, Districts 5 and 6.
During the quarter, employees across Canada recognized the National Day for Truth and Reconciliation by walking together to honor Indigenous communities and their experiences. May we continue to reflect, learn, and respect the diverse history, languages, ceremonies, and culture of Indigenous peoples as we move towards understanding, healing, and reconciliation. Today's remarks will include forward-looking statements that are subject to important risks and uncertainties. For more information on these risks and uncertainties, please refer to our filings with the Canadian Security Regulators. During today's presentation, we may refer to certain non-GAAP and other financial measures, which include adjusted earnings and adjusted EBITDA. These measures do not have any standardized meaning under IFRS, and as a result, they may not be comparable to similar measures presented by other entities. I will now turn the call over to Katie Patrick for her opening remarks.
Thanks, Colin, and a very good morning to everyone. Thank you all for joining us today. I want to start today by saying, what a quarter! $1 03 million in earnings, up 13% from last year. I will come back more to this, but want to first spend a moment re-emphasizing the strategy behind our overall portfolio of assets that has brought us great results in the past and will continue to drive our growth going forward. As a reminder, ATCO is a Canadian company with a market capitalization of approximately $ 6 billion, over $ 27 billion in assets, and approximately 21,000 employees worldwide. ATCO's globally diversified portfolio provides integrated, sustainable solutions in the essential services space to tackle the world's most urgent challenges. When considering essential services, we look primarily at housing, defense, and the energy space, along with investments that will drive long-term growth.
We have extensive experience and a long history of operating across these areas. Many people know us for our strong base of utility assets, but what many do not know is our long history serving the North and capabilities to enable a stronger Canadian defense sector. Looking at the ATCO portfolio strategy, you can think of the portfolio as three primary areas, which balance yield and long-term growth. This is critical to continue to maintain our exceptional dividend history. At the base of our portfolio, we look for a stream of stable and reliable base earnings and recurring cash flows for ATCO, which supports new investments and provides surety to our dividends, in line with our core financial tenets. Many of our Canadian utilities businesses have these characteristics. Moving up in the pyramid in our middle category, we expect these investments to provide a balance between yield and growth.
They will have some cyclicality, but generally have the ability to drive better returns. Our Neltume Ports business is a good example of this profile of investments. We used to say structures fit in this category as well, but candidly, with momentum behind them right now, there's a strong case for them to be in our growth category. At the top of the pyramid, our growth category, we look for contributions to the portfolio that are more growth-focused. New growth is guided by our focus on essential service. As of late, our portfolio has become very dominated by our foundational assets, which has tempered the growth we are accustomed to within the entire portfolio. We have been strategically transitioning to a greater proportion of more growth-oriented assets to return the balance and drive long-term growth.
During the quarter, we were able to achieve several operational milestones that I want to highlight. On the Canadian Utilities earnings call this morning, we highlighted several growth milestones across the business, most notably the project developments within ATCO Energy Systems and our Yellowhead Pipeline project, which remains on track. Earlier this week, we were pleased to file the project's facility application with the Alberta Utilities Commission, another successful milestone in progressing this project. ATCO Structures announced our largest dollar-value contract in the U.S. to date, a $179 million contract with Perpetua Resources. Adam will speak to this and other developments during his remarks. ATCO Frontec secured a position as a U.S. prime contractor on the U.S. Navy's Worldwide Expeditionary Multiple Award contract, one of only two Canadian companies to make this list.
This allows the team to bid on and win task orders under this $20 billion program, recognizing ATCO Frontec as a trusted and large-scale service provider to the United States. Finally, ATCO Australia saw significant earnings growth under the new access arrangement, AA6, with total adjusted earnings growing 80% year-over-year. A remarkable result and a huge congratulations to the team in Australia. Moving to our consolidated financials, as I mentioned, ATCO achieved adjusted earnings of $ 103 million, or $ 0.92 per share, in the third quarter, up $ 12 million and 13% compared to the same period in 2024. An impressive result this quarter is that all of our segments saw year-over-year growth. ATCO Structures & Logistics' adjusted earnings increased $ 6 million year- over- year. Within Structures & Logistics, ATCO Structures delivered another quarter of growth with adjusted earnings of $ 30 million.
Higher adjusted earnings this quarter were driven by increased space rental activity in Canada and the U.S., along with increased permanent modular construction activity in Canada. Within Structures & Logistics, we are seeing stabilization of the ATCO Frontec business, with year-over-year adjusted earnings up $ 5 million compared to the same period in 2024. This growth was driven by improved project-level earnings and realized operating efficiencies across the business. Looking at our cash flows, our ATCO standalone businesses, which excludes Canadian Utilities, reported cash flow from operating activities of $ 84 million in the quarter, up almost 100% year-over-year. This cash generated from our businesses supports our normal course operations, including funding our capital plan and future growth within the ATCO standalone businesses. When considering future growth, our foundational investments, which I previously mentioned, generate stable cash flows, allowing us to pursue diversified opportunity in a prudent and disciplined way.
The maintenance of strong credit ratings and access to capital is critical as we continue to grow, and we remain focused on maintaining our investment-grade credit ratings at the ATCO level. This is a key strategic consideration when we evaluate new opportunities. We maintain low debt at the wholesale level, along with strong access to credit liquidity and the capital markets, positioning us to fund future growth while sustaining our long history of annual dividend growth. Across ATCO, our teams remain focused on operational excellence, consistent earnings growth, and ultimately creating value for our shareholders. I will now pass it over to Adam to further discuss our ATCO Structures business and the growth they are delivering for the ATCO portfolio.
Thank you, Katie, and good morning, everyone. I'm pleased to share that ATCO Structures delivered another strong quarter, representing the 13th straight quarter in a row of year-over-year adjusted earnings growth. ATCO Structures continues to deliver on its performance and strategic objectives. Our 26,000-unit rental fleet, strategically located in Canada, Australia, the U.S., Mexico, and Chile, continues to provide reliable growth, cash flow, and earnings as the foundation of our business. As we grow this asset base, we continue to achieve our target of 75% utilization and average rental rates greater than $ 800 per month. Our space rentals business is sustainably growing, contributing to the 6% in earnings growth year-over-year. On average, we are investing $ 50 million per quarter in our assets and fleet.
As we move through the fourth quarter, we expect to invest significant capital to optimize our workforce housing fleet as we see an increase in demand for these assets moving into 2026, with a number of project leads in the energy, resources, and infrastructure sectors, particularly in Canada, the U.S., and Chile. Securing the recently announced Stibnite Gold Project in Idaho is evidence of our competitive value in being selected to deliver large-scale turnkey workforce accommodation projects in our key regions. We also delivered solutions for the residential sector during the quarter. The image on the slide is an example of ATCO using modern modular manufacturing from one of our 13 global facilities to deliver affordable housing solutions. This is 605 Studio West, a six-story building with 84 one-bedroom apartments, manufactured in under 70 days and set on site in 12 days.
This demonstrates just how fast and efficient modular construction can be to solve housing needs. Our speed to market, expertise, and capacity to supply the residential sector positions us as a proven solution to meet Canada's need for 3.5 million new homes across the country within the next five years. Here in Calgary, we have successfully partnered with Attainable Homes Calgary to build 605 Studio West, the six-story, 84-suite affordable housing project. From design to manufacture to installation, the project with Attainable Homes Calgary will be completed three times faster than a comparable site-build project. Unsurprisingly, this project has garnered national media attention due to the quality and speed of the build. With our focus on growing this segment, I'm pleased to announce that we've started pre-approval design for an additional project with Attainable Homes Calgary to develop now a six-story complex with 189 suites in Calgary's Sunnyside community.
As part of our strategy, we continue to position ourselves for the growing pipeline of opportunities for modular manufactured housing, which is becoming increasingly demanded and recognized as a high-quality, fast, and affordable option for single and multi-family housing. Our recent successes are also evident from our acquisition of NRB Modular Solutions in Q3 2024, where we have since developed a stronger foothold in key central Canadian markets, opened two new retail branches, successfully executed multi-family housing projects, including the City of Toronto's Cummer Avenue project, and are now modernizing and expanding production capacity of our Grimsby, Ontario manufacturing facility. ATCO Structures is the only modular company at scale that has the mix of rental fleet assets, advanced modular manufacturing infrastructure, full-service project management, and site construction capabilities. Controlling the entire value chain provides us a distinct competitive advantage. Our global footprint positions us for growth.
From North America to South America to Australia, we have a strong operating foothold in these markets and see opportunity for future development within these regions. Our operating locations are near regions of economic activity and natural resources, positioning ourselves as a solution for large-scale infrastructure, resource, and energy project developments. ATCO Structures is well- positioned through our capacity and resources to secure market growth beyond our high-performing rental fleet base. We have evolved our operations through organic and inorganic initiatives to become a market leader in permanent modular construction, which includes both commercial and residential modular manufactured products and overall project delivery. Following key strategic acquisitions in the residential modular sector, we are leveraging our market leadership, organic expansion, and product diversification to accelerate growth across the business.
As modular products gain wider acceptance as a solution to the housing supply shortage, we expect to generate a larger portion of our earnings growth from our permanent modular construction offerings. Alongside what we are seeing in the housing market, ATCO Structures sees significant growth opportunities across multiple sectors, underpinned by strong market demand and unprecedented funding commitments. We expect to see increased investment and revenue across the industrial, commercial, and residential markets we serve. Year to date, this includes $ 314 million of secured project work in our industrial sector, composed of workforce housing and space rentals, and $ 67 million of secured projects in commercial opportunities, for example, commercial offices, healthcare, and educational products. On the residential front, we remain focused on fulfilling volume purchases for single-family homes while executing multi-family turnkey residential projects previously secured.
Our strategic acquisitions of NRB Modular Solutions and Triple M Housing, combined with the exciting market position of ATCO, the existing market position of ATCO Structures, provide us with the capacity, skills, and expertise that has already delivered over 6,000 modular homes across the housing continuum in Canada since 2022. Within our industrial pillar, this quarter, we were awarded a $ 179 million contract to supply and install a 1,000-person camp and site offices in support of the Stibnite Gold Project located near Yellow Pine, Idaho. Manufacturing of the 363 modules will begin this December, with final completion anticipated in early 2027. This builds on ATCO Structures' history of being a proven supplier of workforce accommodation to the natural resource sectors on large-scale infrastructure projects of national importance, providing certainty to our customers.
LNG Canada, BC Hydro's Site C Dam, and Woodside's Pluto LNG are just a few recent examples showcasing our project experience, providing project owners like Perpetua Resources the confidence to leverage our expertise in workforce accommodation so they can focus on their core activity. Accelerate economic activity focused on energy, critical minerals, major infrastructure, defense, and housing. We have already secured a reliable pipeline of contracts across our business and will continue to build on this as we move into 2026. In addition to the $ 179 million Stibnite Gold Project, we announced several other contract awards during the quarter in the U.S., which will contribute $34 million to future revenue growth and exemplifies our ability to competitively position ourselves in the U.S. market, where we continue to see long-term growth opportunities for ATCO Structures. In Canada, we were awarded several sale and leasing contracts in the quarter totaling $ 32 million.
These contracts will support critical mining operations and exploration through Western and Central Canada. The market momentum in Canada provides continued opportunities for us moving into 2026. In Australia, ATCO Structures was awarded contracts during the quarter to provide space rentals, workforce housing solutions, and permanent modular classrooms in Queensland and Victoria, totaling CAD 14 million. Additionally, we are seeing positive momentum in Chile's resource sector that we feel will present a growing pipeline for modular space rentals and workforce housing products in the years ahead. Overall, we have a lot of momentum at ATCO Structures. While Q3 earnings were primarily driven by increased activity in our Canadian operations, I expect additional opportunities in the U.S., Australia, and Chile to drive continued stability and growth as we enter 2026. With that, I'll now pass the call back over to Katie.
Thank you, Adam, and congrats to the entire structures team. As seen in our results this quarter and year thus far, our diversified portfolio of investments continues to deliver a growing earnings profile. We continue to believe that ATCO Structures is undervalued in the market when you assess our ATCO some of the parts trading value. For example, ATCO Structures' 2024 adjusted EBITDA was $ 241 million. Using a 10 x multiple, which is comparable to our peers, our enterprise value for this portion alone would be $ 2.4 billion. Across our portfolio of investments, we see significant opportunities ahead for structures and the businesses that make up ATCO investments. We remain focused on executing the strategy in front of us and driving results to deliver long-term shareholder value. That concludes our prepared remarks, and I will now turn the call back to Colin.
Thank you, Katie and Adam. In the interest of time, we ask you to limit yourself to one question. If you have additional questions, you are welcome to rejoin the queue. I'll now pass it over to our conference coordinator, Gayleen, for questions.
Thank you. We'll now begin the question-and-answer session. To join the question queue, you may press star then one on your telephone keypad. You'll hear a tone acknowledging your request. If you're using a speakerphone, please pick up your handset before pressing any keys. To withdraw your question, please press star then two. The first question is from Mark Jarvi with CIBC Capital Markets. Please go ahead.
Yeah, thanks. Good morning, everyone. Thanks, Adam, for all that disclosure. I'm wondering if you could share today something like a book to bill or anything you can share in terms of visibility of the backlog at Structures in terms of where revenue can track through 2026 and beyond.
Sorry, can you restate that, Mark?
Yeah, maybe like a book to bill. Just given what you've recognized on an LTM basis for revenue versus what you have in hand for the next 12 months ahead, would you have enough visibility now to kind of give an indication of where revenue, at least top-line growth, could be for the next sort of 12 months?
Yeah, definitely. Look, I think probably as we look at moving into next year, we feel we have a stronger backlog than we had going into 2024. Some of the momentum and the bidding activity that we're seeing in the market, particularly in the workforce housing sector, and also just the inquiry level around the housing sector, shows that we believe there's a strong opportunity in both what we've secured and what we're currently bidding to show some good improvement on a revenue base going into next year.
Where would the risk be that you don't deliver on that? What sort of is one or two things you point to that the team really has to focus on to make sure that doesn't happen?
Yeah, I think there's that focus on that it does happen.
Yeah, sorry. Exactly. Yeah.
Yeah. Yeah. Look, I think execution is always the key. When you secure a healthy backlog of work, prioritizing to make sure that you execute to the expectation of those projects is very important so we maintain our margins. Certainly, executing the backlog that we have will be a priority. We've done a very effective job in terms of positioning our resources and our capacity to increase our manufacturing availability to service the revenue base that we will be bidding going forward and also the secured revenue that we have. As you know, you're probably aware of, with modular manufacturing, the better the backlog that you take in, the more efficiency you can gain in that volumes of consistent production.
I think if those are key areas, we have clear focus on our space rental business, maintaining our utilization and rental rate expectations, and continuing to grow our asset base in that place, and then really on executing the projects. That is focused on pre-planning and also extracting value from our manufacturing efficiencies from having increased scale in the production backlog.
Sounds great. Thanks.
The next question is from John Mould with TD Cowen, please go ahead.
Hi, good morning. Maybe going back to the Stibnite Gold project and its scale relative to your U.S. business, just wondering how many projects of that scale would you be able to take on and maybe willing to take on at once? What is the gating aspect for your ability to take on more projects like that if there is one?
Okay, good question, John. Thank you. Certainly, the scale to take on more of those projects. As alluded to in the slides, we have 13 manufacturing locations around the globe. Our ability to service projects, not all of those projects happen in one location typically. They'll happen in Canada, the U.S., Australia, Chile. Each of our manufacturing locations and our increased capacity allows us to take on multiple of those projects within a year or at any time continuously. That's really, and then our site execution capability, again, it's diversified, and we have quite a good spread of project management capabilities to deliver site construction and execution capabilities. We think certainly you couldn't deliver 100 of those projects at once, but there's certainly a lot more capacity to do more projects of those scale simultaneously.
Great. Thank you very much for that. Maybe just Frontec had some positive earnings this quarter. Just wondering how we should think about that piece of the structures business on a go-forward basis in terms of its ability to contribute to the bottom line, appreciating that it had some headwinds in the back half of last year that seemed to be behind that business. Any color there would be great.
Yeah, it's Katie here. I think the big thing with Frontec is they had a few, honestly, challenged contracts that they were successfully able to renegotiate some positive terms that should help on a go-forward basis. Where they are right now in terms of their earnings, you can sort of see their run rate earnings, but I would say that they do have some potential for some big things to be happening in the north. I can't really put our finger quite yet on what that will be or give you indications of kind of the magnitude of that. As we all know, there is a big focus on development in the north, and Frontec is very well positioned with a number of different potential contracts that we will obviously keep you informed about as they come out. I think you can kind of look to this quarter's earnings as a bit of a run rate going forward.
Okay. That's great. Thanks very much for that context. I'll leave it there.
The next question is from Maurice Choy with RBC. Please go ahead.
Thank you. Good morning, everyone. Just wanted to ask a question about slide 16. Will you make the separation between industrial modular as well as permanent modular? I like how you've given us the amount of contracts at $ 314 million in industrial and $ 67 million for commercial permanent modular. Rather than looking backwards, can you just comment about, as you look forward to the coming years, what's the mix between these three in terms of contract values that you anticipate? Alongside that, assuming the bill timelines are generally aligned with the one, one-and-a-half-year delivery times on slide 13, can you share the difference between all three of these segments of margins when you have a contract?
Thank you, Maurice. I'll try and do the best I can there. Look, a big portion of the industrial sector has the components of our rental fleet. That is a significant portion of the forward-going revenues as long as the major project activity. I think that will always be substantially larger than the other two tiers. Going forward, we see a huge amount of positive activity coming through the residential sector. The project and the pace of growth that we're seeing in that sector coming off a smaller base, we think, is going to accelerate relatively quickly and probably faster than the industrial sector. The pace of growth there should be higher. It's less capitally intensive.
The margins, typically in the industrial sector, are a higher margin that we realize than we do in the residential and commercial sector, to give some indication without actual numbers. Maybe a cycle. Go ahead. You go. I said the cash flow that we generate from those two sectors, we use that as a cycle of reinvestment into our industrial sector fleet and growth. We continue to build that stable base on getting to the critical scale that we want to continue to improve on in our fleet investments in space rentals and workforce housing.
I understand. Maybe as a quick follow-up, I guess when you think about your last few years where you've rebuilt your base business, and I think that part of that has to do with this rental fleet that you've managed to rebuild, recontract, and reposition. When you think about the next three years, what do you think would constitute a successful three years in terms of growth in earnings? You can choose about three or five years, but just trying to figure out what is the growth profile of this business.
Yeah, we do not provide forward guidance at this point in time. Certainly, what we see is that the pace of growth that we have experienced in the past is not unconceivable in terms of what we see going forward.
Perfect. Thank you.
Once again, if you have a question, please press star then one. The next question is from Rob Hope with Scotiabank. Please go ahead.
Yeah. I just want to circle back on the residential side there. I do appreciate the commentary that you could see some higher growth there as well as the improved margins there. When we think about geographies, which do you think is going to be kind of the most impactful for you that we should be watching for the residential build-out? What are the other kind of key policy factors we should be looking for?
Yeah. Good morning, Rob. Hi. Certainly, I think the key growth geographical region for housing for us over the coming periods will be Canada. Realistically, the key there is that's where we've made our strategic inorganic acquisitions. We've really expanded our physical footprint and manufacturing capability to service that market. We see policy changes and investment decisions really looking to accelerate the cycle of funding put into that sector. The cost competitiveness of modular manufacturing and the solution in terms of the pace, three times faster, we just proved out in that project that I referenced in our presentation, really show that that is where we see the greatest market opportunities and concentration of where the growth will occur in the residential sector.
All right. Appreciate that. That's it for me. Thank you.
Thanks, Rob.
This brings to a close the question- and- answer session. I'd now like to turn the conference back over to Colin Jackson for any closing remarks.
Thank you, Gayleen. Thank you all for participating today. We appreciate your interest in ATCO, and we look forward to speaking with you again soon.
This concludes today's conference call. You may disconnect your lines. Thank you for participating and have a pleasant day.