Good morning, ladies and gentlemen, and welcome to the Chorus Aviation Second Quarter 2023 Financial Results Conference Call. At this time, all lines are in listen-only mode. Following the presentation, we will conduct a question-and-answer session. If at any time during this call you require immediate assistance, please press star zero for the operator. This call is being recorded on Friday, August fourth, twenty twenty-three. I would now like to turn the conference over to Tyrone Cotie, VP Treasury and Investor Relations. Please go ahead.
Thank you, Joel. Hello, thank you for joining us today for our second quarter 2023 conference call and audio webcast. With me today from Chorus are Colin Copp, our President and Chief Executive Officer, and Gary Osborne, our Chief Financial Officer. We will begin today's call with a brief summary of the results, followed by questions from the analyst community. As there may be some forward-looking discussion during the call, I ask that you refer to the caution regarding forward-looking statements and information found in our MD&A. This pertains specifically to the results and operations of Chorus Aviation for the three months ended June 30th, 2023, as well as the Outlook section and other sections of our MD&A, where such statements appear.
In addition, some of the following discussion involves non-GAAP financial measures, including references to adjusted net income, adjusted EBT, adjusted EBITDA, leverage ratio, and free cash flow. Please refer to our MD&A for a discussion relating to the use of such non-GAAP measures. I'll now turn the call over to Colin Copp.
Thank you, Tyrone, good morning, everyone. I'm pleased with Chorus's performance in the quarter as we continue to execute on our plan, delivering significant improvements in our leverage ratio and free cash flow. Chorus's free cash flow has more than doubled year-over-year to CAD 70.3 million in Q2, we further reduced our leverage ratio to 3.8 in the quarter, moving us closer to our target range of 2.5-3.5, as we outlined during our Investor Day in March. We continue to advance discussions on the launch of Fund III with our existing lead investors in Fund II and others. With the market conditions over the past year, several of the larger U.S.-based investors have been limited from investing in certain investment strategies due to regulatory limits on the composition of their portfolios.
We have recently been informed that certain states have increased their regulatory limits, which should further our discussions. We continue to see good opportunities to deploy funds in the regional aircraft leasing space, earning mid-teen returns. We look forward to providing an update on Fund III upon concluding discussions with our investors. In general, what we're seeing is the regional aviation market continuing to show improvements, with aircraft market values and lease rates showing signs of recovery from the pandemic lows. To this point, during the quarter, Falko had 20 aircraft transactions within Fund II and managed assets with nine distinct airline customers operating in Australia, Asia, Africa, Europe, and North and South America, including a sale and leaseback for its fifth E190-E2.
As the strong industry-wide demand for pilots continues, our Jazz operation, like most other regional operators in North America, is experiencing some capacity constraints. There is significant pilot movement in the industry today. While our pilot flow agreement with Air Canada is working as intended, with over 300 pilots having transferred to Air Canada over the past year, we have also seen attrition to other mainline airlines. However, during the same period, we've successfully recruited and trained over 300 pilots and continue to see a good supply of new hire pilots. There is a gap between pilots exiting the organization and the time it takes to train new hires for productive flying, which temporarily constrains available flying hours.
We are actively recruiting pilots and continue to grow our pipeline of future pilots through our Jazz Pathway Program and our new flight training academy, Cygnet Aviation. The leadership team at Jazz is very focused on collaborating with our partner, Air Canada, to coordinate pilot flow and flying capacity. While the production in annual block hours is temporarily constrained as the pilots are getting trained, the reduction in flying does not have any impact on Jazz's earnings. It was recently announced that Voyageur will expand its services for Ambulance New Brunswick. Voyageur operates 2 King Air 200 aircraft for Ambulance New Brunswick, and the expansion allows for greater usage of the secondary aircraft for air ambulance services to Grand Manan Island.
Finally, as we look forward, we're continuing our transition towards an asset-light leasing model to reduce our leverage, de-risk the business, and provide a higher quality of earnings as we execute on asset sales, to allow us to grow and invest in our fund management business at Falko, provide future opportunities to invest in accretive transactions in adjacent and complementary business lines, and ultimately provide an opportunity for us to improve shareholder returns and allow for return of capital to our shareholders. I'll now pass it to Gary to take you through the financials.
Thank you, Colin, and good morning. We had a steady quarter in 2023. Generated strong free cash flows, over doubling last year. Our leverage continued to improve, moving to 3.8 from 4.4 at the end of last year.
Our second quarter earnings were in line with our expectations, with adjusted EBITDA at CAD 110.7 million, up CAD 5.9 million from last year. Free cash flow of CAD 70.3 million, an increase of CAD 36 million, or approximately 105%. Net income of CAD 20.3 million, increasing CAD 60.7 million from last year. Adjusted earnings available to common shareholders of CAD 15.5 million, reduced CAD 6.2 million. Adjusted earnings available to common shareholders of CAD 0.08 per common share, down CAD 0.03 from last year.
As we look to performance, the RAL segment's adjusted EBITDA was CAD 57.3 million, an increase of CAD 6.8 million, primarily due to three months of Falko's earnings in the second quarter of 2023, versus two months in the second quarter of 2022, partially offset by decreased revenue related to the sale of wholly owned aircraft in the second half of 2022. The RAS segment's adjusted EBITDA at CAD 61.8 million, was in line with the second quarter of 2022. Our liquidity ended the quarter at CAD 145 million, down CAD 19.4 million from the prior quarter, which re-reflects our strong free cash flows, debt reduction, and investment in working capital.
As we move through the rest of the year, we expect our free cash flows to continue to support our debt reductions and working capital, capital to remain relatively flat by the end of the year, with improvements in Q3 2023 being partially offset by Q4 2023 investments. We are maintaining our full-year guidance for 2023, as contained in the outlook section of the MD&A, including asset sales in the back half of this year, somewhere between CAD 50 million-CAD 100 million. We are now ready to take questions.
Thank you. Ladies and gentlemen, we will now begin the question and answer session. Should you have a question, please press star followed by the one on your touch tone phone. You will hear a three-tone prompt acknowledging your request, and your questions will be polled in the order they are received. Should you decline from the polling process, please press star two. If you are using a speakerphone, please lift the handset before pressing any keys. One moment please, for your first question. First question comes from Walter Spracklin with RBC Capital.
My first question here is for Colin. You mentioned some dele- some of your the funds or the the investors that you were targeting for Fund III had some restrictions that perhaps didn't allow them to to invest. Do you view that as, is this just kind of a temporary in the environment we're in, and you expect that to to to alleviate? Really, really where I'm going with this is, is what, what is the closing date you're now expecting for Fund III?
Yeah. Hi, Walter. Look, we don't have an exact date. As you can tell, you know, things are a little fluid, but we certainly see good progression. You know, this was one of the, one of the things that we had heard from a few folks that was a bit of a barrier as they moved forward and was kind of slowing things down. We've seen good progression with them. Discussions are ongoing, very active with the investors as well as others beyond fund, beyond the current Fund II investors. We're, you know, we're seeing it closing hopefully in the, in the months ahead. You know, it could be at any point in time as we, we look forward in the next several months.
Okay, that's great. Turning to Falko's transactions, I think 20 in the quarter, how many of those were new placements versus lease extensions?
Yeah, I would say 2. Most of them were just lease extensions and, and re-lease of what they had. Yeah.
Okay. Are you seeing more demand from startups in Canada? I know you, you placed 4 E-Jets with Porter. Are, are, are you seeing that pick up at all here i-in the Canadian marketplace? We've noticed a lot of new orders from smaller carriers, and just seeing if you're, you're seeing evidence, is that an opportunity for you as well?
It's Gary here, Walter. I think the Canadian marketplace is picking up. I think worldwide, everything is picking up. If, if you look at Falko and where our aircraft are, they're worldwide. You know, Canada is certainly improving in North America, but the overall global outlook is improving too, so. Yeah, I would add to Gary's point that we are seeing, you know, a lot of interest there, especially for through Falko, but we're also seeing a lot of secondary market interest. You know, we've, we've done quite well with releasing on secondary markets on the older Dash 8s. There's been a lot of movement there.
You know, that, that market can take a bit of time because quite often you're having to reconfigure the aircraft and prep it from a maintenance perspective. It can be a little slow, but we're seeing tons of interest and activity on that side right now as well.
Okay. last question here is on the pilot. Obviously, a tight, tight labor market on the pilot side. How is that at all, if at all, affecting your ability to grow capacity? I know you've- you mentioned you, you had some pilot loss to attrition to other airlines. Curious where they're going and, and whether, whether that's constraining you at all, either to grow or even to ser- on your service level. I know Air Canada and Jazz have had some cancellation spike here on, on service. Just curious if this is all related to the, the pilot shortage, and do you see it at all alleviating, perhaps if we do s- go into a bit of a soft spot here as the economy continues to play itself out?
Yes, certainly, if we see a bit of a soft, soft landing on the economy and things slow down a little bit, that, you know, the pressure will come off without question. You know, right now, what we have today, what we're dealing with today is a lot of movement, a lot of activity, a lot of growth, in the, in the other mainline operators or low-cost operators, however you want to position them. We are kind of the primary, we are the primary regional operator in Canada that has, you know, every pilot, everybody wants our pilots, let's put it that way. There's lots of opportunities for movement, and the one thing we're very good at is training pilots.
We have - Jazz has got their own in-house training, certification, so they do all the certification for the pilots in-house. It's not outsourced. It's a big advantage to the organization. You know, they're good at doing this. We've done this all of our careers, the last 30 years. It's something we're, we're very experienced at. We're very comfortable with it. It's just that right now, there is a lot of movement, and we've been moving a lot of pilots, so there is a bit of a constraint, it will recover here shortly, as we move forward into next year and, and later this year, we're going to see some, I would suspect. It's going to depend on, as you said, what happens in the business, big picture-wise.
If things slow down a little bit, then we'll recover really quickly. If, you know, if the demand continues and we see more growth in the, in the mainline side, we're gonna, we're gonna continue to produce, lots of new pilots, that's for sure.
Right. You know, I just wanna just clarify, you said it will recover kind of in either scenario. Is it because you've got a, do you have some bubble of pilots just on the like, you know, that you're training that will hit soon? Or do you just see it resolving itself as you under normal course of business?
Yeah, it's going to recover no matter what, for sure. It's just a question of timing and demand. If the flow continues...
Got it.
If we see continued movement, it's going to take a little bit longer. If we don't see that and things start to slow down in the industry over the next year or so, then, you know, I think it'll recover pretty quick.
Fantastic. Okay, I really appreciate the color. Thanks.
You bet. Thanks, Walter.
Your next question comes from Kevin Chiang with CIBC. Please go ahead.
Thanks for taking my question. Just on the Fund III, de-delay here, it sounds like I mean, the visibility is tough, but it could be months, hopefully. Of the $500 million, I think you were looking to raise, are you able to quantify maybe how much of this is an issue of that total amount? It sounds like it's a little bit of a regulatory or maybe just a bit of a paperwork issue at worst. Just how much of that $500 million might be tied up here related to this issue that hopefully gets rectified in due course?
Kevin, it's Gary here. $500 million is still a good number. What typically happens in, in these instances is, is you're looking for your lead investor or investors to come in, and, you know, the Falko team's got great relationships. They've had a lot of ongoing discussions on this. It's all been positive. In the background, they've been working with some of these US pension funds and others, just as they work through the market, you know, turmoils and things like that, that are on the go on, on, on that piece, so that they. They've now got their capital allocations or started to put their capital allocations in place. When we look at this piece, it will, you know, the $500 million is a good number. You're looking for your lead investor.
That's who's, you know, that's what the Falko team's working with, and things are looking good, and, and some of them have changed their, their allocations. We're feeling very positive on it. We just don't know the timing back to where Colin's alluded to. We've, we've said, look, you know, we're not sure if it'll happen in the 2023 time frame, but certainly, we do expect it to happen.
Okay. You know, the $50- 100 million of dispositions, I know you, you've been indicating, you know, basically for, for now, I guess, 8 months, that this would be very back, back-end loaded, but there's been minimal, at least from what I can tell in the cash flow statement, minimal asset sales. Just the, the visibility you have on the $50- 100 million, are, are these essentially, you know, good to go and it's just the timing of the execution, or, or are you still, you know, are you still looking to negotiate with people or, or, or various parties on, on, on the sale of these assets?
Kevin, it's Gary, without getting into the status of the piece, we have a trading desk that actively monitors the market. We put aircraft to the market all the time. They're working through that process. We still feel, at this point, comfortable with the $50 -100 million towards the end of the year here. You know, when you look at the process, we're going through that process today, we feel comfortable with where we're at.
Okay. Maybe just last one for me. You know, it, I guess the past couple of calls now, we've talked about, you know, a tight labor market, especially on the pilot side. I guess the one thing that always strikes me is, like, you still have this employee separation program cost that flows through. Just, I know why you're doing it before when you were restructuring the business, but now, just given the labor market you're facing, you know, the need to bring in pilots, just what's in that program? I suspect it's not pilots, or maybe I'm wrong.
It's Gary here. Sorry. There is a small program, back from, you know, one of the, the, labor deals at, at Jazz about five, six years ago, I think it was.
Mm-hmm.
A small amount, you know, some for some senior pilots, but it's-.
Okay.
It's not really a large amount.
Okay. It's still part of that, it's still part of that program from a few, I guess I'll call it way back when. Okay, kind of like the program is still continuing here?
That's right. That's correct.
Okay. Okay, okay, that's helpful. That's it for me. Thank you.
Your next question comes from Konark Gupta with Scotiabank. Please go ahead.
Thanks, operator. Good morning, everyone.
Good morning.
So-
Good morning.
Morning. Morning, guys. I just wanted to first of all, dig into the RAL segment guidance. It seems like you guys have moved up the revenue guidance for the full-year for that segment, but the EBITDA and EBIT guidance have not changed. Can you explain, like, what's the disconnect between that revenue and earnings guidance please?
No, the revenue in the overall section, we've just tweaked it to reflect what's on the go within there. We've had a bit, you know, good luck on the U.S. dollar here in the first part and, you know, certainly, the way it's trending. But as far as the bottom line, the EBITDA and the adjusted EBT, we see them as coming in within the range there. Really nothing more than that.
Nice. Makes sense. Thanks. Like, Fund III, I, I understand, like, you know, it's delayed a little bit here further, which is fine. Seems like it's not contributing in 2023 at this point from earnings standpoint. What's really keeping the overall guidance intact? It's not changing, but Fund III has delayed, so what, what's really offsetting that?
Yeah. Konark, it's Gary again. When we put our guidance out, obviously it has a range and, you know, we did, you know, do some sensitivity around that. You know, our results, generally speaking, have been good in the RAL section and others. And, you know, this, this piece within, you know, Fund III was a portion of our earnings, but it wasn't a significant contributor this year, so that's why you're seeing the ranges stay where they're at.
Okay. Makes sense. Thank you. Just on the asset sales, just, just, building on Kevin's question here. What are these assets, so the, the ones you are looking to sell, and which fund or funds or which part of the business they are coming from?
The, the assets we're looking to sell are on balance sheet. If it's in Fund II, or it's not consolidated, you know, there, there could be transactions in there that will be healthy for fund investors, but that's not included. What we're talking is, on balance sheet and including Fund I.
Fund II and I together, right?
Yeah. Fund II is not consolidated, so it's excluded from that. We're looking for consolidated aircraft on the balance sheet that generate cash for us.
I see. Okay, thanks. The last one for me, on, on the pilot side, so, A, do you have any, you know, major, coming labor negotiations coming up, either on the pilot side or some other unions you have? How does this whole turnover situation, you know, like, create difficulty for your customers, and how does it impact your, your relationship with customers?
Hi, Konark Gupta, it's Colin Copp. You know, like, we won't ever comment on our pilot negotiations or discussions, obviously, in any significant way. You know, we have a pretty long history of, you know, and a track record of always finding solutions and working well with our unions. You know, you can only expect that in this environment where we have lots of activity, we have, you know, a lot of flow, you know, we're obviously talking to our unions about certain things and engaged with them. You know, we'll see, we'll see how things progress over the coming months. You know, our unions and us are, and our management team are typically in discussions continuously, especially in an environment like this, for sure.
Okay. That's great, Colin. Thanks so much. I appreciate the time, guys.
Thanks, Konark.
Your next question comes from Tim James with TD Cowen. Please go ahead.
Thanks very much. Good morning, everyone.
Good morning. Morning.
I'm wondering if you, if you could talk about the, the, the nature of the 20 transactions that occurred in the quarter. Were those all just re-leasing transactions, you know, commitments for future purposes? Just what was the nature of, of those 20 transactions, please?
It, it was generally re-leasing transactions, Tim, at the Falko unit there. So, you know, they weren't new placements necessarily. They were just, you know, rollovers and extensions. Two E190s there as well. Yeah.
Were, were there any particular aircraft? You mentioned older Dash 8s. Does that mean a lot of those re-leasings or that was a sort of a, a fairly significant portion of the 20 transactions? Were there any sort of characteristics, jets, turboprops, you know, regions of the world, or was it fairly diversified?
Sorry, the 20 that are mentioned, Tim, are really related to Falko. Those are specific to Falko.
Right
... portfolio. The other comments I was making relates to Dash 8 classics, which really is our, our inventory that we have at Voyageur. We've been placing a lot of those aircraft here this last little while. Those are incremental to the 20 releases that we mentioned in the press release and in my previous comments. Tim, it's Gary here. It was nine different airline customers, you know, operating basically throughout the world: Australia, Asia, Africa, Europe, and both North and South America. It was a pretty diverse group that no one in particular, you know, one item I would focus in on.
Okay. Just to follow up to that, could you characterize the, the, the duration of the new contracts at all with these? Or what, what, what sort of time frames you're entering into, whether, you know, it's an average or a range of, of maturities?
Yeah, I don't have that with us. They would just be typical lease extensions, probably. We can get you that information.
Okay. Okay. I guess my second question, looking at the capital expenditures, overall, your guidance for the year is unchanged. It looks like there's a little bit of movement, though, within the components, a bit of an increase to capitalize maintenance overhauls and aircraft acquisitions and improvements. Could you just sort of outline what the moving parts were there and what the reason behind that was?
There's really no no big reason. It's just more of a classification, as to, to where, where it goes, and, and basically the overall number is about the same. It, it's... there's really not much to, to read into it, too.
Okay. All right. Thank you very much. Those are all the questions I had.
Thank you. Thank you.
Your next question comes from David Ocampo with Cormark Securities. Please go ahead.
Thanks. Good morning, everyone.
Morning. Good morning.
I just wanted to touch on the pilot shortage. I know we've been asked a bunch of questions there, but I was hoping you guys can walk us through how the flow-through agreement with, with Air Canada works in a little bit more detail. I guess I'm just really curious if the pilots are, are contractually obligated to move over to AC, if it's in their agreement or not.
Hi, David, it's Colin. No, there's, there's no obligation for an individual to have to go. It's, it's a process whereby the individual comes into the organization, and they're given an opportunity to transition by going through a process. They put their name on a list and so on. It's an automated process, and Air Canada then does a, a review of those individuals, and so many vacancies per year.
Got it. I guess, sorry, Colin. I guess if you take a look at the list over the last year or so, just given the shortage, are the pilots getting a full fill on their transfer over to AC? Like, if 100 people put their name on the list, 100 people have moved over in the last year?
Sorry, there's some background noise there, but, can you, can you ask that again? Sorry.
Yeah. I guess if there's, 100 people that, that put their name on the list to move over to AC, in the last year or so, have all 100 moved over, like 100% fill rate move over to AC, just given the shortage that you're seeing in the industry right now?
The fill rate is based on what the demand Air Canada has. Whatever, whatever demand Air Canada decides, you know, like, we've given you the numbers basically there, that's been 300 captains there we've moved in the past 12 months. That demand is really set by Air Canada, so we don't, we don't have any connection to that in any way. Our job is really just to prepare these individuals and to support the flow. What, what it does for us in turn is it provides, you know, a great opportunity. It's a, it's a leverage point for us when it comes to hiring in the industry. Yeah, there's been no, there's been no real constraint on individuals being able to go.
It's been more the, the other way, where we've been providing a lot of pilots to the industry, and it's, it's put some pressure on our ability to execute on ours. We've been working really hard to get that caught up, for sure.
Got it. Then just sticking with the same theme here, I mean, you, you guys talked about, you know, lower capacity that you're providing AC just because of the shortage. It does look like AC has, has looked elsewhere for capacity, at least for the time being. Do you guys think this is a short-lived phenomenon, and if we fast-forward, call it two or three years from now, you'll once again be the sole regional supplier for AC and you can grow that CPA income again?
Yeah. Look, we, we, we still have exclusivity. There's no question about that, and Air Canada agrees with that. We, we came to an agreement for, you know, this, little bit of extra lift that they had, they had asked for, which made sense for the red team when you look at, the bigger picture. We, you know, we worked through that with, with Air Canada and everybody. We don't really see this as a loss of exclusivity in any way. We continue to have that and, you know, have a strong relationship with Air Canada, and we don't see, you know, we don't see anything really significantly changing as we move forward.
Things will change in the industry as far as needs go, you know, Air Canada's needs and what do they need for capacity lift on the regional markets, all that type of stuff. You know, we'll always be there to support that, for sure.
Perfect. That's all the questions I had for you guys.
Thanks, David.
Your next question comes from Renato Monzon with BMO Capital Markets. Please go ahead.
Yeah, thank you. Good morning, everyone. I guess my first question is, what are the implications of the delay in launching Fund III? 2023 guidance remains unchanged. I guess the delay in Fund III would affect to some extent the ROIC and ROE profile of the company. I mean, also, what are the implications of this type of delays in your internal midterm objectives beyond 2023? Does this impact your leverage target into 2024, for example?
Hi, it's Gary here. If you look through the overview section, in that we haven't changed our guidance. Obviously, when we put a range in, you know, we have some sensitivity around it. Fund III wasn't a major part of our guidance within 2023, hence why we're able to maintain it. If you look at the fund and you go back to our Investor Day, you know, when you look at the fund, it's $500 million of committed capital. Once that's in place, it generates somewhere between 1% and 1.5% of the management fee. That's kind of the piece that you would be looking at as far as the modeling goes. You could figure it out from there.
The carry and other pieces like that happen much later. That's really the implication of it. Back to the, the point we made earlier, we're, we're, you know, we're confident in the fund. It's just a matter of when it closed, when we can get it closed.
Okay, that's great. Thank you for the color. Then my next question is: given the strong recovery of the entire aviation ecosystem, do you see more interest from the investment community compared to maybe three months ago? How would you guys characterize the interest from investors? Is it getting better, or is it stable maybe compared to Q1?
It's, it's Gary here. On, on the, I assume you're asking about the funds. We still see good investor, interest. Jeremy and the Falko team have continued to have good discussions. This really, you know, the bit of delay that we're seeing is really, you know, market-driven and capital allocation-driven, in our opinion. You know, there's, there's no lack of interest in the space.
Okay. Okay, that's great. My last question is on the Jazz pilots. Given that training activities are higher nowadays, adjust to onboard new pilots, and given the high levels of attrition to Air Canada and other airlines, what are the cost implications for Chorus? What type of pressure do you expect on margins?
It's Gary here again. On the CPA piece, we have a fixed margin in place with Air Canada that does not vary regardless of flying. If you look in our overview section, we've, you know, reminded everybody of that. You know, from an economic perspective, as far as the fixed fee, there is no impact associated with the reduced flying. Back to what Colin talked about earlier, we coordinate very well with Air Canada on the pilot resourcing and scheduling and the other side. This is, you know, something we work very hard with them to make sure that it is coordinated.
Okay. Okay, that's all from, from me. Thank you.
Ladies and gentlemen, as a reminder, should you have a question, please press star followed by the one. There are no further questions at this time. Please proceed.
Thank you, Joel. Thank you everyone for taking part in today's call. Have a nice day.
Ladies and gentlemen, this concludes your conference call for today. We thank you for participating and ask that you please disconnect your lines.