Good morning. My name is Ashley, and I'll be your conference operator today. At this time, I would like to welcome everyone to the Pangaea Logistics Solutions First Quarter 2022 earnings teleconference. Our hosts for today's call are Mr. Mark Filanowski, Chief Executive Officer, Mr. Gianni Del Signore, Chief Financial Officer, and Mr. Mads Petersen, Chief Operating Officer. Today's call is being recorded and will be made available for replay beginning at 11:00 A.M. Eastern Standard Time. The recording can be accessed by dialing 800-938-1584 domestic or 402-220-1542 international. All lines are currently muted, and after the prepared remarks, there will be a live question-and-answer session. If you would like to ask a question during the Q&A segment, please press star one on your phone. If your question has been answered, you may remove yourself from the queue at any time by pressing the pound key.
We do ask that you please pick up your handsets for optimal sound quality. It is now my pleasure to turn the floor over to Ms. Emily Blum with Prosek Partners.
Thank you, Operator, and thank you for joining us for this morning's First Quarter 2022 earnings conference call for Pangaea Logistics Solutions. With us today from the company are CEO Mr. Mark Filanowski, CFO Mr. Gianni Del Signore, and COO Mads Boye Petersen. Before I turn the call over to Mark, I'd like to read the Safe Harbor Statement. This call could contain forward-looking statements within the meaning of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995 about Pangaea Logistics Solutions. Forward-looking statements are statements that are not based on historical facts. Such forward-looking statements are based upon the current beliefs and expectations of Pangaea Logistics Solutions management and are subject to risks and uncertainties which could cause the actual results to differ from the forward-looking statements. Such risks are more fully discussed in Pangaea Logistics Solutions filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission.
The information set forth herein should be understood in light of such risks. Pangaea Logistics Solutions does not assume any obligation to update the information contained in this conference call. Also, please recall that a supplemental slide presentation will accompany this call. Those slides can be found attached to the 8-K that was filed with last evening's release, which is available on the investors section of www.pangaeall.com under Company Filings or on SEC's website at sec.gov. Now, I would like to turn the call over to Mr. Mark Filanowski. Mark.
Thank you, Emily, and thanks to all who have joined us today for Pangaea's First Quarter 2022 earnings call. This morning, I'll provide an update on our operations and the overall market before turning the call over to Gianni, our CFO, to provide a more detailed overview of the First Quarter of 2022 financials. We'll then open the line for questions. We hope you've had time to review our press release and accompanying presentation, which were issued last evening. It was a volatile market within the quarter, but overall improving dry bulk market fundamentals, timely expansion of our fleet, and an early winter ice season resulted in another strong quarter to start 2022.
Led by market strength, pushed by our business plan and our people, navigating seasonal operating challenges, and trade-related disruptions caused by the war in Ukraine, we reported quarterly net income of $20.1 million or $0.45 per share. Market strength continues to build in most geographic areas where we operate. At the end of the first week of May, our second quarter time charter equivalent booked indicates a rate of $29,400 per day, an increase from our actual Q1 time charter equivalent rate. As we move toward the third quarter, seasonally our strongest, we don't see a reason for a weakening market. Supply of new ships is constrained for years, and the existing global fleet in use is stretched by high fuel prices, congestion, and increases in ton-mile demand.
We reiterate our tempered enthusiasm (this is shipping, after all) by announcing our board has decided to increase our quarterly dividend by 50% for the June payment date, our second increase this year, and our sixth consecutive dividend payment. We want our shareholders to participate in the results of a good market and the hard work our people put in every day from decks and desks. We have also tried to differentiate our business model and our performance from our peers. One way is to examine results that matter. How productive is a company at making the best use of the assets at its disposal? We think time charter equivalent through cycles is an excellent measure of how effective a shipping company is in its market.
I am pleased to tell you that we learned last week that Pangaea outperformed 20 other publicly listed dry bulk shipping owners and operators in the annual measurement performed by VesselIndex, finishing in second place this year after placing first for the previous three years. It really is hard to be number one every year, especially in the moving market we had last year. Over the last four years, since these statistics have been published by VesselIndex, Pangaea has outperformed all other companies included in the survey. We more than doubled the performance of the second-place entrants. Over four years, Pangaea has averaged an outperformance of 36.6% or $3,372 per day per owned vessel over the industry index and $1,397 per day per vessel over the second-place finisher. This independent measurement of Pangaea's outperformance demonstrates the power of our business strategy and trading platform over long-term business cycles.
As we look ahead, we remain encouraged by our strategic position and our ability to capitalize on improving market fundamentals. We continue to supplement our successful business model by ramping up our efforts in logistics at ports we operate in the U.S. We are participating in infrastructure cargoes and projects, meaning we are stevedoring breakbulk solar components and cement and bauxite, and we are bidding on projects to support wind farm installations. There is no doubt this service is complementary to our base shipping business. We have attracted a veteran of this space, Brent Mahana, to work with us to expand our efforts. We hope to make this part of our business a real contributor over the next few years. I'd now like to turn the call over to Gianni to go over the numbers in more detail. Gianni?
Thank you, Mark, and thank you all for joining us on today's call. 2021 was a record year for Pangaea, and our momentum continued into 2022. Despite a volatile rate environment during the first quarter, with the average of the Pacific Panamax and Supramax indexes ranging from 16,000 to a high of over 30,000, we generated Adjusted EBITDA of $31.3 million and adjusted net income of $15.7 million. Our average net TCE earned of $26,472 per day increased over 60% compared to the first quarter of 2021 and exceeded the market by approximately 17%. We believe we are well positioned to extract the most out of any market that may be ahead. We continue to deploy our assets to serve our clients' cargo needs, and within the quarter, took delivery of the Bulk Concord, a 2009-built Panamax, giving us the flexibility to sell the Bulk Pangaea, a 1999-built Panamax vessel.
Although we recognized a $3 million book loss on impairment during the quarter, the sale of the Bulk Pangaea, once completed in June, will result in approximately $8.5 million in positive cash from investing activities. Turning to our full-year financials starting on page 6 of our presentation, you will see a year-over-year increase in our total revenues driven by an improving market and an increase in our achieved TCE rate. Voyage revenues increased approximately 62% to $176 million, and charter revenues decreased approximately 5% to $15.4 million as our fleet was deployed on more voyage charters compared to time charters during this quarter as compared to Q1 of 2021. Charter expenses paid to third-party shipowners increased to $77.7 million from $53.6 million, a 45% increase due to increases in market rates to chartering vessels.
However, total chartering days decreased 19% as the expansion of our owned fleet during 2021 reduced the number of vessels needed to supplement the owned fleet at prevailing market rates. Further, the expansion of our owned fleet throughout 2021 led to an increase in vessel operating expenses, which increased by 55% to $13.2 million compared to $8.5 million. Vessel operating expenses on a per-day basis, excluding management fees, increased 7% from $5,014 per day to $5,345 per day. Unrealized gains on derivative instruments were $7.5 million, representing the change in market value of open derivative positions from December 31, 2021 to March 31, 2022. Within other current assets, we recorded FFA assets of $4.9 million, fuel swaps of $4 million, and interest rate cap of $2.4 million.
As we've discussed in the past, we utilize forward freight agreements and bunker swaps to selectively hedge our exposure to the market on our long-term cargo contracts and forward cargo bookings. While this locks in future cash flows, the mark-to-market unrealized gains or losses can lead to fluctuations in the company's reported results on a period-to-period basis, while settlement of the position and execution of the physical will occur at a future date. Net income for the quarter was $20.2 million or $0.45 per share compared to net income of $5.8 million or $0.13 per share for the same period in 2021.
Moving on to the balance sheet and cash flows on page seven of our presentation, we ended the quarter with $69.9 million of total cash and cash equivalents, an increase of $13.7 million from year-end, driven by $32 million in positive operating cash flow offset by the acquisition of the Bulk Concord and related financing activities. Collectively, we are encouraged by the steps we've taken to strengthen our financial position and return value to shareholders as we have increased our quarterly dividend by 50% to $0.075 for the June payment date, our second increase this year, and our sixth consecutive dividend payment. With that, I will now turn the call back over to Mark for any additional remarks before we get to the Q&A portion of the call. Mark?
Thank you, Gianni. We thank our customers, business partners, and shareholders for their continued commitment and partnership, and we look forward to updating you further in coming quarters. I'll now open the floor for questions.
At this time, if you would like to ask a question, please press star one on your touch-tone phone. You may withdraw your question at any time by pressing the pound key. Once again, that is star and one. We will take our first question from Liam Burke with B. Riley Securities. Please go ahead. Your line is open.
Thank you. Good morning, Mark. Morning, Gianni. Good morning, Mads.
Hi, Liam. Thanks for joining us.
Thank you. Mark, you mentioned your prepared statements that there's a fair amount of scarcity in assets in your asset class. If I'm looking at volumes of traffic in the Northern Sea routes, they're growing pretty rapidly. What does that mean for future rates and asset values going forward?
Liam, we're seeing a lot of tightness in the markets. Almost everywhere we look, market rates are really good. I mentioned that for the second quarter year to date, we're over $29,000 a day booked, and the market looks favorable from there for the rest of this quarter, which is about halfway done. For the rest of the year, we move into our summer ice season, and that's always good for us. It keeps us busy at ice premium rates for 10 of our ships at least. And the rest of the market still seems pretty firm for the rest of the year. The forward numbers look good for the rest of this year. In terms of ship values, ship values have increased substantially over the past two years or so, ratcheting up very nicely.
The ships that we ordered in 2019, delivered in 2021, they were ordered for $38 million each. We think they're probably at least 20% higher in value today, but there aren't a lot of these ships trading because they are valuable to the current owners. In terms of the values of the rest of the fleets around the world, I think anything that floats is up substantially from where it was two years ago. Older ships are multiples, maybe, of what they were back two years ago. Newer ships are way above where the values were some time ago. New building costs are rising, but some people are brave enough to order new buildings at the current prices, but you've got to wait a while for your ships. So that's pushed up the prices of secondhand ships.
Looking at our Net Asset Value, we don't think it's a good way to measure where your stock trades compared to Net Asset Value, but our Net Asset Value has increased substantially over the past couple of years. If you look at it today, it's a little bit hard to decipher on our balance sheet because of the consolidated joint venture assets. You've got to do a little adding and subtracting, and then you've got to consider, I guess, maybe adding a little bit more because our trading platform does add, as I mentioned in my prepared remarks, add substantial extra value when we trade our assets in the market. So we think we're trading today the value of our shares is substantially under our Net Asset Value, and I think that's a good indicator for the future of our company and where we stand.
Great. Thank you. And you did sell a vessel, the Bulk Pangaea. What motivated you to sell it if asset prices are so valuable, if your current asset group is so valuable?
That ship was purchased maybe about 10 years ago for a specific trade for our bauxite business, Jamaica to Gramercy, Louisiana. In that trade for well over 100 voyages, and she was due for docking in early this year and installation of a ballast water treatment system. Again, that's a 10-year contract we have. We have 10 years more left to go. We thought it was better to trade that ship for a newer vessel that we committed to purchase back in November and put it into the trade just very recently, so it's really a trade.
Oh, okay. So I just want to clarify that the contract still exists and you're still going to move that cargo. You're just trading up on the vessel.
Correct.
Okay. Great.
Reinvesting in a 1999-built ship. We bought a replacement ship that will see it through the next 10 years.
Great. Thank you, Mark.
We'll take our next question from Climent Molins with Value Investor Edge. Please go ahead. Your line is open.
Good morning. Thank you for taking my questions. You provided some interesting commentary regarding your exposure to both ports and terminals, and I was wondering if you could expand on the new projects you mentioned, especially on the wind side. Should we expect incremental CapEx, or are the port facilities ready for this additional business?
The port and terminal business is complementary to what we're doing. We try to make it complementary to what we're doing. If we can find stevedoring business, for instance, that complements ocean freight, that's really what we're trying to do. We are involved in one specific project in Brayton Point, Massachusetts. It's been identified as a very valuable property for support of wind farm installations offshore. We don't have a fixed contract to use that space for this business right now, but we are working on it. It will take some CapEx to improve that area, but that's all built into the funding for the contract the way it's been contemplated. We're also in one of our terminals in Sabine, Texas. We're taking breakbulk solar parts, components into Sabine and taking them off ships that come in and distributing them in the area.
So we are involved in that kind of business. We expect it to grow substantially over the next few years. It's not a large part of our operation today, but it is a focus that we have to complement our basic shipping business.
All right. That's a very tough point. And the board approved a significant increase to the dividend, which comes on top of other recent increases. How should we think about your capital allocation priorities going forward? And I was wondering regarding shareholder returns, is there any appetite for potentially formalizing a dividend policy tied to EBITDA with cash flow or net income, or does the board prefer to retain more optionality?
To date, the board has preferred to retain optionality, always looking forward to capital expenditures, including fleet renewal and considering that this is a pretty volatile business. But also, on the other side, where we have a business plan that does protect us from the downside through contracts we have in place that go for long term. So to date, the board has always considered that it should be a quarter-to-quarter decision rather than a long-term decision to commit to any formula. That could change in the future, but right now, the board considers flexibility to be the key.
Makes sense. That's all from me. Congratulations for this quarter, and thank you for taking my questions.
Thank you.
Once again, as a reminder to ask a question today, that is star and one on your touch-tone phone. We'll go next to Poe Fratt with Alliance Global Partners. Please go ahead.
Good morning, Mark. Good morning, Gianni. Good morning, Mads. I just had a couple of quick questions. One is, when you look at the Bulk Pangaea, what would have been the scrap value on that vessel right now?
Oh, probably $6 million, plus minus.
Can you just walk me through, given the scrap value and the potential cash that you would have been generating on an annual basis, which probably is north of $4 million or so, why you wouldn't have kept that in the fleet and run it out until it was and then eventually scrap it as opposed to selling it into the market?
I guess a couple of things, Poe. One is the time and cost to put the ship through a docking and then looking at the trading value of that ship. As the ship gets older, it becomes a little more difficult to trade. It becomes a little more difficult to get the premiums we talk about when we study our income statement. So the best use of that asset would be in the bauxite trade that I talked about. But that contract has another 10 years of life, and we didn't think that the Bulk Pangaea has another 10 years of life, even after we did the dry dock and maintenance and improvements on the ship. So it was really just a trade-off to make a long-term fulfillment of our contract obligations under that contract.
Okay. And then when you look at the ancillary businesses, for lack of a better word, the stevedoring and other services that you're providing, did that have a material impact on the quarter? And then maybe you could just give us an idea of sort of, as you look into 2023 and 2024, where potentially we might see a more material impact.
It's not a material impact on the quarter yet. It's a focus of our efforts. It's what we try to do to increase our, I guess, participation in the throughput of the cargo. The eventual goal that we want to achieve here is to go to a customer and say, "Give us your entire give us control over the entire supply chain. We'll take your product from the mine well. We'll put it into your production process onshore, and we'll move the cargo in all places. And it'll be better for you because it'll simplify your operation, maybe cost you less overall, take inefficiencies out of the supply line, and we'll take on a little more risk, but we want to get a little bit more for it." So that's the whole concept.
We've done it in some places, but we want to make it a real part of our business to go out to people, maybe make some joint venture or operating agreements with some barge lines, with some stevedores. We've done some of that, but we want to do more. How long that will take? I can't give you a timeline on it, but we're concentrating on it. We're successful at it in Sabine. We're successful at it in Gramercy, in the Mississippi River. We've been successful at it in Brayton Point in Massachusetts. And we're working on Florida and other spots in Texas now and the Northeast. So it's something we're concentrating on a lot, and we've got this new guy, Brent, who's an expert at attracting cargo and making these kinds of supply lines really work for customers. So we're very hopeful there.
Great. And then you talked about the Ice Class market a little bit earlier in the call. Can you quantify the premium that was realized in the first quarter for the Ice Class and potentially what's built into the second quarter forward cover? That's a pretty healthy premium over the market still. And then you said the third quarter is going to be the strongest. So does that imply that the TC rate premium could expand into the third quarter too?
Yeah. I'll go ahead and let Mads address the premium we saw in the first quarter in terms of ice class. These ships, when they trade ice in the winter season, they're not put on time charter. When they're in the ice, we get an additional premium for those days that the ships trade in the ice. What that average is, I'm going to let Mads talk about that. Going into the third quarter under our Baffinland contract, we have a fixed rate. Well, it's not totally fixed, but it's a commitment to use the ships for a certain number of days per vessel at a specific contract rate. So why don't I let Mads address the premium that we see on those ice class ships?
Sure. Thanks, Mark. Poe, the overall premium for the Pangaea fleet was 17% for the quarter, right? We don't usually break out the individual ice premium, but it is higher than 17%. It was a bit of an unusual season in the sense that it actually started quite early. We started earning premiums earlier than we usually did. And then, of course, there was a bit of, to say the least, disruption with the fallout from the Ukrainian situation. But still, overall, we actually managed to get a pretty good season out of it in the end. And, of course, for Q2, we never really had much of an ice premium there historically. And, of course, now we're gearing up for the Baffinland summer season, which we have high hopes for, of course.
Okay. Great. And then, Mark, you talked about the dividend. You bumped it $0.025 a quarter, big percentage. But how should we be looking going forward on the dividend? It seems like, given your strong financial position, the outlook for the market, that additional increases should be or are likely, at least in my mind. Can you talk about, are you looking at a potential set increase per quarter per share and ignoring the percentage increase or sort of how you're looking at that? And then maybe if you could talk about share buybacks in the context that your public market float has changed over the last year from the standpoint of a board member or a holding associated with board member, they're out. You also have other circumstances that made your public float go up.
Can you just talk about share buybacks in the context of a public market float that's still not as constricted as it was in the past?
Sure, Poe. Our thoughts on all these things are evolving as cash starts to accumulate on the balance sheet. We think the $0.075 dividend that we declared the other day that will be paid in June is a pretty nice reward. We certainly hope you are right that the cash keeps building, that the market stays strong, and we can increase the dividend more. We've always thought of buybacks as a way that we would further restrict our public trading element of our shares. We've always been reluctant to do that. It's been only about nine months since the large shareholder Cartesian, who held a third of the shares in their fund, started to get out of the stock. It got pretty easily absorbed into the market over the following months, and by summer last year, they were totally out.
I think as we look forward and get a little more comfortable with the trading volume of the stock, maybe we'll think of stock buybacks a little differently. But it hasn't been on the top of our priority list in the way of to get funds and rewards back to shareholders at this point.
Poe, if I could add just one thing on the dividend. I think one of the most important factors for us and our board as we assess the level each quarter is to make sure it's as sustainable as possible. I think what we want to do is have a dividend that is not going to fluctuate significantly quarter to quarter. We want it to be as sustainable as possible for a longer term. And I think that's one factor that we continue to pay close attention to as we make that decision.
Great. And just to check the box on the macro, Mads, are you seeing any things that concern you out in the marketplace from the standpoint of rates are high, bunker prices are high? There's been disruption from Ukraine. Anything that concerns you from the standpoint of what's going on in the market or even in other places around the world?
I think, I mean, the global market is sort of an extremely dynamic, fluid place. What tends to happen when there are disruptions, whether that is COVID or whether that is the situation in Ukraine, the market adjusts actually pretty quickly, right? We have been very busy helping our customers who were previously, for instance, sourcing their raw material in Russia to help them as they look for alternative places to get their iron ore, for instance, or their anthracite. That drives up the ton miles. I think the overall uncertainties in the world at the moment is sort of, it appears from our perspective at least, is very much being balanced out by actually increased ton mile demand we're seeing. I think you'll hear the same story from most of the Baltic guys on their calls, right?
Then we are really seeing that trades that didn't exist four months ago suddenly are sort of back in fashion, right? And so a lot of things are being turned on the tap. But overall, I think the Baltic is in a pretty good situation, right? As Mark alluded to, the newbuilding costs are high. That tends to keep the overall supply of ships in check. But it is shipping after all, so you never know what happens sort of on the demand side. But generally, from what we're seeing and what we're hearing from our customers is that generally, sort of the mood is pretty upbeat, to be honest.
Great. Gentlemen, thank you for your time.
Thank you, Poe.
Thanks, Poe.
There are no further questions at this time. I will turn the call back over to Mark Filanowski for any closing remarks.
Thank you for joining us today to talk about our earnings and our prospects. I wish you all a great day. Hope to hear you again next quarter.
Thank you. And this does conclude today's program. Thank you for your participation. You may disconnect at any time.