DT
Drilling Tools International Corp (DTI)·Q1 2025 Earnings Summary
Executive Summary
- Q1 2025 revenue rose to $42.88M (+7.6% q/q; +16.0% y/y) on stronger tool rentals and product sales; Adjusted EBITDA was $10.75M (essentially flat q/q; +y/y), while GAAP diluted EPS was -$0.05 due to a $1.9M non-cash goodwill impairment; Adjusted diluted EPS was $0.02 .
- Against S&P Global consensus, DTI delivered a clean beat: Revenue $42.88M vs $38.53M*, Primary EPS (S&P normalized) $0.02 vs -$0.01*, and EBITDA $10.75M vs $9.32M* (consensus coverage thin at 1–2 estimates)*. Values retrieved from S&P Global.
- Management cut FY25 guidance on macro/rig softness and pricing pressure: Revenue to $145–$165M (from $163–$183M), Adjusted EBITDA to $32–$42M (from $40–$50M), Adj. FCF to $14–$19M (from $17–$21M), and Adj. EBITDA margin to 22–25% (from 25–27%) .
- Board authorized up to $10M share repurchases, signaling confidence and adding a capital-returns lever amid volatility .
- Stock reaction catalysts: estimate beat vs low expectations, but guidance cut and tariff/rig-count commentary imply near-term margin pressure; buyback may support shares on weakness .
What Went Well and What Went Wrong
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What Went Well
- Revenue growth amid a declining global rig count, driven by rental mix and product traction; revenue +16% y/y and +7.6% q/q with Adjusted EBITDA up ~18% y/y; CEO highlighted resilience despite headwinds .
- Strategic progress: integration and product expansion (RotoSteer, MechLOK swivel, Rubblizer) supporting rental mix and international traction; management expects better cost absorption ahead .
- Capital allocation: initiation of up to $10M buyback reflecting perceived undervaluation and balance sheet flexibility .
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What Went Wrong
- Guidance cut on tariffs, recession fears, OPEC+ output, U.S. land rig softness and pricing pressure; FY25 revenue/EBITDA/FCF ranges all lowered .
- GAAP loss (-$1.67M) due to non-cash goodwill impairment tied to Vernal, Utah bit repair and deep casing tools reporting units; while non-cash, it pressured GAAP EPS .
- Margin pressures from pricing and mix; management expects pricing-driven compression in 2H25 despite cost actions (targeting ≥$6M annualized savings) .
Financial Results
Segment/Revenue Mix
KPIs and Balance Sheet (Quarter-End)
Estimate vs Actual – Q1 2025 (S&P Global consensus)
Values marked with * are retrieved from S&P Global (via GetEstimates).
Guidance Changes
Earnings Call Themes & Trends
Management Commentary
- “We are pleased to report first quarter sequential and year-over-year revenue growth and solid adjusted EBITDA despite industry headwinds.” – CEO Wayne Prejean .
- “We see increased volatility and uncertainty… tariffs, recession fears… OPEC+’s decision to increase production… we implemented a program to cut expenses by approximately $6 million this year.” – CEO .
- “We recorded a noncash goodwill write-down… attributable to… Vernal, Utah bit repair… and deep casing tools… does not affect liquidity, free cash flow or adjusted EBITDA.” – CFO David Johnson .
- “Our diversified manufacturing base and supply chain… and ability to curtail growth CapEx… insulate us from tariff risk.” – CEO .
- “Western Hemisphere steady; Eastern Hemisphere choppy due to deep casing tools exposure… expect EH contribution to grow as the year progresses.” – CFO .
Q&A Highlights
- Free cash flow durability: Cost reductions and capex timing underpin FCF despite expected 2H softness; ability to defer growth capex if needed .
- Eastern Hemisphere outlook: Saudi offshore rig reductions and Mexico weighed on deep casing sales; traction improving via ED Projects technologies and D&R tools .
- Quarterly cadence: Company views the rest of the year holistically; anticipates U.S. softness and Canadian seasonality; difficult to pinpoint intra-year trajectories .
- Interest expense variability: Range depends on debt reduction versus buybacks and capex pacing .
- Capex priorities: Focused on growth tools (stabilizers, swivels, RotoSteer) while sustaining legacy rental fleet; nimble to curtail if macro worsens .
Estimates Context
- Q1 2025 vs S&P Global: Revenue $42.88M vs $38.53M*, Primary EPS (S&P normalized) $0.02 vs -$0.01*, EBITDA $10.75M vs $9.32M*; beats across all three metrics (note normalized EPS compares to S&P “Primary EPS,” which may differ from GAAP diluted EPS) . Values retrieved from S&P Global.
- Consensus breadth is limited (1–2 estimates), increasing dispersion risk*.
Key Takeaways for Investors
- Q1 delivered a solid top-line and EBITDA beat vs S&P consensus despite macro softness, aided by rental mix and integration benefits .
- Guidance reset lower on tariffs/pricing/rig count caution; expect margin compression in 2H25 even as cost savings begin to flow through .
- Non-GAAP adjustments matter: a non-cash goodwill impairment drove GAAP loss; operational performance better reflected in Adjusted EPS/EBITDA .
- Eastern Hemisphere is becoming a more meaningful growth vector (11% mix), helping offset North American softness; product innovations (RotoSteer, MechLOK, Rubblizer) support rental growth .
- Capital allocation now includes buybacks (up to $10M), creating support for the equity and signaling confidence in medium-term value .
- Near-term trading setup: beats vs low expectations + buyback support vs guidance cut and 2H pricing pressure; watch updates on cost savings realization and EH contribution ramp .
- Medium-term thesis: diversified footprint, accretive M&A, and technology-led rental mix position DTI to expand margins as activity stabilizes and pricing pressure abates .
Notes: Values marked with * are retrieved from S&P Global (via GetEstimates).