KC
KIRBY CORP (KEX)·Q4 2024 Earnings Summary
Executive Summary
- Q4 2024 delivered $802.3M revenue (+0.4% YoY, -3.5% QoQ) and GAAP EPS of $0.74; adjusted EPS of $1.29 excluded a $56.3M inventory impairment and a $10.9M Louisiana tax law credit .
- Marine Transportation remained the growth engine: revenue +3% YoY with operating margin rising to 18.4% (from 15.1% LY), while Distribution & Services (D&S) softened (revenue -3% YoY, 8.0% margin) amid oil & gas weakness .
- 2025 guide calls for EPS growth of 15–25% YoY, inland margins +200–300 bps for the year, coastal margins in the mid-teens, and operating cash flow of $620–$720M with capex of $280–$320M (lower vs. 2024) .
- Cash generation was strong: Q4 adjusted EBITDA $172.3M; operating cash flow $247.4M; free cash flow $150.7M; $105M of debt repaid and $33.3M of buybacks executed in Q4 .
- Key narrative for 2025: tight supply, limited newbuilds, high utilization, and term renewals support pricing in inland/coastal; D&S power gen strength offsets oil & gas softness—setup seen as favorable for margin expansion and EPS growth .
What Went Well and What Went Wrong
What Went Well
- Inland and coastal pricing/margins: Inland operating margins ~20% (segment 18.4%) with high-single-digit term renewals; coastal term renewals up mid-to-high 20% YoY and low-teens operating margin despite shipyards .
- Robust cash generation and deleveraging: Q4 operating cash flow $247.4M; free cash flow $150.7M; debt reduced by $105M; liquidity $582.6M; debt-to-cap down to 20.7% .
- Management confidence for 2025: “we expect…15–25% year-over-year growth in earnings per share” and inland margin up 200–300 bps; coastal mid-teens margins for the year .
Selected quotes:
- “Adjusted earnings for the quarter were $1.29 per share.”
- “We are very tight in terms of supply and demand right now… that… drives pricing.”
- “Our barge utilization is strong and we are realizing strong rate increases… very favorable outlook for our business as we look into the coming year.”
What Went Wrong
- One-time impairment hit GAAP: $56.3M non-cash impairment tied to conventional diesel frac equipment as the market shifts toward e-frac; partially offset by $10.9M deferred tax credit .
- Seasonal/operational headwinds: Q4 saw weather/lock delays (delay days +30% QoQ) and typical seasonal D&S weakness; coastal shipyards tempered quarterly revenues/margins .
- D&S oil & gas weakness: Oil & gas revenues -38% YoY with mid-to-high single-digit margins; management expects 2025 O&G revenues down high-single to low-double digits as shift to e-frac continues .
Financial Results
Consolidated P&L Snapshot (YoY and QoQ context, estimates unavailable)
Note on estimates: Wall Street consensus from S&P Global was not retrievable at this time due to access limits; please advise if you’d like us to refresh when available.
Segment Performance
Cash Generation
Marine KPIs (Inland)
Guidance Changes
Earnings Call Themes & Trends
Management Commentary
- Strategy and outlook: “All in all, we have a very favorable outlook for our business as we look into the coming year.”
- Inland/coastal pricing: “We are very tight in terms of supply and demand right now… that… drives pricing.”
- Cost pressures support pricing: “Shipyards… have the same labor constraints… anything electronic, we’ve seen inflation… we need the pricing to continue to march up to offset some of that inflation.”
- Newbuild economics: “Spot pricing is well above term… to justify building new equipment… a 2 barge tow would need… ~$14,000 a day.”
- Power generation: “Power gen is a real thing. The data center demand is real… backlog… in the hundreds of millions… we will hit the milestone of delivering 1 gigawatt of natural gas power generation products.”
Q&A Highlights
- Pricing and utilization: Q4 spot dipped 0–2% but recovered in January; inland utilization reached 95–97% at times, effectively sold out; term renewals high-single digits .
- Inflation/wages: Industry-wide mariner tightness and yard/equipment inflation persist; management expects pricing to offset inflation; inland margin up 200–300 bps for 2025 .
- Tariffs/refinery closure: Tariffs could spur onshoring and support demand; closure of a Houston refinery likely re-routes flows and can increase ton-miles; net impact manageable .
- Newbuild & orderbook: Inland rates need ~+40% to justify new capacity; 2025 orderbook ~50–60 barges (largely replacement), with capacity constraints pushing any incremental orders into 2026 .
- Power gen backlog: Backlog in “hundreds of millions,” lumpy delivery profile; milestone 1 GW of natural gas power generation deliveries expected this year .
Estimates Context
- We attempted to retrieve S&P Global consensus for revenue/EPS/EBITDA to compare against Q4 results; data was unavailable due to access limits at the time of request. Please advise if you’d like us to refresh when access is restored for explicit beat/miss quantification.
- Given the qualitative setup (tight supply, renewal pricing, high utilization), street models likely need to reflect: (1) 2025 inland margin expansion of +200–300 bps, (2) coastal mid-teens margins with Q1 trough, and (3) D&S power generation growth offsetting oil & gas declines in aggregate flat-to-down revenues with high-single digit margins .
Key Takeaways for Investors
- Tight supply + disciplined newbuilds create multi-year pricing power; inland and coastal fundamentals remain favorable, supporting margin expansion through 2025 and beyond .
- 2025 guide looks constructive: EPS +15–25%, inland margins +200–300 bps, coastal mid-teens, underpinning stronger earnings and cash generation even with seasonal Q1 trough .
- Free cash flow engine accelerating: $150.7M FCF in Q4 and $414M in 2024; 2025 operating cash flow guided to $620–$720M with lower capex, enabling continued buybacks and debt paydown .
- D&S pivot continues: power generation demand (data centers/backup power) and natural gas power solutions offset ongoing conventional oil & gas softness; deliveries remain lumpy .
- Watch catalysts: inland spot/term pricing trajectory through renewal season, coastal shipyard cadence (Q1 headwind), execution on power gen backlog, and any material shifts in refinery utilization or tariff policy .
- Risks: seasonal weather/lock delays, persistent inflation (labor, yards, electronics), and prolonged oil & gas weakness pressuring D&S mix .