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Stabilis Solutions, Inc. (SLNG)·Q1 2025 Earnings Summary
Executive Summary
- Q1 2025 printed mixed fundamentals: revenue of $17.3M (-12.3% YoY) and adjusted EBITDA of $2.1M (11.9% margin), impacted by planned marine customer downtime and the roll-off of a large short-duration industrial project; GAAP net loss was ($1.6)M driven by $2.1M non-recurring executive transition costs .
- Liquidity remained solid with $9.0M cash and $3.5M availability ($12.5M total), and management emphasized “essentially no net debt” at quarter-end alongside continuing operating cash generation ($1.0M) .
- End-market mix continues to pivot toward growth verticals: marine and aerospace contributed ~51% of Q1 revenue versus 39% in Q1 2024; aerospace revenues grew 147% YoY while power generation was stable .
- Strategic growth focus reiterated: progressing commercial contracts and FEED work to expand liquefaction capacity on the Gulf Coast (George West and waterfront), with potential FID requiring $20–$25M and ~9–12 months to complete at George West (longer on-water) .
What Went Well and What Went Wrong
What Went Well
- Strong momentum in growth markets: marine and aerospace revenue mix up to ~51% in Q1 2025 (+12ppt YoY); aerospace revenues +147% YoY, with management highlighting increased activity with a major aerospace customer .
- Continued operating cash generation and liquidity: $1.0M cash from operations in Q1 and $12.5M total liquidity, positioning for growth investments; “essentially no net debt” at quarter-end .
- Execution-ready platform for Gulf Coast expansion: FEED studies and equipment/infrastructure progress support potential capacity additions; management: “We’re actively positioning the business to scale… targeted opex investments… while continuing to generate consistent positive operating cash flow” .
What Went Wrong
- Topline and profitability headwinds: revenue fell 12.3% YoY; adjusted EBITDA declined to $2.1M (11.9% vs 15.7% LY) due to lower equipment/labor revenues after a completed contract and planned cruise maintenance week reducing a bunkering event .
- Non-recurring SG&A: ~$2.1M executive transition costs drove GAAP net loss ($1.6M, -$0.09/sh) versus $0.08/sh in Q1 2024 .
- No formal quantitative guidance: management discussed growth pathways and capex/timelines but did not issue revenue/EPS/margin guidance ranges, limiting near-term model precision for the Street .
Financial Results
Segment/End-Market Mix and KPIs
Estimates vs. Actuals
- S&P Global consensus estimates were not available for SLNG for Q1 2025 (EPS, revenue, EBITDA, counts of estimates: unavailable). Values retrieved from S&P Global.*
Guidance Changes
Earnings Call Themes & Trends
Management Commentary
- Strategy: “We’re actively positioning the business to scale… targeted operating expense investments… yet we continue to generate consistent positive operating cash flow.” – Casey Crenshaw .
- End-market focus: “We are seeing strong demand across the marine bunkering, commercial aerospace, and power generation sectors.” – Casey Crenshaw .
- Financial discipline: “With $9.1M of total debt outstanding, we ended the quarter with essentially no net debt and strong balance sheet flexibility.” – Andy Puhala .
- Capex and FID: “It would take about $20–$25M to finish construction on that train (George West)… about a 9–12 month process… much longer on the water.” – Management Q4 call context .
- Tariffs: “Changes in U.S. trade policy and tariff regimes are not expected to directly impact our business.” – Casey Crenshaw .
Q&A Highlights
- Contracting/FID timing: Management expects clarity on commercial contracts supporting deployment of the additional train in Q2–Q3 2025; timing pushed slightly but expectations unchanged .
- Distributed power pipeline: Multiple AI/data center and microgrid opportunities under discussion; projects range from 6 months to 5 years depending on bridge vs. backup needs .
- Marine downtime: Quarter impacted by a planned non-sailing maintenance week for cruise operators (~1 week out of 52), reducing a bunkering event .
- Demand indicators: Team monitors rocket launch/testing schedules and LNG vessel deliveries; customer plans (e.g., Galveston LNG vessels) inform near-term demand outlook .
- Disclosure posture: No current data center work; management will disclose when material contracts are secured, emphasizing long-term value over short-term announcements .
Estimates Context
- Wall Street consensus estimates via S&P Global for SLNG Q1 2025 (EPS, revenue, EBITDA, counts of estimates) were not available, limiting direct beat/miss benchmarking. Values retrieved from S&P Global.*
- Given the absence of consensus, we expect Street models to lower near-term EBITDA and EPS for Q2 on the back of Q1’s non-recurring SG&A and lower equipment/labor revenue, while likely raising out-year aerospace/marine contributions given pipeline commentary .
Key Takeaways for Investors
- Mix shift to higher-quality growth markets is intact: marine/aerospace now ~51% of revenue; aerospace +147% YoY; expect sustained momentum as contracts convert .
- Q1’s margin/EPS pressure was largely transitory: planned marine downtime and $2.1M non-recurring SG&A drove the loss; adjusted EBITDA remained positive ($2.1M; 11.9%) .
- Balance sheet supports optionality: $12.5M liquidity and “essentially no net debt” provide flexibility to fund FEED and growth capex ahead of FID decisions .
- Gulf Coast expansion is real but phased: FID requires $20–$25M; 9–12 months build (George West) or longer on-water; watch for commercial milestones in Q2–Q3 .
- Distributed power (including AI/data centers) is a meaningful potential leg: no contracts yet, but active engagements across behind-the-meter use cases; disclosure will follow material wins .
- Near-term trading: Expect model/estimate ambiguity (no formal guidance) and sensitivity to contract announcements; catalysts include liquefaction FID, data center/AI wins, and additional marine bunkering agreements .
- Medium-term thesis: Incumbent small-scale LNG supplier with execution-ready logistics and production is well-positioned to capture multi-year demand across marine, aerospace, and distributed power while maintaining capital discipline .
Footnote: *S&P Global consensus data for SLNG was unavailable at the time of this analysis. Values retrieved from S&P Global.