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Espen Nilsen - Vice President of investor relations
Welcome To SFL's fourth quarter 2025 conference calls. My name is Espinosa, and I'm Vice President of investor relations in SFL.
Our CEO Juliao will start the call with an overview of the fourth quarter highlights. Then our chief operating officers Trim Shirley will comment on this performance matters, followed by our CFO Ole Hjertaker, who will take us through the financial results. The conference call will be concluded by opening up for questions, and I will explain the procedure to do so prior to the Q&A session.
Before we begin our presentation, I would like to note that this conference call will contain forward-looking statements within the meaning of the US Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995-1995. Words such as expect, anticipates, intends, estimates, or similar expressions are intended to identify these forward-looking statement statements.
Please note that forward-looking statements are not guarantees of future performance. These statements are based on our current plans and expectations and are inherently subject to risks and uncertainties that could cause future activity.
And results of operations to be materially different from those set forth in the forward-looking statements. Important factors that could cause actual resources to differ include, but are not limited to conditions in the shipping offshore credit markets.
You should therefore not place undue reliance on these forward-looking statements. Please refer to our filings within the Securities and Exchange Commission for more detailed discussion of risks and uncertainties which may have a direct bearing on operating resources and our financial condition. Then I will leave the word over to our CEO Ole Hjertaker with highlights for the fourth quarter.
Ole Hjertaker - Director and Chief Executive Officer
We are pleased to announce our 88th consecutive dividend as we continue to build SFL as a maritime infrastructure company with a diversified, high-quality fleet.
For the fourth quarter, we reported revenues of $176 million and an equivalent cash flow of $109 million over the past 12 months amounts to $450 million reflecting the continued strength and stability in our operations. In recent quarters we have taken decisive steps to strengthen your charter backlog, securing long-term agreements with strong counterparties and deploying high-quality assets,
and we have made significant investments in efficiency upgrades across the liner fleet, which has enabled a very strong fleet performance. Our Chief Operating Officer Tim Shirley will elaborate on this later.
In December we announced two transactions with a charter of four Suezmax tankers where we agreed to sell a pair of 2015 built Suezmax tankers in the market at a very strong price. The vessels were acquired for $477 million per vessel back in 2022, and we agreed to sell the vessels to a third-party for approximately $57 million per vessel with a profit share agreement with a charter.
One vessel was delivered in December and we recorded a book gain of approximately $11.3 million in the fourth quarter. Net cash effect after repayment of debt and profit share to the charterer was approximately $26 million. The second vessel was delivered to the buyer earlier this week, and a similar gain will be reported in the first quarter.
This transaction has been very profitable for us with an annualized return on equity above 25%. In parallel, we also agreed to release the charters on two other 2020 built Suezmax tankers against a compensation of $11.5 million per vessel instead of selling the vessels in the market to a third-party.
Similar to the two other vessels, the return on this investment has been very strong based on prevailing values at the time of the agreement in December.
We decided to keep these vessels as they are Korean built and very fuel efficient. They're also newly dry docked and more attractive for new potential long-term charters compared to the two older vessels.
Based on US GAAP accounting rules, the full settlement compensation was expensed as a cost in the fourth quarter, which turned a net profit into a net loss for the quarter, despite the very strong return on investment so far.
The positive side of this is that we have the vessels on our books at only $55 million while charterer values, according to ship brokers, is currently in excess of $80 million.
The vessels are currently traded in the spot market, and the market has strengthened significantly since the deal was agreed only less than two months ago. Net cash flow contribution is currently higher from these two vessels alone than ALL four vessels in the original charter agreement.
I would note that charter hire for vessels in the spot market is accounted for on a low to discharge basis based on the US GAAP, so we can expect some volatility in the profit and loss statement from quarter to quarter due to vessel positioning.
We will look for new long-term charter opportunities in due course, and market analysts predict a very strong tanker market the next few quarters.
We have seen an unprecedented consolidation recently in the supply side for the larger 2 million barrel VLCCs and very high charter rates in that segment, which is expected to also have a positive spillover effect on the 1 million barrel Suezmax market as these two segments over time have shown a high correlation.
Turning to our offshore assets, the harsh Environment drilling rig Lynas performs very well on the long-term contract with Conoco, while the harsh Environment drilling rig Hercules remains warm stacked in Norway pending new employment.
The offshore drilling sector is gaining tangible structural support driven by recent strategic industry developments that underscores higher day rates, extended contract duration, and rising demand for premium high specification rigs.
First, the announced all stock merger between Transocean and Valaris announced earlier this week marks a pivotal consolidation in the space. And secondly, a recent new 3-year contract for the Noble great white drilling rig in Norway which started up in 2027 illustrates the strengthening contract fundamentals. With this backdrop, we remain optimistic about securing new employment for Hercules in due course.
So with the announced $0.20 dividend, SFL has now returned more than $2.9 billion to shareholders over 88 consecutive quarters. This represents a dividend yield of around 9% based on yesterday's share price.
And our charter backlog stands at $3.7 billion with 2/3 contracted to investment grade counterparties, providing strong cash flow visibility.
Over time, we have consistently demonstrated our ability to renew and diversify their asset base, supporting a sustainable long-term capacity for shareholder distributions. A solid liquidity position, including on-road credit lines and unlevered assets at quarrian ensures that we remain well positioned to continue investing in equity growth opportunities.
And with that, I will now hand the call over to our Chief Operating Officer Trym Otto Sjølie.
Trym Otto Sjølie - Chief Operating Officer
Thank you. We have a diversified fleet of assets chartered out to first-class customers on mostly long-term charters, and the majority of our customer base is large industrial end users.
After the sale of two Suezmax in Q4, our current fleet is made up of 57 maritime assets, including vessels, rigs, and contracted new buildings.
Our backlog from owned and managed shipping assets stands at approximately $3.7 billion and the fleet following Q4 is made up of two dry bulk vessels, 30 container ships, 14 large tankers, two chemical tankers, seven car carriers, and two drilling rigs.
Our charter backlog is mainly derived from time charter contracts, and with the exception of four container ships on bare boat leases, the rest are on time charter or in the short-term or spot market. The charter revenue from our fleet was about $176 million and we had a total of 4,808 operating days in the quarter.
Our overall utilization across the shipping fleet in Q4 was about 98.6% and adjusted for unscheduled technical or fire only. The utilization of the shipping fleet was about 99.8%. This quarter we had two vessels in scheduled dry dock at a cost of about $4.2 million US dollars. Furthermore, we had a chemical tanker in shipyard to carry out upgrades to the LNG dual fuel system to better handle gas boiloff.
The sister vessel will have the same upgrade done in Q1. This is part of our drive to ensure we can fully utilize our dual fuel capabilities. All of our 6 LNG dual fuel vessels are actually operating on LNG, which aligns with our ambitions to reduce greenhouse gas emissions from our fleet.
I will now give the word over to our CFO Aksel Olesen, who will take us through the financial highlights of the quarter.
Aksel Olesen - Chief Financial Officer
Thank you, Trym. Turning to this slide, we present a performer illustration of our cash flows for the quarter. Please note that this is on a guideline to assess the company's underlying performance. It is not prepared in accordance with US capP and excludes extraordinary and non-cash items.
The company generated approximately $176 million of charter during the quarter. Of this, around $81 million came from our container fleet, including profit share related to fuel savings on seven of our large container vessels. The car carrier fleet generated approximately $26 million of charter hire compared to $23 million in the prior quarter, reflecting that all vessels were fully back in service during the period following a scheduled drydocking last quarter.
In tankers, the fleet generated approximately $42 million or charged higher, down from around $44 million in the previous quarter due to a scheduled dry locking. In dry bulk, we have divested the majority of the fleet over recent quarters and now have two Camer Max vessels remaining, both trading in a short-term market.
Revenue from these vessels was approximately $2.7 million or it is the equivalent of approximately $15,000 per day per vessel. Revenue from our energy assets was approximately $23 million, mainly generated by the Linus, which is in a long-term contract with ConocoPhillips through May 2029.
Net operating and expenses for the quarter were approximately$ 67 million, broadly in line with the previous quarter. Overall, this resulted in an adjusted EVDA of approximately $109 million, which is in line with the third quarter. Turning now to the profit and loss statement on the US GAAP.
For the quarterly report, total operating revenues of approximately $176 million compared to $178 million in the previous quarter.
The net result for the quarter was impacted by several non-recurring and non-cash items, including a gain on sale of a Suezmax tankers of approximately $11.3 million, settlement compensation of $23 million relating to two Suezmax tankers, positive mark to mark effects from hedging derivatives of 600,000, positive mark to mark effects from equity investments of 700,000, and an increase in credit loss provisions of 200,000.
As a result of the US GAAP, the company reported a net loss of approximately $4.7 million, or $0.04 per share. Turning to the balance sheets, as of year-end, cash on cash equivalents totaled approximately $151 million, with an additional $46 million available on the drawn credit facilities.
The facility related to the Hercules rig, which matured at year-end, was repaid using balance sheet cash, leaving the rig debt-free at quarter rent. We have since negotiated a new financing facility which we expect to execute during the 1st quarter, serving the customer closing conditions.
The remaining capital expenditures on our 5 contained new buildings of approximately $850 million is expected to be funded through a combination of pre and post-delivery financing. We're experiencing very strong interest from lenders, reflecting a strong financing market for these assets.
Finally, based on quarterly figures, the company's book equity ratio stood approximately 26%. To conclude, The board has declared the 8th consecutive quarterly cash dividend of [$10.00] per share. A dividend yield of approximately 9%.
Starter backlog stands at approximately $3.7 billion, with more than 2/3 linked to customers with investment grade ratings, providing strong cash flow visibility. With a solid balance sheet and liquidity position, we remain well positioned to act on accreted investment opportunities. With that, I will hand the call back to Espen, who will open the line for questions.
Espen Nilsen - Vice President of investor relations
Thank you, Aksel. (Operator Instructions)
Gregory Lewis
Gregory Lewis - Analyst
Hey, thank you and good afternoon, everybody, and thanks for taking my questions. Thanks for highlighting the activity in the Suezmax with your Suezmax ships. All, I guess I'd be curious how you're thinking about those vessels. Clearly, the crew tanker spot market, it seems to be surprising to the upside, everybody's expectations. Rates are strong. I know the focus is on putting out long-term charters.
We, we've definitely seen some short, I guess 12-month charters for the, some of the larger vessels, some of these, but I'm just kind of curious, just given the strength and rates in, where we are in the first part of 2026, are we starting to see signs or interest from customers or charters around multi-year contracts,
or is it, as we think about these vessels, should we just be thinking more, hey, the spot market's good, the outlook's good for the next couple of years, and we're just going to use this kind of as a trade.
Ole Hjertaker - Director and Chief Executive Officer
Yeah, hi, Greg. And thanks. Yes, I, we find that market segment, quite interesting, right now for a couple of reasons. And just to also be clear about that, we, when this transaction, you call it opportunity came about, this was based really backed by the agreement we had there with This customer where we, after a certain period of time, gave them the opportunity to effectively trigger a sale with a profit share as long as we were over, a level that gave us a very good return in the first place.
And then the market had been moving up and they were interested in doing that. So we sold it to. Older, Chinese built vessels. And if you look at the equity returns we generated on that, those, with the implied profits split that we got out of it too, we're talking sort of high 20s in return on equity on those deals.
So you could say it was a, I would say it was a really strong deal, and much better than we anticipated when we did that deal back in the days. And they also wanted to do the same with the other two vessels, but the other two, the Korean built vessels are more attractive for long-term charters. They're Korean built.
They're sort of eco, design, they have scrubbers. We just had them through a dry dock, and we believe they are more attractive also for longer-term charter opportunities.
What we did not anticipate, back in December was the way the market moved up, moved upward sharply. So over this two month period, both, one year charter as indicated by brokers and also, the index, the TD20 index, that sort of is used for hedging this market is up 20%, in that short period of time.
A couple of reasons for that. I mean, you have some trading pattern issues, but I think 11 very important underlying factor here on the tanker side, which I would call almost unprecedented in the market, at least, in the history I've seen, is that you have one, party or group of you know of people who are working together who effectively control.
Around a third of the available or traded tanker VLCC fleet out there, and we believe they are willing to hold back ships if they don't get the rate charter rate where they want it to be, which, implicitly, would give also the other owners out there, confidence to hold back and not just drop their.
So to speak, and fixed at lower levels. So I think that is a very, I was a fundamental shift in the market. And then we have to look at the correlation between the VLCC market and the Suezmax market where this over the last 25 years, the Suezmax have earned, around 85% of the VLCC, charter rate.
So we believe that, with the dynamics. On the VLCC market, and also trading patterns, which is quite interesting for the Suezmax size. We think the market could, remain firm for some time, but our ultimate objective here is to find new longer-term charters for these vessels.
But then, of course, in the meantime, we enjoy the spot market. And just to be clear, I mean, we used to have four vessels. The two vessels, that are remaining, are generating more net cash flow than ALL four vessels did in the previous chartering arrangement. So far, we're generating more cash out of two vessels compared to four vessels in the past.
Gregory Lewis - Analyst
Yeah, no, it's definitely good to be a tanker owner at the moment. And then all I was hoping, realizing that, it's always the board, it's a board decision, there's lots of variables that go into how the company thinks about the dividend,
but as we kind of think about, the, I guess it'll be later this year, and I think next quarter it'll be that the dividend, it would have been lowered for about a year now. I think at the time, 11 of the, one of the drivers of that dividend was, you, the lack of visibility on the Hercules, but, to the sustainability of the model. Where the dividend is still below 50% of operating cash, it's well covered on a net income basis.
I guess two questions here. How are we thinking about the dividend over the next 12 months, and to that point, I, is one of the To that point, how is the market looking for in the second hand market, i.e., opportunities clearly in tankers, prices are high, charter rates are catching up to do.
How is the opportunity for growth looking in kind of the container ship market, which, seems to be maybe where numbers, the economics might look a little better and doing. I say a purchase and charter out.
Ole Hjertaker - Director and Chief Executive Officer
Yeah, thanks. I mean, to start with the dividend, for that question, the board, never guides on dividend, going forward. But, the underlying sort of, structure or the, what goes into that, evaluation is long-term sustainable cash flows. If you look at the last year, we did sell a number of vessels, some, that we're coming to the End of the charter period. We sold some older, feeder container ships, etc.
So which freed up quite a bit of capital. And of course, to have a sustainable distribution, you have to have producing assets, call it generating, those returns. So that's one thing. And also, I would say last year, for geopolitical reasons, with that sort of, we call it a trade war or at least trade friction, mounting, we sensed that many of the players out there were stepping a little bit back. They were very uncertain about how this all would evolve, and then it's difficult to get, call it counterparties to commit long-term.
So we sense now that the dynamics is more, is better. We see more interest in engaging for new business, but, we cannot really comment on anything before we potentially do it. And, from a, from a board perspective, I mean, it's very, it's, it, we TRY to be disciplined, TRY not to, what do we say, run out.
And just spend the money because we have capital available. It's all about trying to do the right deals, long-term deals, and then, from time to time, you may get lucky like we did on the Suezmax tankers with a much stronger return than we, expected. So, that's what you should expect from us, we should TRY to deploy the. Capital and hopefully, balanced way, build the distributable cash flow.
We still have the drilling and Kirculus, idol, that used to produce a lot of cash flow for us in 2024. So there are a few factors here going into that, but still, we're looking at north of $100 million in dividend. Per year, even at this level. So we are paying a lot of cash flow out to shareholders. It's more than $2.9 billion over the 88 quarters. So I think we've shown a disciplined approach to it. We've been standing firm through pretty rough cycles and hopefully we will have a good capacity also going forward.
Gregory Lewis - Analyst
Super helpful. Thank you for taking my questions.
Ole Hjertaker - Director and Chief Executive Officer
Thank you.
Espen Nilsen - Vice President of investor relations
Climent Molins
Climent Molins - Analyst
Hi, and Tim, thank you for taking my questions. I joined a few minutes late, so you may have touched upon this, but I wanted to follow-up on Greg's question on the charters you terminated. Could you remind us what was the rate on the previous contract? And secondly, could you talk a bit about the fixtures you have secured to date in the stock market?
Yes, we, this, was a deal that was done back in 2022. The two Chinese built vessels were acquired for at that time, around $46 million to $47 million if I'm not mistaken.
We had our own charter rates of around $27,000 per day, for that period, and then we sold them now for $57 million net. So we've enjoyed, strong cash flows, depreciated the assets, and then sold them for, 20% more gross than we bought them. For three years earlier, hence the very strong returns on that deal.
A similar dynamic on the, on the newer Korean built vessels, they were more expensive. So we bought them for around $64 million if I'm not mistaken. And, if you look at the broker reports now and you have, for instance, the broker, Fernleys, they just increased their, evaluations on tanker assets, and they now guide five-year-old Suezmax tankers at $85 million. So it's a significant uplift also for these assets.
If you look at the spot market, we typically will not, guides on, spot market there and then. I mean, you can, you can, you can look up to the brokers, they will typically guide you on what the charter rights are. But just to give you, a guiding, right now, and this is just from a broker report, the guide that a one-year TC.
For a modern, Suezmax tankers would be, in the high 40s, they guide 47,500. While, if you use the Suezmax TD20, index, they, you could do 12 months now, in excess of $60,000 per day, based on the index alone. So the market is, quite strong. As a guide, as I mentioned, we were below $30,000 in the old structure.
I remember also on those vessels, or on the vessels, you have to subtract operating expenses, you have to subtract interest and amortization on the loans. So we are now in this market generating more than we did, well, from the two vessels than we did from all four vessels that combined on a net basis.
I would mention though that Based on US GAAP, well, first of all, we had to expense, the termination fee on the two modern vessels, despite having a very low, book value level on those vessels, because we own them already, it has to be, had to be taken straight through P&L in the fourth quarter.
So that had that effect. Also, when you trade the vessels in the stock market, this, being a tankers or bulkers based on GAAP, you have to account for the revenues on a load to discharge basis. And typically these assets, they go empty and ballast, as we call it, one way, and you load it, and then you go load it the other way.
So you will see some volatility in the P&L effect for these assets, all depending on the position they are, whether they, through the specific quarter were more loaded. Then empty in that rotation. When we got them back off the charter, and this is again a coincidence, but both vessels were just, coming off a loaded journey and therefore, started with some ballas days,
but this is something that will balance and equal out over the year. But, from quarter to quarter, there may be some, call it earnings volatility due to US GAAP.
Yeah, makes sense. Thank you. And after recent sales on the drywall site, you only have two remaining Panamaxes. Those seem clearly non-core. Is that a fair assessment? And secondly, there has seemingly been some interest from potential charters on long-term contracts on Newcastle Max's new builds.
What are your thoughts on potentially relocating some capital to Tribourg?
Ole Hjertaker - Director and Chief Executive Officer
Yeah, thanks. I mean, we've always been invested in the dry sector. And you could say, I would say it's more of a coincidence now that we're down to two vessels. We are segment agnostics, so we would look at deals in all the segments, and including the dry book segment, and have a looked at, multiple transactions.
But, to get to a, to get to a deal, it has to make sense for us from, One thing is the purchase price, the charter rate, the counter party, the financing structure we can build around it. And of course, our charter would want to pay the charter rate we need to have to make that work for us.
So this is sort of a balance, and, you are correct. We're only two vessels left now. I wouldn't say they're non-core. Those vessels were on 10-year time charters and have been over time quite profitable for us, but we are traded more in the short-term market currently. So we look at opportunities on the dry side as we do in other sectors, and, as I said, agnostics, it's all about getting a good risk adjusted return.
Climent Molins - Analyst
Thanks for the call. I'll turn it over.
Thank you for taking my questions.
Espen Nilsen - Vice President of investor relations
All right, then we have some written questions. Could you please share any updates on the Hercules?
Ole Hjertaker - Director and Chief Executive Officer
Yes. The Hercules has remained idle, since, November 24. So it's, it was idle through, 2025, generated very strong cash flows when it was working. Now, it's, it has remained idle. We are, we have been looking for employment. That market has been a little slow, it's fair to say,
but we now see signs both with from a consolidation perspective, where we had the big, merger announced, earlier this week, Transocean and Valarris. We also saw, a drilling rig with, I would call it similar sort of harsh environment, ultra-deep water, features that was recently fixed, on a three-year charter with startup in 2027.
So, based on what we see from brokers, it looks like, there is more market dynamics and more, employment opportunities, there are going forward, but we cannot comment specifically on the rig or we cannot comment on discussions we may have, on this rig, specifically. We will announce, contracts, if and when they materialize.
Espen Nilsen - Vice President of investor relations
Thank you. We also have another one here. How do you see the long-term evolution of the contracted revenue mix across the different shipping segments? Do the container new build orders signal the strategic direction the company intends to pursue?
Ole Hjertaker - Director and Chief Executive Officer
The new build, container ships, were done or we will order those vessels in 2024. It's typically what we like to do, long-term time charters to investment grade counterparties, modern technology, that enables, and, where we through the long-term charter are able to amortize, that investment down significantly.
So, we are not specifically focused on one single segment, but we TRY to position us as, logistics partners for strong, industrial focused, partners.
And then, container ship market has been, an interesting market for us. But we would be happy also to look at other segments. So, yeah.
Espen Nilsen - Vice President of investor relations
And related to different segments, what segment are you currently most optimistic about in relation to potential future growth, i.e., in what niche do you see the best economics?
Ole Hjertaker - Director and Chief Executive Officer
It's, I would say it's almost an impossible question. I mean, we, as we look across, the board, between the segments, we don't have any sort of favorite. What we have seen over time is that there have been more longer-term charters in typically liner type assets. Container ships, car carriers,
but we also see that from time to time on tankers, where you see longer-term charters and also on dry bulk. And we also have some, chemical carriers in our portfolio where we also have good interaction with logistics, players. So, we look across the board, and, hopefully we will build a portfolio, in more than one segment.
Espen Nilsen - Vice President of investor relations
Thank you. We also have a question. What is the status of SFL composer?
Right, I think I'll interpret that question as after the collision we had in Q3, so the vessel was going into dry dock when she was hit by another container vessel or by a container vessel. She, we were going into dry dock anyway, at that time, and we had a slot available, so we didn't really lose any time.
And all of the damage repairs were covered by insurance, including also thefi related to the incident. So for SFL we did not lose really out on this at all. The vessel is now back in service with Volkswagen and operating in the Atlantic as That's normal.
Thank you.
One last question here. Hi all, can you say something about the size of the new rig financing facility? Sure.
Aksel Olesen - Chief Financial Officer
So you are, relating it to the new Hercules facility, and that they're being kind of, negotiated and prepared, and that's in the amount of $100 million.
Espen Nilsen - Vice President of investor relations
Thank you, Aksel. As there are no further questions from the audience, I would like to thank everyone for participating in this conference call. If you have any follow-up questions to the management, there are contact details in the press release or you can get in touch with us through the contact pages on our webpage www.sFLcorp.com.
Thank you all.