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Iridium Announces 2021 Results; Company Issues 2022 Outlook

aerospace-chronicles-nicole-beauclair-aeromorning.comAerospace news

MCLEAN, Va. – February 17, 2022 – Iridium Communications Inc. (Nasdaq: IRDM) (“Iridium”) today reported financial results for the fourth quarter and full-year 2021 and issued its full-year 2022 guidance. Net loss was $5.9 million, or $0.04 per diluted share, for the fourth quarter of 2021, as compared to net loss of $7.9 million, or $0.06 per diluted share, for the fourth quarter of 2020. This improvement was primarily the result of higher commercial service revenue and lower interest expense. Operational EBITDA (“OEBITDA”)(1) for the fourth quarter was $93.4 million, as compared to $84.8 million for the prior-year period, representing a year-over-year increase of 10% and an OEBITDA margin(1) of 60%.

Iridium reported fourth-quarter total revenue of $155.9 million, which consisted of $126.7 million of service revenue and $29.1 million of revenue related to equipment sales and engineering and support projects. Total revenue increased 6% versus the comparable period of 2020, while service revenue grew 8% from the year-ago period. Service revenue, which represents primarily recurring revenue from Iridium’s growing subscriber base, was 81% of total revenue for the fourth quarter of 2021.

The Company ended the quarter with 1,723,000 total billable subscribers, which compares to 1,476,000 for the year-ago period and is up from 1,690,000 for the quarter ended September 30, 2021. Total billable subscribers grew 17% year-over-year, driven by growth in commercial IoT.

Full-Year 2021 Iridium Business Highlights

For the full year, Iridium reported net loss of $9.3 million, or $0.07 per diluted share, as compared to net loss of $56.1 million, or $0.42 per diluted share, for 2020. This improvement in net loss resulted primarily from higher revenue, a reduction in debt extinguishment costs and lower interest expense. The Company reported record total revenue in 2021 of $614.5 million, which was up 5% from the year-ago period. Total revenue included $492.0 million of service revenue and $122.5 million of revenue related to equipment sales and engineering and support projects. OEBITDA for 2021 was $378.2 million, a 6% increase from $355.6 million in the prior year, representing an OEBITDA margin of 62%. Capital expenditures were $42.1 million for the full-year 2021.

Iridium had another strong year in 2021 on the back of the best subscriber growth in Company history,” said Matt Desch, CEO, Iridium. Desch added, “We achieved this growth even in the face of supply chain issues, while continuing to expand our product portfolio.”

Commenting on Iridium’s growing free cash flow and shareholder returns, Desch said, “Our pro forma free cash flow(1) grew by more than 20% in 2021, well outpacing growth in operational EBITDA, and Iridium’s net leverage is now within our forecasted target range. We continue to execute on shareholder friendly initiatives. In 2021, we repurchased $163 million of common stock through our $300 million share repurchase program and continue to take advantage of market volatility to execute on this program at favorable levels.”

Fourth-Quarter Iridium Business Highlights

Service – Commercial

Commercial service remained the largest part of Iridium’s business, representing 64% of the Company’s total revenue during the fourth quarter. The Company’s commercial customer base is diverse and includes markets such as maritime, aviation, oil and gas, mining, recreation, forestry, construction, transportation and emergency services. These customers rely on Iridium’s products and services as critical to their daily operations and integral to their communications and business infrastructure.

  • Commercial service revenue was $100.2 million, up 10% from last year’s comparable period due primarily to increased revenues from IoT and voice and data services.
  • Commercial voice and data subscribers were up 6% from the year-ago period to 370,000. Commercial voice and data average revenue per user (“ARPU”) was $41 during the fourth quarter, compared to $40 in last year’s comparable period.
  • Commercial IoT data revenue was $28.9 million, up 15% from the year-ago period. Commercial IoT subscribers grew 24% from the year-ago period to 1,193,000 customers, driven by continued strength in consumer personal communications devices. Commercial IoT data ARPU was $8.20 in the fourth quarter, compared to $8.90 in last year’s comparable period. The decrease in ARPU resulted from the effect of the growing proportion of personal communications subscribers within IoT, who typically utilize lower ARPU plans.
  • Commercial broadband revenue was $11.5 million, up 19% from $9.6 million in the year-ago period on increasing activations of Iridium Certus® broadband service. Commercial broadband ARPU was $292 during the fourth quarter, compared to $277 in last year’s comparable period, reflecting an increasing mix of Iridium Certus broadband subscribers.
  • Iridium’s commercial business ended the quarter with 1,576,000 billable subscribers, which compares to 1,324,000 for the prior-year quarter and is up from 1,541,000 for the quarter ended September 30, 2021. IoT data subscribers represented 76% of billable commercial subscribers at the end of the quarter, an increase from 73% at the end of the prior-year period.
  • Hosted payload and other data service revenue was $14.7 million in the fourth quarter compared to $14.4 million in the prior-year period.

Service – U.S. Government

Iridium’s voice and data solutions improve situational awareness for military personnel and track critical assets in tough environments around the globe, providing a unique value proposition that is not easily duplicated.

Under Iridium’s Enhanced Mobile Satellite Services contract (the “EMSS Contract”), a seven-year, $738.5 million fixed-price airtime contract with the U.S. Space Force signed in September 2019, Iridium provides specified satellite airtime services, including unlimited global standard and secure voice, paging, fax, Short Burst Data®, Iridium Burst®, RUDICS and Distributed Tactical Communications System services for an unlimited number of Department of Defense and other federal government subscribers. Iridium also provides maintenance and support work for the U.S. government’s dedicated Iridium gateway under two other contracts with the U.S. Space Force. Iridium Certus airtime services are not included under these contracts and may be procured separately for an additional fee.

  • Government service revenue was $26.5 million in the fourth quarter and reflected increased revenue from a contractual step up in the EMSS Contract on September 15, 2021.
  • Iridium’s U.S. government business ended the quarter with 147,000 subscribers, which compares to 152,000 for the prior-year quarter and 149,000 for the quarter ended September 30, 2021. Subscriber counts continue to be negatively affected by the government’s internal service pricing levels, created as a result of a shift in contract administration between agencies. Government voice and data subscribers increased 5% from the year-ago period to 65,000 as of December 31, 2021. Government IoT data subscribers decreased 9% year-over-year and represented 56% of government subscribers at year-end.

Equipment

Equipment revenue was up 3% from the prior-year period, to $19.5 million during the fourth quarter, despite constraints on equipment shipments due to parts availability.  The company also expects higher levels of equipment sales in 2022 than in 2021, even as the parts availability issues are forecast to continue during the year.

Engineering & Support

Engineering and support revenue was $9.7 million during the fourth quarter, down 10% from the prior-year quarter, primarily due to the episodic nature of contract work for the U.S. government.

Capital expenditures were $14.1 million for the fourth quarter, including $0.4 million in capitalized interest. The Company ended the fourth quarter with gross debt of $1.62 billion and a cash and cash equivalents balance of $320.9 million, for a net debt balance of $1.30 billion.

During the quarter ended December 31, 2021, the Company repurchased approximately 976,000 shares of its common stock under its previously announced $300 million share repurchase program at a total purchase price of $38.3 million. As of December 31, 2021, $136.6 million remained available and authorized for repurchase under this program.  Into 2022, Iridium has repurchased an additional $103.6 million in common stock as of February 15, 2022, leaving approximately $33 million available under its repurchase program.

2022 Outlook

The Company issued its full-year 2022 outlook and updated other elements of long-term guidance:

Non-GAAP Financial Measures & Definitions

In addition to disclosing financial results that are determined in accordance with U.S. GAAP, the Company provides Operational EBITDA, Operational EBITDA margin and Pro Forma Free Cash Flow, which are non-GAAP financial measures, as supplemental measures to help investors evaluate the Company’s fundamental operational performance. Operational EBITDA represents earnings before interest, income taxes, depreciation and amortization, share-based compensation expenses and, for periods presented through the first quarter of 2020 only, certain expenses associated with the construction of the Company’s Iridium NEXT satellite constellation, primarily in-orbit insurance. The Company considers the loss on early extinguishment of debt to be financing-related costs associated with interest expense or amortization of financing fees, which by definition are excluded from Operational EBITDA. Such charges are incidental to, but not reflective of, the Company’s day-to-day operating performance.

 The Company also presents Operational EBITDA expressed as a percentage of GAAP revenue, or Operational EBITDA margin. In addition, the Company presents Pro Forma Free Cash Flow, which subtracts non-cash hosted payload revenue, pro forma net interest, and normalized capital expenditures, working capital and cash taxes from Operational EBITDA. The Company uses Pro Forma Free Cash Flow to measure the Company’s capacity for deleveraging and other shareholder-friendly actions. Operational EBITDA, along with its related measure, Operational EBITDA margin, and Pro Forma Free Cash Flow, do not represent, and should not be considered, alternatives to U.S. GAAP measurements such as net income or loss. In addition, there is no standardized measurement of Operational EBITDA or Pro Forma Free Cash Flow, and the Company’s calculations thereof may not be comparable to similarly titled measures reported by other companies.

The Company believes Operational EBITDA and Pro Forma Free Cash Flow are useful measures across time in evaluating the Company’s fundamental core operating performance. Management also uses Operational EBITDA to manage the business, including in preparing its annual operating budget, debt covenant compliance, financial projections and compensation plans. The Company believes that Operational EBITDA and Pro Forma Free Cash Flow are also useful to investors because similar measures are frequently used by securities analysts, investors and other interested parties in their evaluation of companies in similar industries. As indicated, Operational EBITDA does not include interest expense on borrowed money, the payment of income taxes, amortization of the Company’s definite-lived intangible assets, or depreciation expense on the Company’s capital assets, which are necessary elements of the Company’s operations. Since Operational EBITDA does not account for these and other expenses, its utility as a measure of the Company’s operating performance has material limitations. Pro Forma Free Cash Flow further adjusts Operational EBITDA by subtracting pro forma net interest, cash from hosted payloads, and normalized amounts of capital expenditures, working capital and cash taxes. 

The actual amounts of these pro forma and normalized measures may vary from year to year. Due to these limitations, the Company’s management does not view Operational EBITDA or Pro Forma Free Cash Flow in isolation, but also uses other measurements, such as net income (loss), revenues, operating profit and cash flows from operating activities, to measure operating performance. Please refer to the schedule below for a reconciliation of consolidated GAAP net loss to Operational EBITDA and Pro Forma Free Cash Flow and Iridium’s Investor Relations webpage at www.iridium.com for a discussion and reconciliation of these and other non-GAAP financial measures. We do not provide a forward-looking reconciliation of expected full-year 2022 Operational EBITDA or Pro Forma Free Cash Flow guidance as the amount and significance of special items required to develop meaningful comparable GAAP financial measures cannot be estimated at this time without unreasonable efforts.

Source : Iridium

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