CorEnergy Infrastructure Trust, Inc.

OTCPK:CORR.Q Rapport sur les actions

Capitalisation boursière : US$194.7k

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CorEnergy Infrastructure Trust Gestion

Gestion contrôle des critères 2/4

Le PDG CorEnergy Infrastructure Trust est Dave Schulte, nommé en Jan2005, a un mandat de 19.42 ans. La rémunération annuelle totale est $ 1.24M, composée du salaire de 36.3% et des bonus 63.7%, y compris les actions et options de la société. détient directement 5.59% des actions de la société, d'une valeur de $ 10.88K. La durée moyenne de mandat de l'équipe de direction et du conseil d'administration est respectivement 3.3 ans et 9 ans.

Informations clés

Dave Schulte

Directeur général

US$1.2m

Rémunération totale

Pourcentage du salaire du PDG36.34%
Durée du mandat du directeur général19.4yrs
Propriété du PDG5.6%
Durée moyenne d'occupation des postes de direction3.3yrs
Durée moyenne du mandat des membres du conseil d'administration9yrs

Mises à jour récentes de la gestion

Recent updates

Seeking Alpha Feb 06

CorEnergy: Common And Preferred Distributions Cut, What's Next?

Summary Each round of successive results had forced us to dial up the caution on CorEnergy. On our last call, we took the controversial stance that the investors hiding in preferred shares are likely to face a cut at the same time as the common shares. That has come to pass. Let's look at what is next. Your job as an investor is to focus on risk management. That means the primary question you should ask is what can go wrong. You do this by first ignoring the "yield" and looking at how the company manages its debt structure. An extension of risk management is to also evaluate company management. We did all of that for CorEnergy Infrastructure Trust, Inc. (CORR) and its preferred shares (CORR.PA). Against the grain, we suggested that things were getting worse for the company. In fact, we dialed up the negativity, as more and more data suggested that anyone holding for yield, would regret it. Seeking Alpha On our last note, we did not believe discretion was the better part of valor and instead told you to run like the wind. Of course preferred distributions can only be cut when common distributions are moved to zero. We get that. But in this case, it's totally warranted and likely the only thing that keeps the firm on a good footing going into 2024. For those bullish on the firm the 19.263% yielding bonds make 100 times more sense than the preferred shares yielding 10%. Sell the common shares, sell the preferred shares and perhaps consider the bonds if you are bullish. Source: Common And Preferred Distributions Likely Get Cut Time, Tide and Distribution Cuts wait for no man. CorEnergy dropped the hammer this morning. KANSAS CITY, Mo.--(BUSINESS WIRE)-- CorEnergy Infrastructure Trust, Inc. announced today that its Board of Directors has determined the Company will suspend dividend payments on its 7.375% Series A Cumulative Redeemable Preferred Stock and the Company’s common stock. “After careful consideration, the Board agreed with management’s recommendation to suspend dividends due to a combination of declining volumes and increased costs in our California systems. As a result, we filed for a 36% rate increase on our SPB line in California based on the regulated cost-of-service tariff structure,” said Dave Schulte, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer. “Additionally, near-term debt maturities provide a transitory challenge, which will be addressed with a focus on monetizing assets and reducing total leverage. Pending the resumption of dividends, we believe that retained capital best benefits stockholders through the reduction of debt. The Board will continue to evaluate future dividend payments on a quarterly basis,” Schulte concluded. Source: CorEnergy Outlook There are a few things to dissect here so let's get started. Our thesis was always that the near-term debt maturities were screaming that the organization is not viable. That distress has increased. In September, those bonds yielded 19% and they now are now with a 24.6% yield to maturity. FINRA Remarkably, this happened at the same time as when junk bonds have rallied and CCC spreads have compressed. Data by YCharts In other words the entire market was screaming "risk-on" but CorEnergy bonds were refusing to drink the Kool-Aid. This is the "dog that did not bark." Silver Blaze When company specific fundamentals are so bad that even the madness of crowds cannot move things up, you have to be worried. What's driving this is exceptionally poor cash flow from the company. Over the last six reported months, cash available for distribution has been negative $1.05 million. Q3-2022 Press Release This has been driven by extremely poor operational performance and an increase in interest rates. On the first front, CorEnergy's volumes paint a distressed picture. 10-Q Link Below On the interest rate front, the variable debt is a big albatross. Under the Crimson Credit Facility, a 100 basis point increase or decrease in the current SOFR rate would have resulted in an approximately $738 thousand increase or decrease in interest expense for the nine months ended September 30, 2022. Source: 10-Q There's a lag with which these rates reset for CorEnergy and this underpinned our thesis. Anyone doing the math would know instantly that the company's cash flow would go deeply negative by the time all these rates moved through to the system. The base case would be close to negative $2 million a quarter of cash available for distribution once these resets were through. So the common dividend was toast and that was engraved in stone. But why the preferreds? Here, it's an extension of the same math. Suspending the common dividend barely helps the company. With 15.86 million shares, the common dividend of 5 cents a quarter is peanuts. Data by YCharts The bulk of the dividend payments are the preferred shares. So if you examined the financial statements, you would know with a high degree of certainty that a dividend cut would have to be at both the common and preferred levels to make any sort of difference to the company.
Seeking Alpha Jan 03

CorEnergy Infrastructure Trust: 16% Yield On Preferred Shares

Summary CorEnergy Infrastructure Trust is a REIT that owns pipeline assets for the transportation of crude oil and natural gas. The company's preferred shares are deeply discounted due to a number of risks. Based on an evaluation of these risks, I believe the preferred shares are still a good investment. CorEnergy Infrastructure Trust (CORR) is a REIT that owns and leases pipeline assets for the transport of crude oil and natural gas on the west coast of the United States. The company has a Series A Cumulative Preferred share (CORR.PA) that is currently trading at 46% of par value ($11.40/$25) generating a dividend yield of over 16%. After weighing the risks involved in the business, I believe the preferred shares are still a good investment for income investors. Seeking Alpha CorEnergy's income statement shows that the company has grown revenue in the first nine months of 2022 by $5 million compared to the same period in 2021. While expenses have grown by more than revenue, this increase, and subsequent net loss was caused by the impairment of goodwill (a noncash expense). If we remove the impairment charges (from both 2021 and 2022), we'll find that operating expenses grew by only $2 million and operating income in 2022 based on this adjustment would be $17 million, nearly double the company's interest expense. SEC 10-Q CorEnergy's balance sheet is a consolidated, cut and dry document. The company's assets are mainly comprised of the pipelines, listed as property and equipment. The liability side is comprised mostly of secured credit facilities and convertible senior notes. The only significant change to the balance sheet in 2022 has been the impairment of goodwill, which led to the decrease of the company's total equity. Overall, CorEnergy has maintained a stable capital position throughout the year. SEC 10-Q In terms of cash flow, CorEnergy has doubled its operating cash flow in the first nine months of 2022 compared to 2021. After capital expenditures, the company has free cash flow of $19 million, which is enough to cover its preferred dividend obligation of just over $7 million. It's also important to note that CorEnergy did not add debt in 2022 and was able to increase its cash position from $12 million to $21 million. SEC 10-Q SEC 10-Q One concern regarding CorEnergy lies in all its debt maturing in 2024 and 2025. The company has $100 million in revolver and term loan debt that has already seen an increase in interest expense compared to last year. CorEnergy does seem to be preparing for a capital raise should the company need it. They have a shelf registration on file that allows it to raise up to $600 million in capital through either stock or debt offerings. The refinancing need combined with the shelf registration is why I am not advocating for investment in the company's common shares, because I believe they stand to be diluted by any capital raise. SEC 10-Q SEC 10-Q Another concern that investors need to weigh is the cash available for distribution analysis. This is an internal calculation used to determine the viability of the company's dividend. CorEnergy's third quarter performance did push the cash available for distribution downward, but the company still has cash available for distribution after taking the preferred dividends into account and the mandatory principal payments on the company's term loan. It's also important to note that the company maintained common and preferred dividends in 2021 despite a negative cash available for distribution. SEC 10-Q Possibly the most tangible threat to the company's cash flow capabilities lies in its capital expenditures forecast. In one section of its most recent 10-Q, CorEnergy disclosed a sizable expected increase to capex in the fourth quarter of 2022. When earnings are released, investors should expect cash available for distribution to be negative for the year. Looking further into the future, the company is expected to make additional investments to its assets in late 2023 and early 2024 related to legislation in California.
Seeking Alpha Nov 10

CorEnergy Infrastructure Trust GAAP EPS of -$1.17, revenue of $32.96M

CorEnergy Infrastructure Trust press release (NYSE:CORR): Q3 GAAP EPS of -$1.17. Revenue of $32.96M (-11.0% Y/Y). “Our third quarter was characterized by steady performance from our predictable MoGas and Omega natural gas operations, where we are also evaluating expansion opportunities. We also reported improved volume on our Crimson assets as we continue to manage through disruptions in the global oil supply chain and operational issues with third-party infrastructure. We have initiated both cost efficiency measures and tariff increases on our California pipelines in response to this increased volatility, while maintaining our 2022 outlook calling for adjusted EBITDA of between $42.0 and $44.0 million,” said Dave Schulte, Chief Executive Officer.
Seeking Alpha Nov 03

CorEnergy Infrastructure Trust declares $0.05 dividend

CorEnergy Infrastructure Trust (NYSE:CORR) declares $0.05/share quarterly dividend, in line with previous. Forward yield 10.99% Payable Nov. 30; for shareholders of record Nov. 16; ex-div Nov. 15. See CORR Dividend Scorecard, Yield Chart, & Dividend Growth.
Seeking Alpha Sep 21

CorEnergy: Common And Preferred Distributions Likely Get Cut

Summary CorEnergy has struggled to deliver on the promise of its new acquisition. Numbers look troubling for common shares but we are now driving the distress into the preferred shares as well. We recommend one play for those brave enough to venture in here. Sometimes you don't need more than a chart. CorEnergy Infrastructure Trust Inc. (CORR) has delivered an exceptionally poor performance relative to the Alerian MLP ETF (AMLP). Data by YCharts What else is left to say here you might ask. Well for one, investors are still long this equity and its preferred shares (CORR.PA), and interestingly enough there is a trade to be made here. Q2-2022 CORR's big acquisition closed in early 2021 (10-Q) and this was the first quarter where we got a year over year number that was fully comparable. We saw a year over year decline in revenues CORR Press Release This is a rather grim outcome from what was projected right around the time the acquisition was announced. Back then the projected run rate was supposed to exceed $130 million and EBITDA was supposed to be at $51 million (midpoint). CORR Presentation Those numbers were projected at a time of far lower oil prices and were supposed to be a launchpad for 2022. CORR also instituted 10% price hikes in August 2021 and despite this all we are at a revenue run-rate far below that. So what's going on here? In a nutshell, this is a volume story. Volumes on the Crimson pipelines are headed in one direction and one direction only. CORR Presentation Note that this does not include the Q2-2022 numbers as this is the latest presentation we could find. The Q2-2022 numbers are below though and you can see the trend continues. CORR 10-Q CORR of course spoke about this in their earnings release. The Company also announced that its joint venture with Crimson Midstream experienced an unexpected volume decline in the second quarter, primarily due to supply disruptions in the global oil market resulting in the California refineries altering their historical crude oil sourcing patterns. However, the volume loss has reversed beginning in July due to operational issues in the crude oil supply chain unrelated to the Crimson assets. As a result, volumes are expected to remain near first quarter 2022 volumes as long as the third-party operational issues persist. The level of volume volatility in 2022 is unusual compared to historical patterns. Based upon the impact of current market conditions on our customers, and therefore on volumes shipped on Crimson’s pipelines in any given month, swings in revenue may occur quarter to quarter, until the global oil markets return to a more normal state. Despite the low second quarter volume and uncertainty of the duration of other supply chain issues, the Company maintains its revised adjusted EBITDA guidance of $42 to $44 million. The Company expects to benefit from potential increase in crude oil volume available to be shipped upon the conversion of the Phillips 66 Rodeo refinery to renewable diesel, scheduled for first quarter 2024. Source: CORR Press Release There was also the mention of yet another 10% hike this year. The Company also announced that Crimson subsidiaries recently submitted applications for 10% rate increases to the California Public Utilities Commission. These rate increases mitigate the adverse earnings impact of long term decline in oil production in California. The rate increase will become effective in the third quarter; as always, rate increases are subject to potential refund if the cost of service impact of lower volume is successfully challenged. Source: CORR Press Release This is a fascinating case study to us where a regulated asset is passing on huge hikes as the volume drops off. It will be interesting to see if this hike is approved at the current request rate and whether CORR can continue to offset declines in this manner. Outlook At first glance, the NAREIT defined funds from operations (FFO) appears rather sturdy in relation to the dividend of $0.05 per quarter. CORR 10-Q It is important to note though that the FFO does not include maintenance capex and those were half of the FFO in Q2-2022. They will also increase dramatically in Q3-2022 & Q4-2022.
Seeking Alpha Aug 11

CorEnergy Infrastructure Trust GAAP EPS of -$0.08, revenue of $31.5M

CorEnergy Infrastructure Trust press release (NYSE:CORR): Q2 GAAP EPS of -$0.08. Revenue of $31.5M (-2.5% Y/Y). CorEnergy maintained its outlook for 2022: Expected adjusted EBITDA of $42.0-$44.0 million; Maintenance capital expenditures expected to be in the range of $8.0 million to $9.0 million in 2022; quarterly maintenance costs are not expected to be uniform throughout the year due to project timing. Generated Net Income of $2.2 million and Adjusted EBITDA of $10.0 million.
Seeking Alpha Aug 05

CorEnergy Infrastructure Trust declares $0.05 dividend

CorEnergy Infrastructure Trust (NYSE:CORR) declares $0.05/share quarterly dividend, in line with previous. Forward yield 2.17% Payable Aug. 31; for shareholders of record Aug. 17; ex-div Aug. 16. See CORR Dividend Scorecard, Yield Chart, & Dividend Growth.
Seeking Alpha Jul 05

CorEnergy: Rising Risks

CorEnergy has been on our naughty list in 2021 and 2022. The stock has disappointed the bulls, despite a strong commodity market. The distribution on preferred shares looks safe at first glance, but the bonds paint a different picture. We would run from both (common and preferred) investments. A rising tide lifts all boats. Even the creaky, leaky ones. That is why it is difficult to go negative on a stock when the sector enjoys bullish tailwinds. Our philosophy follows that. Hence, if we are bearish on a stock but bullish on its sector, we tend to rate stocks as a "hold", rather than an outright "sell". CorEnergy Infrastructure Trust, Inc. (CORR) was a prime example of such a rationale. Coming into 2021, we were very bullish on energy, and midstream plays, but we could not remotely grasp the appeal in CORR after the Crimson deal. That got us to a "stay out" rating. With perfect hindsight, of course, we were too generous. Seeking Alpha We examine the thesis today as the stock struggles to find footing. Q1-2022 CORR reported consolidated revenue of $32.9 million for Q1-2022, alongside adjusted EBITDA of $12.0 million. We don't have a good comparative for Q1-2022, as Q1-2021 quarter only had Crimson assets included from February 1 onwards. The $12 million of adjusted EBITDA led to a cash available for distribution or CAD of $2.2 million. CORR Presentation If these amounts sound really small, well it is because CORR is really tiny in terms of equity capitalization. The $2.2 million did cover the common distributions comfortably as that only worked out to about $0.8 million for the quarter. But there is more to this story. Extremely Leveraged Structure When we refer to the common distributions being covered for the common shares, we are referring to the $37.6 million highlighted below. CORR Presentation We will start by noting here that the Class B shares also should be eligible for dividends at some point (assuming things go better than what we expect) and that will reduce the coverage we see. The Company's Board declared dividends on all preferred obligations during the first quarter and a $0.05 per share dividend on our common stock. No dividend was declared on Class B common stock. We will only begin paying a Class B dividend once we are confident the Class B dividend can be maintained in the foreseeable future at the minimum 1.25 required coverage ratio for all common and Class B. Source: CORR Press Release The fact that CORR has not started declaring dividends there (Class B), shows how tight things have been for the company. More Problems Ahead The biggest risk here is that the company is debt loaded in relation to its equity. The preferred shares (CORR.PA) are of course equity, but they create additional risk for the common shares. If one takes the fixed payout ratio coverage, that is the sum of interest and preferred share dividends to free cash flow, we are barely over 1.2X. CORR guided for $42-$44 million in EBITDA for 2022. At the midpoint, we can see that the total enterprise value is over 10X this adjusted EBITDA. That is quite a shocking number when large firms like Energy Transfer (ET) and Plains All American Pipeline, L.P. (PAA) are trading at less than 10. That number of $43 million for 2022, is still below ($50-$52 million) what was guided for in the very first quarter after the Crimson acquisition in 2021. CORR Presentation After Crimson Purchase So six quarters in, we are still struggling to get this growth story going. The key reason is this picture below. CORR Presentation Crude oil volumes have taken just a one-way road to downtown. CORR addressed this in their conference call. Looking at the results, first quarter revenue was $32.9 million with steady performance from MoGas and Omega and lower overall volumes in California, reflecting the continued temporary closure of the offshore amplified pipeline and the continued delay of new drilling permits that would bolster production volumes potentially shift on our line. We do see near-term opportunities ahead in transportation volumes at these two situations of remedy. We anticipate the return this fall of the Amplify offshore production volumes that feed into our system. As a reminder, these barrels were lost late last year, due to an underwater pipeline break in the third-party system not owned by the company, prior to the break the pipeline accounted for 1.2 million barrels of annual volume and a sizable boost to our cash flow of approximate $1 million. Source: CORR Q1-2022 Transcript While the delays look temporary, we think the pressures are more defined by geology. We expect volumes to be weak and this should keep pressure on the company's financial metrics. One other area that shows just how stressed investors perceive this company is via the traded senior notes.
Seeking Alpha Mar 16

CorEnergy: A Look At Dividend Safety For 2022

CorEnergy Infrastructure Trust has struggled to benefit from their latest acquisition. The last quarter's results were downright awful. We examine the numbers for Q4-2021, alongside the guidance for 2022 and tell you if the dividend is safe.
Seeking Alpha Feb 24

CorEnergy: My Worst Investment Ever Is Still Struggling

I first invested in CorEnergy (CORR) in March of 2019, when it was selling for about $36 per share and yielding 8%. CorEnergy has been my worst investment of all time. This article examines growth, balance sheet, dividend, and valuation metrics, taking a look at how the company is doing now.
Seeking Alpha Dec 21

CorEnergy Preferreds Yield 10%:  What We Like More

Year-end tax loss selling can result in big distortions. CorEnergy has been a victim as well. Preferred shares now yield 10%. Here is what you need to know before you pull the trigger.
Seeking Alpha Aug 26

CorEnergy: Valuation Still High Despite Stock's Decline

CorEnergy has declined to near its 52 week low. The company reported its Q2-2021 results recently and showed the first full quarter after assimilating Crimson's assets. We examine the numbers including free cash flow and interest coverage, and give your our verdict.
Article d’analyse Mar 08

What Kind Of Shareholders Own CorEnergy Infrastructure Trust, Inc. (NYSE:CORR)?

Every investor in CorEnergy Infrastructure Trust, Inc. ( NYSE:CORR ) should be aware of the most powerful shareholder...
Article d’analyse Jan 14

A Look At CorEnergy Infrastructure Trust's (NYSE:CORR) Share Price Returns

CorEnergy Infrastructure Trust, Inc. ( NYSE:CORR ) shareholders will doubtless be very grateful to see the share price...

Analyse de la rémunération des PDG

Comment la rémunération de Dave Schulte a-t-elle évolué par rapport aux bénéfices de CorEnergy Infrastructure Trust?
DateRémunération totaleSalaireBénéfices de l'entreprise
Dec 31 2023US$1mUS$450k

-US$286m

Sep 30 2023n/an/a

-US$24m

Jun 30 2023n/an/a

-US$35m

Mar 31 2023n/an/a

-US$30m

Dec 31 2022US$1mUS$500k

-US$22m

Sep 30 2022n/an/a

-US$17m

Jun 30 2022n/an/a

US$2m

Mar 31 2022n/an/a

US$979k

Dec 31 2021US$250kUS$250k

-US$15m

Rémunération vs marché: La rémunération totale de Dave ($USD 1.24M ) est supérieure à la moyenne des entreprises de taille similaire sur le marché US ($USD 638.05K ).

Rémunération et revenus: La rémunération de Dave a augmenté alors que l'entreprise n'est pas rentable.


PDG

Dave Schulte (63 yo)

19.4yrs
Titularisation
US$1,238,200
Compensation

Mr. David John Schulte, also known as Dave, JD, CFA, has been an Independent Director of Western Midstream Holdings, LLC (formerly Western Gas Equity Holdings, LLC), the General Partner of Western Midstrea...


Équipe de direction

NomPositionTitularisationCompensationPropriété
David Schulte
Co-Founder19.4yrsUS$1.24m5.59%
$ 10.9k
Robert Waldron
CFO & President3.3yrsUS$761.96k0.092%
$ 178.5
John Grier
COO & Director3.3yrsUS$611.70k0.063%
$ 121.8
Christopher Huffman
Chief Accounting Officer2.6yrspas de données0.034%
$ 65.9
Christopher Reitz
Executive VP2.1yrspas de donnéespas de données
Michael Jonagan
Senior Vice President10.2yrspas de donnéespas de données
Rachel Stroer
Assistant Secretaryno datapas de donnéespas de données
Natalie Hill
Assistant Corporate Secretary and Paralegalno datapas de donnéespas de données
Matt Kreps
Investor Relations Officerno datapas de donnéespas de données
3.3yrs
Durée moyenne de l'emploi
60.5yo
Âge moyen

Gestion expérimentée: L'équipe de direction de CORR.Q est considérée comme expérimentée (ancienneté moyenne 3.3 ans).


Membres du conseil d'administration

NomPositionTitularisationCompensationPropriété
David Schulte
Co-Founder12.5yrsUS$1.24m5.59%
$ 10.9k
John Grier
COO & Director3.3yrsUS$611.70k0.063%
$ 121.8
Conrad Ciccotello
Independent Director19.4yrsUS$112.00k0.21%
$ 416.0
Todd Banks
Lead Independent Director7.1yrsUS$112.00k0.14%
$ 282.0
Catherine Lewis
Independent Director10.9yrsUS$112.00k0.17%
$ 325.3
Arkan Haile
Independent Director2.1yrsUS$100.00k0.088%
$ 171.9
9.0yrs
Durée moyenne de l'emploi
63.5yo
Âge moyen

Conseil d'administration expérimenté: Les membres du conseil d'administration de CORR.Q sont considérés comme expérimentés (ancienneté moyenne 9 ans).


Analyse de l'entreprise et données financières

DonnéesDernière mise à jour (heure UTC)
Analyse de l'entreprise2024/06/12 23:44
Cours de l'action en fin de journée2024/06/12 00:00
Les revenus2023/12/31
Revenus annuels2023/12/31

Sources de données

Les données utilisées dans notre analyse de l'entreprise proviennent de S&P Global Market Intelligence LLC. Les données suivantes sont utilisées dans notre modèle d'analyse pour générer ce rapport. Les données sont normalisées, ce qui peut entraîner un délai avant que la source ne soit disponible.

PaquetDonnéesCadre temporelExemple de source américaine *
Finances de l'entreprise10 ans
  • Compte de résultat
  • Tableau des flux de trésorerie
  • Bilan
Estimations consensuelles des analystes+3 ans
  • Prévisions financières
  • Objectifs de prix des analystes
Prix du marché30 ans
  • Cours des actions
  • Dividendes, scissions et actions
Propriété10 ans
  • Actionnaires principaux
  • Délits d'initiés
Gestion10 ans
  • L'équipe dirigeante
  • Conseil d'administration
Principaux développements10 ans
  • Annonces de l'entreprise

* Exemple pour les titres américains ; pour les titres non américains, des formulaires réglementaires et des sources équivalentes sont utilisés.

Sauf indication contraire, toutes les données financières sont basées sur une période annuelle mais mises à jour trimestriellement. C'est ce qu'on appelle les données des douze derniers mois (TTM) ou des douze derniers mois (LTM). En savoir plus.

Modèle d'analyse et flocon de neige

Les détails du modèle d’analyse utilisé pour générer ce rapport sont disponibles sur notre page Github; nous proposons également des guides expliquant comment utiliser nos rapports et des tutoriels sur Youtube.

Découvrez l'équipe de classe mondiale qui a conçu et construit le modèle d'analyse Simply Wall St.

Indicateurs de l'industrie et du secteur

Nos indicateurs de secteur et de section sont calculés toutes les 6 heures par Simply Wall St. Les détails de notre processus sont disponibles sur Github.

Sources des analystes

CorEnergy Infrastructure Trust, Inc. est couverte par 5 analystes. 0 de ces analystes ont soumis les estimations de revenus ou de bénéfices utilisées comme données d'entrée dans notre rapport. Les soumissions des analystes sont mises à jour tout au long de la journée.

AnalysteInstitution
Barry OxfordD.A. Davidson & Co.
Eduardo SedaLadenburg Thalmann & Company
Torrey SchultzRBC Capital Markets