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Coronado Global Resources Inc. - Quarter Report: 2023 March (Form 10-Q)

Form10q2023q1
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Form10q2023q1p1i0
 
UNITED STATES
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
Washington, D.C. 20549
___________________________________________________
FORM
10-Q
___________________________________________________
(Mark One)
 
QUARTERLY
 
REPORT PURSUANT TO SECTION 13
 
OR 15(d) OF THE SECURITIES EXCHANGE
ACT OF 1934
For the quarterly period ended
March 31, 2023
OR
 
TRANSITION REPORT PURSUANT TO
 
SECTION 13 OR 15(d) OF THE SECURITIES EXCHANGE
ACT OF 1934
For the transition period from
 
to
 
Commission File Number:
1-16247
___________________________________________________
Coronado Global Resources Inc.
(Exact name of registrant as specified in its charter)
___________________________________________________
Delaware
83-1780608
(State or other jurisdiction of
incorporation or organization)
(I.R.S. Employer
Identification No.)
Level 33, Central Plaza One
,
345 Queen Street
Brisbane, Queensland
,
Australia
4000
(Address of principal executive offices)
(Zip Code)
(
61
)
7
3031 7777
(Registrant’s telephone number, including area code)
N/A
(Former name, former address and former fiscal year, if changed since last report)
___________________________________________________
Securities registered pursuant to Section 12(b) of the Act:
 
Title of each class
Trading Symbol(s)
Name of each exchange on which registered
None
None
None
Indicate by check
 
mark whether the
 
registrant (1) has filed
 
all reports required
 
to be filed
 
by Section 13 or
 
15(d) of the
 
Securities Exchange
Act of 1934 during
 
the preceding 12 months
 
(or for such shorter
 
period that the registrant
 
was required to file
 
such reports), and (2) has
been subject to such filing requirements for the past 90 days.
Yes
 
 
No
 
Indicate by check mark whether
 
the registrant has submitted electronically
 
every Interactive Data File required to
 
be submitted pursuant
to Rule 405
 
of Regulation S-T
 
(§232.405 of this
 
chapter) during the
 
preceding 12 months
 
(or for such
 
shorter period that
 
the registrant
was required to submit such files).
 
Yes
 
 
No
 
Indicate by check mark whether the registrant
 
is a large accelerated filer,
 
an accelerated filer, a non-accelerated
 
filer, a smaller reporting
company,
 
or
 
an
 
emerging
 
growth
 
company.
 
See
 
the
 
definitions
 
of
 
“large
 
accelerated
 
filer,”
 
“accelerated
 
filer,”
 
“smaller
 
reporting
company,” and “emerging growth company” in Rule 12b-2 of the Exchange Act.
 
Large accelerated filer
Accelerated filer
Non-accelerated filer
Smaller reporting company
Emerging growth company
 
If an emerging
 
growth company, indicate by
 
check mark if
 
the registrant has
 
elected not to
 
use the extended
 
transition period for
 
complying
with any new or revised financial accounting standards provided pursuant to Section 13(a) of the Exchange Act.
 
Indicate by check mark whether the registrant is a shell company (as defined in Rule 12b-2 of the Exchange Act).
 
Yes
 
 
No
The registrant’s
 
common stock is
 
publicly traded on
 
the Australian Securities
 
Exchange in the
 
form of CHESS
 
Depositary Interests, or
CDIs, convertible at the option of
 
the holders into shares of the
 
registrant’s common stock on a 10-for-1 basis.
 
The total number of shares
of the registrant's common stock, par value $0.01 per share, outstanding on April 30, 2023, including
 
shares of common stock underlying
CDIs, was
167,645,373
.
Form10q2023q1p2i1 Form10q2023q1p2i0
Steel starts
here.
Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q for the quarterly period ended
 
March 31, 2023.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Coronado Global Resources Inc.
 
Form 10-Q March 31, 2023
 
4
PART I – FINANCIAL INFORMATION
ITEM 1.
 
FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
Condensed Consolidated Balance Sheets
(In US$ thousands, except share data)
Assets
Note
(Unaudited)
 
March 31, 2023
December 31,
2022
Current assets:
Cash and restricted cash
 
$
498,300
$
334,629
Trade receivables, net
 
311,980
409,979
Inventories
5
 
185,014
158,018
Other current assets
 
75,636
60,188
Assets held for sale
4
 
26,214
Total
 
current assets
 
1,070,930
989,028
Non-current assets:
Property, plant and equipment,
 
net
6
 
1,411,284
1,389,548
Right of use asset – operating leases, net
 
16,292
17,385
Goodwill
 
28,008
28,008
Intangible assets, net
 
3,260
3,311
Restricted deposits
15
 
86,453
89,062
Other non-current assets
 
21,240
33,585
Total
 
assets
 
$
2,637,467
$
2,549,927
Liabilities and Stockholders’ Equity
Current liabilities:
 
Accounts payable
 
$
69,224
$
61,780
Accrued expenses and other current liabilities
7
 
324,655
343,691
Dividends payable
8
 
8,311
Income tax payable
 
110,541
119,981
Asset retirement obligations
 
15,737
10,646
Contract obligations
 
39,976
40,343
Lease liabilities
 
7,452
7,720
Other current financial liabilities
 
4,175
4,458
Liabilities held for sale
4
 
12,241
Total
 
current liabilities
 
580,071
600,860
Non-current liabilities:
Asset retirement obligations
 
135,241
127,844
Contract obligations
 
86,756
94,525
Deferred consideration liability
 
248,300
243,191
Interest bearing liabilities
9
 
233,523
232,953
Other financial liabilities
 
7,498
8,268
Lease liabilities
 
13,710
15,573
Deferred income tax liabilities
 
103,726
95,671
Other non-current liabilities
 
30,885
27,952
Total
 
liabilities
 
$
1,439,710
$
1,446,837
Common stock $
0.01
 
par value;
1,000,000,000
 
shares
authorized,
167,645,373
 
shares issued and outstanding as of March 31,
2023 and December 31, 2022
1,677
1,677
Series A Preferred stock $
0.01
 
par value;
100,000,000
 
shares
authorized,
1
 
Share issued and outstanding as of March 31, 2023 and
December 31, 2022
Additional paid-in capital
 
1,091,974
1,092,282
Accumulated other comprehensive losses
13
 
(95,926)
(91,423)
Retained earnings
 
200,032
100,554
Total
 
stockholders’ equity
 
1,197,757
1,103,090
Total
 
liabilities and stockholders’ equity
 
$
2,637,467
$
2,549,927
See accompanying notes to unaudited condensed
 
consolidated financial statements.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Coronado Global Resources Inc.
 
Form 10-Q March 31, 2023
 
5
Unaudited Condensed Consolidated Statements of
 
Operations and Comprehensive Income
(In US$ thousands, except share data)
Three months ended
 
 
March 31,
Note
2023
2022
Revenues:
Coal revenues
$
738,345
$
936,628
Other revenues
27,369
10,497
Total
 
revenues
3
765,714
947,125
Costs and expenses:
Cost of coal revenues (exclusive of items shown separately
 
below)
380,474
357,500
Depreciation, depletion and amortization
39,423
38,009
Freight expenses
63,353
59,264
Stanwell rebate
39,208
29,053
Other royalties
85,957
83,032
Selling, general, and administrative expenses
 
7,774
7,876
Total
 
costs and expenses
616,189
574,734
Other (expense) income:
Interest expense, net
(14,665)
(17,332)
Decrease (increase) in provision for discounting and credit
 
losses
3,988
(428)
Other, net
3,042
(2,790)
Total
 
other income, net
(7,635)
(20,550)
Income before tax
141,890
351,841
Income tax expense
10
(34,030)
(81,943)
Net income attributable to Coronado Global Resources
 
Inc.
$
107,860
$
269,898
Other comprehensive income, net of income taxes:
Foreign currency translation adjustments
13
(4,503)
16,258
Total
 
other comprehensive (loss) income
(4,503)
16,258
Total
 
comprehensive income attributable to Coronado
 
Global
Resources Inc.
 
$
103,357
$
286,156
Earnings per share of common stock
Basic
11
0.64
1.61
Diluted
11
0.64
1.61
See accompanying notes to unaudited condensed
 
consolidated financial statements.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Coronado Global Resources Inc.
 
Form 10-Q March 31, 2023
 
6
Unaudited Condensed Consolidated Statements of
 
Stockholders’ Equity
(In US$ thousands, except share data)
Common stock
Preferred stock
Additional
Accumulated other
Total
paid in
comprehensive
Retained
stockholders
Shares
Amount
Series A
Amount
capital
losses
earnings
equity
Balance December 31, 2022
167,645,373
$
1,677
1
$
$
1,092,282
$
(91,423)
$
100,554
$
1,103,090
Net income
107,860
107,860
Other comprehensive loss
(4,503)
(4,503)
Total
 
comprehensive (loss) income
(4,503)
107,860
103,357
Share-based compensation for equity
classified awards
(308)
(308)
Dividends
(8,382)
(8,382)
Balance March 31, 2023
167,645,373
$
1,677
1
$
$
1,091,974
$
(95,926)
$
200,032
$
1,197,757
Common stock
Preferred stock
Additional
Accumulated other
Total
paid in
comprehensive
Retained
stockholders
Shares
Amount
Series A
Amount
capital
losses
earnings
equity
Balance December 31, 2021
167,645,373
$
1,677
1
$
$
1,089,547
$
(44,228)
$
30,506
$
1,077,502
Net income
269,898
269,898
Other comprehensive income
16,258
16,258
Total
 
comprehensive income
16,258
269,898
286,156
Share-based compensation for equity
classified awards
84
84
Dividends
(150,881)
(150,881)
Balance March 31, 2022
167,645,373
$
1,677
1
$
$
1,089,631
$
(27,970)
$
149,523
$
1,212,861
See accompanying notes to unaudited condensed
 
consolidated financial statements.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Coronado Global Resources Inc.
 
Form 10-Q March 31, 2023
 
7
Unaudited Condensed Consolidated Statements of
 
Cash Flows
(In US$ thousands)
Three months ended
March 31,
2023
2022
Cash flows from operating activities:
Net income
$
107,860
$
269,898
Adjustments to reconcile net income to cash and restricted cash
 
provided by
operating activities:
Depreciation, depletion and amortization
39,423
38,009
Amortization of right of use asset - operating leases
1,083
3,401
Amortization of deferred financing costs
483
484
Non-cash interest expense
8,086
7,689
Amortization of contract obligations
(7,201)
(8,670)
Loss on disposal of property,
 
plant and equipment
121
228
Equity-based compensation expense
(308)
84
Deferred income taxes
8,141
19,027
Reclamation of asset retirement obligations
(737)
(1,156)
(Decrease) increase in provision for discounting and credit
 
losses
(3,988)
428
Changes in operating assets and liabilities:
Accounts receivable
105,270
(226,983)
Inventories
(28,039)
(10,574)
Other assets
5,362
3,160
Accounts payable
7,601
(34,488)
Accrued expenses and other current liabilities
(11,883)
54,967
Operating lease liabilities
(2,080)
Income tax payable
(8,510)
(2,086)
Change in other liabilities
2,942
58,431
Net cash provided by operating activities
223,626
171,849
Cash flows from investing activities:
Capital expenditures
(54,839)
(37,768)
Purchase of restricted deposits
(2,403)
(3,548)
Redemption of restricted deposits
3,095
140
Net cash used in investing activities
(54,147)
(41,176)
Cash flows from financing activities:
Principal payments on interest bearing liabilities and other financial
 
liabilities
(920)
(4,773)
Principal payments on finance lease obligations
(31)
(21)
Premiums paid on early redemption of debt
(22)
Net cash used in financing activities
(951)
(4,816)
Net increase in cash and restricted cash
168,528
125,857
Effect of exchange rate changes on cash and restricted
 
cash
(4,857)
7,679
Cash and restricted cash at beginning of period
334,629
437,931
Cash and restricted cash at end of period
$
498,300
$
571,467
Supplemental disclosure of cash flow information:
Cash payments for interest
$
575
$
677
Cash paid for taxes
$
34,000
$
Restricted cash
$
251
$
251
See accompanying notes to unaudited condensed
 
consolidated financial statements.
Coronado Global Resources Inc.
 
Form 10-Q March 31, 2023
 
8
NOTES TO UNAUDITED CONDENSED CONSOLIDATED
 
FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
1.
 
Description of Business, Basis of Presentation
(a)
Description of the Business
 
Coronado
 
Global
 
Resources
 
Inc.
 
is
 
a
 
global
 
producer,
 
marketer,
 
and
 
exporter
 
of
 
a
 
full
 
range
 
of
 
metallurgical
coals,
 
an
 
essential
 
element
 
in
 
the
 
production
 
of
 
steel.
 
The
 
Company
 
has
 
a
 
portfolio
 
of
 
operating
 
mines
 
and
development projects in
 
Queensland, Australia, and
 
in the states of
 
Pennsylvania, Virginia and
 
West Virginia
 
in
the United States, or U.S.
 
(b)
 
Basis of Presentation
 
The interim unaudited condensed consolidated financial statements
 
have been prepared in accordance with the
requirements of U.S. generally accepted
 
accounting principles, or U.S. GAAP,
 
and with the instructions to Form
10-Q and Article
 
10 of Regulation
 
S-X related to
 
interim financial reporting
 
issued by the
 
Securities and Exchange
Commission, or the
 
SEC. Accordingly,
 
they do not
 
include all of
 
the information
 
and footnotes required
 
by U.S.
GAAP for complete
 
financial statements and should
 
be read in
 
conjunction with the audited
 
consolidated financial
statements and notes thereto included in the
 
Company’s Annual Report on Form 10-K filed with the
 
SEC and the
Australian Securities Exchange, or the ASX, on February
 
21, 2023.
The
 
interim
 
unaudited
 
condensed
 
consolidated
 
financial
 
statements
 
are
 
presented
 
in
 
U.S.
 
dollars,
 
unless
otherwise
 
stated.
 
They
 
include
 
the
 
accounts
 
of
 
Coronado
 
Global
 
Resources
 
Inc.
 
and
 
its
 
wholly-owned
subsidiaries.
 
References
 
to
 
“US$”
 
or
 
“USD”
 
are
 
references
 
to
 
U.S.
 
dollars.
 
References
 
to
 
“A$”
 
or
 
“AUD”
 
are
references
 
to
 
Australian
 
dollars,
 
the
 
lawful
 
currency
 
of
 
the
 
Commonwealth
 
of
 
Australia.
 
The
 
“Company”
 
and
“Coronado”
 
are
 
used
 
interchangeably
 
to
 
refer
 
to
 
Coronado
 
Global
 
Resources
 
Inc.
 
and
 
its
 
subsidiaries,
collectively, or to Coronado Global Resources Inc., as
 
appropriate to the context.
 
All intercompany balances and
transactions have been eliminated upon consolidation.
 
In
 
the
 
opinion
 
of
 
management,
 
these
 
interim
 
financial
 
statements
 
reflect
 
all
 
normal,
 
recurring
 
adjustments
necessary
 
for
 
the
 
fair
 
presentation
 
of
 
the
 
Company’s
 
financial
 
position,
 
results
 
of
 
operations,
 
comprehensive
income, cash flows and changes in
 
equity for the periods presented. Balance sheet information
 
presented herein
as of December 31,
 
2022 has been derived from
 
the Company’s audited consolidated balance sheet at
 
that date.
The Company’s results
 
of operations for
 
the three months
 
ended March 31,
 
2023 are not necessarily
 
indicative
of the results that may be expected for the year ending
 
December 31, 2023.
2.
 
Summary of Significant Accounting Policies
Please see Note 2 “Summary
 
of Significant Accounting Policies”
 
contained in the audited
 
consolidated financial
statements for the year ended December 31, 2022 included in Coronado Global Resources Inc.’s Annual Report
on Form 10-K filed with the SEC and ASX on February
 
21, 2023.
 
(a) Newly Adopted Accounting Standards
During
 
the
 
period,
 
there
 
has
 
been
 
no
 
new
 
Accounting
 
Standards
 
Update
 
issued
 
by
 
the
 
Financial
 
Accounting
Standards Board that had a material impact on the Company’s
 
consolidated financial statements.
3.
 
Segment Information
The Company has a portfolio of operating
 
mines and development projects in
 
Queensland, Australia, and in the
states
 
of
 
Pennsylvania,
 
Virginia
 
and
 
West
 
Virginia
 
in
 
the
 
U.S.
 
The
 
operations
 
in
 
Australia,
 
or
 
Australian
Operations, comprise
 
the 100%-owned
 
Curragh producing
 
mine complex. The
 
operations in the
 
United States,
or U.S. Operations,
 
comprise
two
 
100%-owned producing
 
mine complexes (Buchanan
 
and Logan),
one
 
100%-
owned idled mine complex (Greenbrier) and
two
 
development properties (Mon Valley
 
and Russell County).
 
The
 
Company
 
operates
 
its
 
business
 
along
two
 
reportable
 
segments:
 
Australia
 
and
 
the
 
United
 
States.
 
The
organization
 
of
 
the
two
 
reportable
 
segments
 
reflects
 
how
 
the
 
Company’s
 
chief
 
operating
 
decision
 
maker,
 
or
CODM, manages
 
and allocates resources to the various components
 
of the Company’s business.
The CODM
 
uses Adjusted
 
EBITDA as
 
the primary
 
metric to
 
measure each
 
segment’s
 
operating performance.
Adjusted EBITDA is not a measure of financial performance in accordance with U.S. GAAP.
 
Investors should be
aware that
 
the Company’s
 
presentation of
 
Adjusted EBITDA
 
may not
 
be comparable
 
to similarly
 
titled financial
measures used by other companies.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
NOTES TO UNAUDITED CONDENSED CONSOLIDATED
 
FINANCIAL STATE
 
MENTS (Continued)
Coronado Global Resources Inc.
 
Form 10-Q March 31, 2023
 
9
Adjusted EBITDA is
 
defined as earnings
 
before interest, taxes,
 
depreciation, depletion and
 
amortization and other
foreign exchange losses. Adjusted EBITDA is
 
also adjusted for certain discrete items that
 
management exclude
in analyzing each
 
of the
 
Company’s segments’ operating performance.
 
“Other and corporate”
 
relates to additional
financial information for
 
the corporate function
 
such as accounting,
 
treasury, legal, human resources,
 
compliance,
and tax.
 
As such, the corporate function is not determined to be
 
a reportable segment but is discretely disclosed
for purposes of reconciliation to the Company’s
 
unaudited Condensed Consolidated Financial Statements.
Reportable segment results as
 
of and for
 
the three months ended
 
March 31, 2023
 
and 2022 are
 
presented below:
(in US$ thousands)
Australia
United
States
Other and
Corporate
Total
Three months ended March 31, 2023
Total
 
revenues
$
398,661
$
367,053
$
$
765,714
Adjusted EBITDA
13,233
185,042
(7,526)
190,749
Total
 
assets
1,146,508
951,237
539,722
2,637,467
Capital expenditures
7,235
34,163
55
41,453
Three months ended March 31, 2022
Total
 
revenues
$
605,298
$
341,827
$
$
947,125
Adjusted EBITDA
238,968
179,899
(7,880)
410,987
Total
 
assets
1,371,294
976,326
504,735
2,852,355
Capital expenditures
15,962
23,749
92
39,803
The reconciliations
 
of Adjusted
 
EBITDA to
 
net income
 
attributable to the
 
Company for
 
the three months
 
ended
March 31, 2023 and 2022 are as follows:
Three months ended
 
March 31,
(in US$ thousands)
2023
2022
Net income
$
107,860
$
269,898
Depreciation, depletion and amortization
39,423
38,009
Interest expense (net of income)
14,665
17,332
Income tax expense
34,030
81,943
Other foreign exchange (gains) losses
(1)
(2,992)
1,991
Losses on idled assets held for sale
(2)
1,751
1,386
(Decrease) increase in provision for discounting and credit
 
losses
(3,988)
428
Consolidated Adjusted EBITDA
$
190,749
$
410,987
(1)
 
The balance
 
primarily relates
 
to foreign
 
exchange gains
 
and losses
 
recognized in
 
the translation
 
of short-term
 
inter-entity balances
 
in
certain entities within the group that
 
are denominated in currencies other than
 
their respective functional currencies. These
 
gains and losses
are included in “Other, net” on the unaudited Consolidated Statement
 
of Operations and Comprehensive Income.
 
(2)
 
These losses relate to idled non-core assets
 
that the Company has an active plan to sell.
The
 
reconciliations
 
of
 
capital
 
expenditures
 
per
 
the
 
Company’s
 
segment
 
information
 
to
 
capital
 
expenditures
disclosed
 
on
 
the
 
unaudited
 
Condensed
 
Consolidated
 
Statements
 
of
 
Cash
 
Flows
 
for
 
the
 
three
 
months
 
ended
March 31, 2023 and 2022 are as follows:
Three months ended March 31,
(in US$ thousands)
2023
2022
Capital expenditures per unaudited Condensed Consolidated
 
Statements of
Cash Flows
$
54,839
$
37,768
Accruals for capital expenditures
4,098
9,510
Payment for capital acquired in prior periods
(11,242)
(7,475)
Advance payment to acquire long lead capital items
(6,242)
Capital expenditures per segment detail
$
41,453
$
39,803
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
NOTES TO UNAUDITED CONDENSED CONSOLIDATED
 
FINANCIAL STATE
 
MENTS (Continued)
Coronado Global Resources Inc.
 
Form 10-Q March 31, 2023
 
10
Disaggregation of Revenue
The Company disaggregates the revenue
 
from contracts with customers by
 
major product group for each of
 
the
Company’s
 
reportable
 
segments,
 
as
 
the
 
Company
 
believes
 
it
 
best
 
depicts
 
the
 
nature,
 
amount,
 
timing
 
and
uncertainty of revenues and cash flows.
 
All revenue is recognized at a point in time.
Three months ended March 31, 2023
(in US$ thousands)
Australia
United States
Total
Product Groups:
Metallurgical coal
$
372,519
$
283,023
$
655,542
Thermal coal
18,285
64,518
82,803
Total
 
coal revenue
390,804
347,541
738,345
Other
(1)
7,857
19,512
27,369
Total
$
398,661
$
367,053
$
765,714
Three months ended March 31, 2022
(in US$ thousands)
Australia
United States
Total
Product Groups:
Metallurgical coal
$
554,009
$
337,720
$
891,729
Thermal coal
42,289
2,610
44,899
Total
 
coal revenue
596,298
340,330
936,628
Other
(1)
9,000
1,497
10,497
Total
$
605,298
$
341,827
$
947,125
(1) Other revenue for the Australian segment includes
 
the amortization of the Stanwell non-market coal
 
supply contract obligation liability.
4.
 
Assets Held for Sale
During
 
the
 
fourth
 
quarter
 
of
 
2020, the
 
Company
 
committed
 
to
 
a
 
plan
 
to
 
sell
 
the
 
Greenbrier
 
mining
 
asset
 
and
determined that all
 
of the criteria
 
to classify assets
 
and liabilities as
 
held for sale
 
were met. The
 
asset is part
 
of
our U.S. segment, located
 
in the State of Virginia
 
in the United States. The
 
Greenbrier asset does not
 
form part
of the Company’s core business strategy and
 
has been idled since April 1, 2020.
The Company remains
 
committed to a
 
plan to sell
 
the Greenbrier
 
mining asset, however,
 
the timing of
 
the sale
within
 
the
 
next
 
twelve
 
months
 
is
 
uncertain.
 
As such,
 
Greenbrier
 
mining
 
asset
 
no
 
longer
 
meets
 
the
 
criteria
 
for
classification as held for sale and has
 
been reclassified as held for use as
 
of March 31, 2023, however it remains
idle.
 
The assets and
 
liabilities of Greenbrier met
 
the criteria for
 
classification as held for
 
sale as of
 
December 31, 2022,
therefore the Condensed Consolidated Balance Sheet continues to reflect these assets and liabilities as held for
sale as of that date.
 
5.
 
Inventories
(in US$ thousands)
March 31,
2023
December 31,
2022
Raw coal
$
65,571
$
50,604
Saleable coal
62,375
45,913
To
tal coal inventories
127,946
96,517
Supplies inventory
57,068
61,501
To
tal inventories
$
185,014
$
158,018
Coal inventories measured at its net
 
realizable value were $
2.1
million
and $
5.0
 
million as at March 31, 2023
 
and
December 31,
 
2022, respectively,
 
and relates
 
to coal
 
designated for
 
deliveries under
 
the Stanwell
 
non-market
coal supply agreement.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
NOTES TO UNAUDITED CONDENSED CONSOLIDATED
 
FINANCIAL STATE
 
MENTS (Continued)
Coronado Global Resources Inc.
 
Form 10-Q March 31, 2023
 
11
6.
 
Property, Plant and
 
Equipment
(in US$ thousands)
March 31,
2023
December 31,
2022
Land
$
27,686
$
27,711
Buildings and improvements
90,770
91,336
Plant, machinery, mining
 
equipment and transportation vehicles
1,055,106
1,012,844
Mineral rights and reserves
392,846
373,309
Office and computer equipment
9,493
9,488
Mine development
563,755
565,106
Asset retirement obligation asset
76,017
87,877
Construction in process
99,613
82,713
To
tal cost of property,
 
plant and equipment
2,315,286
2,250,384
Less accumulated depreciation, depletion and amortization
904,002
860,836
Property, plant and
 
equipment, net
$
1,411,284
$
1,389,548
7.
 
Accrued Expenses and Other Current Liabilities
Accrued expenses and other current liabilities consist of the
 
following:
(in US$ thousands)
March 31,
2023
December 31,
2022
Wages and employee benefits
$
42,149
$
38,687
Taxes
 
other than income taxes
6,991
5,988
Accrued royalties
102,383
117,131
Accrued freight costs
50,515
44,496
Accrued mining fees
89,520
103,492
Acquisition related accruals
11,612
11,669
Other liabilities
21,485
22,228
Total
 
accrued expenses and other current liabilities
$
324,655
$
343,691
Acquisition
 
related
 
accruals
 
is
 
an
 
accrual
 
for
 
the
 
estimated
 
remaining
 
stamp
 
duty
 
payable
 
on
 
the
 
Curragh
acquisition of $
11.6
 
million (A$
17.0
 
million). Refer to Note 14. “Contingencies” for further details.
8. Dividends payable
On
 
February
 
21,
 
2023,
 
the
 
Company’s
 
Board
 
of
 
Directors
 
declared
 
a
 
bi-annual
 
fully
 
franked
 
fixed
 
ordinary
dividend of $
8.4
 
million, or
0.5
 
cents per CDI. On April 5,
 
2023, the Company paid $
8.3
 
million, net of $
0.1
 
million
foreign exchange
 
gain on
 
payment of
 
dividends to
 
certain CDI
 
holders who
 
elected to be
 
paid in
 
Australian dollars.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
NOTES TO UNAUDITED CONDENSED CONSOLIDATED
 
FINANCIAL STATE
 
MENTS (Continued)
Coronado Global Resources Inc.
 
Form 10-Q March 31, 2023
 
12
9.
 
Interest Bearing Liabilities
The following is a summary of interest-bearing liabilities
 
at March 31, 2023:
 
(in US$ thousands)
March 31, 2023
December 31, 2022
Weighted Average
Interest Rate at
March 31, 2023
Final
Maturity
10.75
% Senior Secured Notes
$
242,326
$
242,326
12.14
%
(2)
2026
ABL Facility
2024
Discount and debt issuance costs
(1)
(8,803)
(9,373)
Total
 
interest bearing liabilities
$
233,523
$
232,953
(1)
Debt issuance costs incurred on the establishment
 
of the ABL Facility has been included within
 
"Other non-current assets" on the
unaudited Condensed Consolidated Balance Sheet.
(2)
 
Represents the effective interest rate.
 
Senior Secured Notes
As of
 
March 31,
 
2023, the
 
Company’s
 
aggregate principal
 
amount of
 
the
10.750
% Senior
 
Secured Notes
 
due
2026, or the Notes, outstanding was $
242.3
 
million. The Notes mature on
May 15, 2026
 
and are senior secured
obligations of the Company.
The
 
terms
 
of
 
the
 
Notes
 
are
 
governed
 
by
 
an
 
indenture,
 
dated
 
as
 
of
 
May
 
12,
 
2021,
 
or
 
the
 
Indenture,
 
among
Coronado Finance
 
Pty Ltd,
 
an Australian
 
proprietary
 
company,
 
as issuer,
 
Coronado,
 
as parent
 
guarantor,
 
the
other guarantors
 
party thereto
 
and Wilmington
 
Trust,
 
National Association,
 
as trustee.
 
The Indenture
 
contains
customary
 
covenants
 
for
 
high
 
yield
 
bonds,
 
including,
 
but
 
not
 
limited
 
to,
 
limitations
 
on
 
investments,
 
liens,
indebtedness, asset
 
sales, transactions
 
with affiliates
 
and restricted
 
payments, including
 
payment of
 
dividends
on capital stock. As of March 31, 2023, the Company was in compliance
 
with all applicable covenants under the
Indenture.
 
The carrying
 
value of
 
debt issuance
 
costs, recorded
 
as a
 
direct deduction
 
from the
 
face amount
 
of the
 
Notes,
were $
8.8
 
million and $
9.4
 
million at March 31, 2023 and December 31, 2022, respectively.
ABL Facility
On May 12, 2021, the Company entered into a senior secured asset-based revolving credit agreement providing
for
 
a
 
multi-currency
 
asset-based-loan
 
facility,
 
or
 
ABL
 
Facility,
 
in
 
an
 
initial
 
principal
 
amount
 
of
 
$
100.0
 
million,
including a $
30.0
 
million sublimit for
 
the issuance of
 
letters of credit
 
and $
5.0
 
million for swingline
 
loans, at any
time outstanding, subject to borrowing base availability.
 
The ABL Facility matures on
May 12, 2024
.
 
Borrowings under
 
the ABL
 
Facility bear
 
interest at
 
a rate
 
equal to
 
a Bank
 
Bill Swap
 
Bid, or
 
BBSY,
 
rate plus
 
an
applicable
 
margin.
 
In
 
addition
 
to
 
paying
 
interest
 
on
 
the
 
outstanding
 
borrowings
 
under
 
the
 
ABL
 
Facility,
 
the
Company is also
 
required to pay
 
a fee in
 
respect of unutilized
 
commitments, on amounts
 
available to be
 
drawn
under outstanding letters of credit and certain administrative
 
fees.
 
As at March 31, 2023,
no
 
amounts were drawn and
no
 
letters of credit were outstanding
 
under the ABL Facility.
As at March 31, 2023, the Company was in compliance with all
 
applicable covenants under the ABL Facility.
The carrying value of debt
 
issuance costs, recorded as “Other non-current assets” in
 
the unaudited Consolidated
Balance Sheets, were $
2.0
million and $
2.5
 
million at March 31, 2023 and December 31, 2022,
 
respectively.
 
 
 
NOTES TO UNAUDITED CONDENSED CONSOLIDATED
 
FINANCIAL STATE
 
MENTS (Continued)
Coronado Global Resources Inc.
 
Form 10-Q March 31, 2023
 
13
10.
 
Income Taxes
For the three months ended March 31, 2023
 
and 2022, the Company estimated its
 
annual effective tax rate and
applied this effective tax rate to its
 
year-to-date pretax income at the end
 
of the interim reporting period. The tax
effects of unusual or
 
infrequently occurring items,
 
including effects of changes
 
in tax laws or rates
 
and changes
in judgment about the
 
realizability of deferred
 
tax assets, are reported
 
in the interim
 
period in which they
 
occur.
The Company’s 2023 estimated
 
annual effective tax rate
 
is
24.0
%, which has been favorably
 
impacted by mine
depletion deductions in
 
the United States.
The Company had
 
an income tax expense
 
of $
34.0
 
million based on
an income before tax of $
141.9
 
million for the three months ended March 31, 2023.
Income tax
 
expense of
 
$
81.9
 
million for
 
the three
 
months ended
 
March 31,
 
2022 was
 
calculated based
 
on an
estimated annual effective tax rate of
23.3
% for the period.
The Company utilizes the
 
“more likely than not”
 
standard in recognizing
 
a tax benefit in
 
its financial statements.
For
 
the
 
three
 
months
 
ended
 
March
 
31,
 
2023,
 
the
 
Company
 
had
no
 
unrecognized
 
tax
 
benefits.
 
If
 
accrual
 
for
interest
 
or
 
penalties
 
is
 
required,
 
it
 
is
 
the
 
Company’s
 
policy
 
to
 
include
 
these
 
as
 
a
 
component
 
of
 
income
 
tax
expense.
The Company is
 
subject to taxation
 
in the
 
U.S. and its
 
various states, as
 
well as Australia
 
and its
 
various localities.
In the
 
U.S.
 
and
 
Australia, the
 
first tax
 
return
 
was
 
lodged for
 
the
 
year
 
ended December
 
31,
 
2018. In
 
the U.S.,
companies are
 
subject to
 
open tax
 
audits for
 
a period
 
of seven
 
years at
 
the federal
 
level and
 
five years
 
at the
state level.
 
In Australia,
 
companies
 
are subject
 
to open
 
tax audits
 
for a
 
period of
 
four years
 
from the
 
date of
assessment.
The Company assessed the need for valuation allowances by evaluating future taxable income, available for tax
strategies and the reversal of temporary tax differences.
11.
 
Earnings per Share
Basic earnings per
 
share of common
 
stock is computed
 
by dividing net
 
income attributable
 
to the Company
 
for
the period,
 
by the
 
weighted-average
 
number of
 
shares
 
of common
 
stock outstanding
 
during the
 
same period.
 
Diluted earnings per share of common stock is computed
 
by dividing net income attributable to the Company
 
by
the weighted-average number
 
of shares
 
of common
 
stock outstanding adjusted
 
to give
 
effect to potentially
 
dilutive
securities.
Basic and diluted earnings per share was calculated as
 
follows (in thousands, except per share data):
Three months ended March 31,
(in US$ thousands, except per share data)
2023
2022
Numerator:
Net income attributable to Company stockholders
 
$
107,860
$
269,898
Denominator (in thousands):
 
Weighted-average shares of common stock outstanding
167,645
167,645
Effects of dilutive shares
307
88
Weighted average diluted shares of common stock
 
outstanding
167,952
167,733
Earnings Per Share (US$):
Basic
0.64
1.61
Dilutive
0.64
1.61
12.
 
Fair Value Measurement
The fair
 
value of
 
a financial
 
instrument is
 
the amount
 
that will
 
be received
 
to sell
 
an asset
 
or paid
 
to transfer
 
a
liability in
 
an orderly transaction
 
between market participants
 
at the
 
measurement date. The
 
fair values
 
of financial
instruments involve uncertainty and cannot be determined with
 
precision.
The Company utilizes valuation
 
techniques that maximize
 
the use of observable inputs
 
and minimize the use of
unobservable
 
inputs
 
to
 
the
 
extent
 
possible.
 
The
 
Company
 
determines
 
fair
 
value
 
based
 
on
 
assumptions
 
that
market participants would use in pricing
 
an asset or liability in the
 
market.
 
When considering market participant
assumptions in fair
 
value measurements, the
 
following fair value
 
hierarchy distinguishes between observable
 
and
unobservable inputs, which are categorized in one of the following
 
levels:
 
 
 
 
 
 
NOTES TO UNAUDITED CONDENSED CONSOLIDATED
 
FINANCIAL STATE
 
MENTS (Continued)
Coronado Global Resources Inc.
 
Form 10-Q March 31, 2023
 
14
Level
 
1 Inputs:
 
Unadjusted
 
quoted
 
prices
 
in
 
active
 
markets
 
for identical
 
assets
 
or liabilities
 
accessible
 
to
 
the
reporting entity at the measurement date.
Level 2 Inputs:
 
Other than quoted prices that are observable for the
 
asset or liability,
 
either directly or indirectly,
for substantially the full term of the asset or liability.
Level
 
3
 
Inputs:
 
Unobservable
 
inputs
 
for
 
the
 
asset
 
or
 
liability
 
used
 
to
 
measure
 
fair
 
value
 
to
 
the
 
extent
 
that
observable inputs
 
are not
 
available, thereby
 
allowing for
 
situations in
 
which there
 
is little, if
 
any,
 
market activity
for the asset or liability at measurement date.
Financial Instruments Measured on a Recurring Basis
As of March
 
31, 2023, there
 
were
no
 
financial instruments
 
required to be
 
measured at fair
 
value on a
 
recurring
basis.
Other Financial Instruments
The following methods
 
and assumptions
 
are used to
 
estimate the fair
 
value of other
 
financial instruments
 
as of
March 31, 2023 and December 31, 2022:
 
Cash
 
and
 
restricted
 
cash,
 
accounts
 
receivable,
 
accounts
 
payable,
 
accrued
 
expenses,
 
lease
 
liabilities
and
 
other
 
current
 
financial
 
liabilities:
 
The
 
carrying
 
amounts
 
reported
 
in
 
the
 
unaudited
 
Condensed
Consolidated Balance Sheets approximate fair value due to the
 
short maturity of these instruments.
 
Restricted
 
deposits,
 
lease
 
liabilities,
 
interest
 
bearing
 
liabilities
 
and
 
other
 
financial
 
liabilities:
 
The
 
fair
values
 
approximate
 
the
 
carrying
 
values
 
reported
 
in
 
the
 
unaudited
 
Condensed
 
Consolidated
 
Balance
Sheets.
 
Interest bearing liabilities: The
 
Company’s outstanding interest-bearing liabilities are carried at
 
amortized
cost. As of March 31,
 
2023, there were
no
 
borrowings outstanding under the ABL Facility. The estimated
fair value of
 
the Notes as
 
of March 31,
 
2023 was approximately
 
$
253.3
 
million based upon
 
quoted market
prices in a market that is not considered active (Level 2).
13.
 
Accumulated Other Comprehensive Losses
Accumulated other comprehensive losses consisted of
 
the following at March 31, 2023:
(in US$ thousands)
Foreign
currency
translation
adjustments
Balance at December 31, 2022
$
(91,423)
Net current-period other comprehensive income (loss):
Loss in other comprehensive income before reclassifications
 
(807)
Loss on long-term intra-entity foreign currency transactions
(3,696)
Total
 
net current-period other comprehensive loss
(4,503)
Balance at March 31, 2023
$
(95,926)
 
 
 
 
 
NOTES TO UNAUDITED CONDENSED CONSOLIDATED
 
FINANCIAL STATE
 
MENTS (Continued)
Coronado Global Resources Inc.
 
Form 10-Q March 31, 2023
 
15
14.
 
Commitments
(a)
 
Mineral Leases
The
 
Company
 
leases
 
mineral
 
interests
 
and
 
surface
 
rights
 
from
 
land
 
owners
 
under
 
various
 
terms
 
and
 
royalty
rates. The future minimum royalties under these leases
 
as of March 31, 2023 are as follows:
(in US$ thousands)
Amount
Year ending
 
December 31,
2023
$
4,043
2024
4,736
2025
4,629
2026
4,500
2027
4,474
Thereafter
23,711
Total
$
46,093
Mineral leases are not in scope of ASC 842 and continue to
 
be accounted for under the guidance in ASC 932,
Extractive Activities – Mining.
(b)
 
Other commitments
As of
 
March 31, 2023,
 
purchase commitments for
 
capital expenditures were
 
$
26.6
 
million, all
 
of which is
 
obligated
within the next twelve months.
In Australia, the
 
Company has generally
 
secured the ability
 
to transport coal
 
through rail contracts
 
and coal export
terminal contracts that are primarily funded
 
through take-or-pay arrangements with terms ranging up to
13 years
.
 
In the U.S., the Company
 
typically negotiates its rail
 
and coal terminal access
 
on an annual basis.
 
As of March
31, 2023, these Australian and U.S.
 
commitments under take-or-pay
 
arrangements totaled $
0.9
 
billion, of which
approximately $
96.0
 
million is obligated within the next twelve months.
15.
 
Contingencies
In the
 
normal course
 
of business,
 
the Company
 
is a
 
party to
 
certain guarantees
 
and financial
 
instruments with
off-balance sheet
 
risk, such
 
as letters
 
of credit
 
and performance
 
or surety
 
bonds.
No
 
liabilities related
 
to these
arrangements are reflected
 
in the Company’s
 
unaudited Condensed Consolidated Balance Sheets.
 
Management
does not expect any material losses to result from these
 
guarantees or off-balance sheet financial instruments.
As required
 
by certain
 
agreements, the
 
Company had
 
cash collateral
 
in the
 
form of
 
deposits in
 
the amount
 
of
$
86.5
 
million and $
89.1
 
million as of
 
March 31, 2023
 
and December 31,
 
2022, respectively,
 
to provide back-to-
back support
 
for bank
 
guarantees,
 
financial
 
payments,
 
other performance
 
obligations, various
 
other
 
operating
agreements and
 
contractual obligations
 
under workers
 
compensation insurance.
 
These deposits
 
are restricted
and classified as long-term assets in the unaudited Condensed
 
Consolidated Balance Sheets.
 
In accordance
 
with the
 
terms of
 
the ABL
 
Facility,
 
the Company
 
may be
 
required
 
to cash
 
collateralize
 
the ABL
Facility to the extent of outstanding letters of credit after the expiration or termination date of such letter of credit.
As of March 31, 2023,
no
 
letter of credit was outstanding and
no
 
cash collateral was required.
For the U.S. Operations in order to provide the required financial assurance, the Company generally uses surety
bonds
 
for
 
post-mining
 
reclamation.
 
The
 
Company
 
can
 
also
 
use
 
bank
 
letters
 
of
 
credit
 
to
 
collateralize
 
certain
obligations.
 
As of
 
March
 
31, 2023,
 
the
 
Company
 
had
 
outstanding
 
surety
 
bonds
 
of $
37.6
 
million and
 
letters
 
of
credit of $
16.8
 
million issued from our available bank guarantees,
 
to meet contractual obligations under workers
compensation insurance and to secure other obligations
 
and commitments.
 
For
 
the
 
Australian
 
Operations,
 
the
 
Company
 
had
 
bank
 
guarantees
 
outstanding
 
of
 
$
25.5
 
million
 
at
 
March
 
31,
2023, primarily in respect of certain rail and port arrangements
 
of the Company.
 
As at March
 
31, 2023, the
 
Company had total
 
outstanding bank guarantees
 
provided of $
42.3
 
million to secure
obligations and
 
commitments. Future
 
regulatory changes
 
relating to
 
these obligations
 
could result
 
in increased
obligations, additional costs or additional collateral requirements.
NOTES TO UNAUDITED CONDENSED CONSOLIDATED
 
FINANCIAL STATE
 
MENTS (Continued)
Coronado Global Resources Inc.
 
Form 10-Q March 31, 2023
 
16
Stamp duty on Curragh acquisition
On September 27, 2022, the Company received from
 
the Queensland Revenue Office, or QRO,
 
an assessment
of the stamp duty
 
payable on its
 
acquisition of the Curragh
 
mine in March
 
2018. The QRO assessed
 
the stamp
duty
 
on
 
this
 
acquisition
 
at
 
an
 
amount
 
of
 
$
55.2
 
million
 
(A$
82.2
 
million)
 
plus
 
unpaid
 
tax
 
interest
 
of
 
$
8.1
 
million
(A$
12.1
 
million).
 
On
 
November
 
23,
 
2022,
 
the
 
Company
 
filed
 
an
 
objection
 
to
 
the
 
assessment
 
and
 
is
 
currently
awaiting the outcome of this objection. The outcome of this
 
objection is uncertain.
 
The Company continues
 
to maintain its
 
position and the
 
estimated accrual $
28.9
 
million (A$
43.0
 
million) stamp
duty payable
 
on the
 
Curragh acquisition
 
based on
 
legal and
 
valuation advice
 
obtained. The
 
Company made
 
a
partial payment to date of the stamp duty reducing the estimated
 
accrual to $
11.6
 
million (A$
17.3
 
million), which
is included
 
within
 
“Accrued
 
Expenses
 
and Other
 
Current
 
Liabilities”
 
in
 
its unaudited
 
Condensed
 
Consolidated
Balance sheet,
 
as at March 31, 2023.
 
From time to time,
 
the Company becomes
 
a party to other
 
legal proceedings in the
 
ordinary course of business
in Australia, the U.S. and other countries where the Company does business.
 
Based on current information, the
Company believes that such other pending
 
or threatened proceedings are likely to
 
be resolved without a material
adverse
 
effect
 
on
 
its
 
financial
 
condition,
 
results
 
of
 
operations
 
or
 
cash
 
flows.
 
In
 
management’s
 
opinion,
 
the
Company is not currently
 
involved in any legal
 
proceedings, which individually
 
or in the aggregate
 
could have a
material effect on the financial condition, results of
 
operations and/or liquidity of the Company.
16.
 
Subsequent Events
New asset-based revolving credit facility
On May
 
8, 2023,
 
or the
 
Signing Date,
 
the Company,
 
Coronado Coal
 
Corporation, a
 
Delaware corporation
 
and
wholly owned subsidiary
 
of the Company,
 
Coronado Finance Pty
 
Ltd, an Australian
 
proprietary company
 
and a
wholly owned
 
subsidiary of
 
the Company,
 
or an
 
Australian Borrower,
 
Coronado Curragh
 
Pty Ltd,
 
an Australian
proprietary company and wholly owned subsidiary of the Company, or an Australian Borrower and, together with
the
 
other
 
Australian
 
Borrower,
 
the
 
Borrowers,
 
and
 
the
 
other
 
guarantors
 
party
 
thereto,
 
collectively
 
with
 
the
Company,
 
the
 
Guarantors
 
and,
 
together
 
with
 
the
 
Borrowers,
 
the
 
Loan
 
Parties,
 
entered
 
into
 
a
 
senior
 
secured
asset-based revolving credit agreement in an initial aggregate amount of
 
$
150.0
 
million, or the New ABL Facility,
with Global Loan Agency Services
 
Australia Pty Ltd, as the
 
Administrative Agent, Global Loan
 
Agency Services
Australia Nominees Pty Ltd, as
 
the Collateral Agent, the
 
Hongkong and Shanghai Banking
 
Corporation Limited,
Sydney Branch,
 
as the
 
Lender,
 
and DBS
 
Bank Limited,
 
Australia Branch,
 
as the
 
Lender and,
 
together with
 
the
other Lender, the Lenders.
 
Upon satisfaction of the stipulated conditions
 
precedent to closing under the New
 
ABL Facility,
 
which conditions
include,
 
among
 
other
 
things,
 
completion
 
of
 
a
 
field
 
examination
 
by
 
an
 
independent
 
third-party
 
assessor,
 
and
satisfactory right
 
of entry
 
arrangements being
 
entered into
 
in relation
 
to certain
 
Australian ports
 
utilized by
 
the
Company for
 
shipment of
 
coal, the
 
New ABL
 
Facility will
 
replace the
 
predecessor ABL
 
Facility.
 
The conditions
precedent under
 
the New
 
ABL Facility
 
need to
 
be satisfied,
 
or waived,
 
on or
 
before the
 
date that
 
falls 60
 
days
after the Signing Date, or such later date as agreed between the Company
 
and each lender under the New ABL
Facility.
The New ABL
 
Facility will
 
mature
three years
 
after the
 
Signing Date
 
and will provide
 
for up to
 
$
150.0
 
million in
borrowings, including a $
100.0
 
million sublimit for the issuance of letters of credit and
 
$
70.0
 
million sublimit as a
revolving credit facility. Availability under the
 
New ABL Facility
 
is limited to
 
an eligible borrowing
 
base, determined
by applying customary advance rates to eligible accounts
 
receivable and inventory.
The New
 
ABL Facility
 
is guaranteed
 
by the
 
Guarantors.
 
Amounts outstanding
 
under the
 
New ABL
 
Facility are
secured by
 
(i) first
 
priority lien
 
in the
 
accounts receivable
 
and other
 
rights to
 
payment, inventory,
 
intercompany
indebtedness, certain general
 
intangibles and commercial tort
 
claims, commodities accounts,
 
deposit accounts,
securities accounts
 
and other
 
related assets
 
and proceeds
 
and products
 
of each
 
of the
 
foregoing, collectively,
the New ABL
 
Collateral, and
 
(ii) a second-priority lien
 
on substantially all
 
of the Company’s assets
 
and the assets
of the
 
guarantors, other than
 
the New ABL
 
Collateral, and (iii)
 
solely in the
 
case of the
 
obligations of the
 
Australian
Borrower, a featherweight
 
floating security interest over certain
 
assets of the Australian Borrower,
 
in each case,
subject to certain customary exceptions
Borrowings under the New
 
ABL Facility bear interest
 
at a rate per
 
annum equal to applicable
 
rate of
2.80
% and
BBSY,
 
for loans denominated in A$, or SOFR, for loans
 
denominated in U$, at the Borrower’s election.
 
NOTES TO UNAUDITED CONDENSED CONSOLIDATED
 
FINANCIAL STATE
 
MENTS (Continued)
Coronado Global Resources Inc.
 
Form 10-Q March 31, 2023
 
17
The New
 
ABL Facility
 
contains customary representations
 
and warranties
 
and affirmative and
 
negative covenants
including, among
 
others, a
 
covenant regarding
 
the maintenance
 
of leverage
 
ratio to
 
be less
 
than
3.00
 
times, a
covenant regarding maintenance of interest coverage ratio to be more than
3.00
 
times, covenants relating to the
payment of dividends, or purchase or redemption of, with respect to any Equity Interests of Holdings or
 
any of its
Subsidiaries,
 
covenants
 
relating
 
to
 
financial
 
reporting,
 
covenants
 
relating
 
to
 
the
 
incurrence
 
of
 
liens
 
or
encumbrances, covenants relating to the incurrence or prepayment of certain debt, compliance with laws, use of
proceeds, maintenance of properties, maintenance of insurance, payment obligations, financial accommodation,
mergers and
 
sales of all
 
or substantially all
 
of the Borrowers
 
and Guarantors’, collectively
 
the Loan Parties,
 
assets
and limitations on changes in the nature of the Loan Parties’
 
business.
The
 
New
 
ABL
 
Facility
 
provides
 
for
 
customary
 
events
 
of
 
default,
 
including,
 
among
 
other
 
things,
 
the
 
event
 
of
nonpayment
 
of
 
principal,
 
interest,
 
fees,
 
or
 
other
 
amounts,
 
a
 
representation
 
or
 
warranty
 
proving
 
to
 
have
 
been
materially incorrect when made, failure to perform or observe certain covenants within a specified period of time,
a cross-default to certain material indebtedness,
 
the bankruptcy or insolvency of
 
the Company and certain of its
subsidiaries,
 
monetary
 
judgment
 
defaults
 
of
 
a
 
specified
 
amount,
 
invalidity
 
of
 
any
 
loan
 
documentation,
 
and
Employee Retirement
 
Income Security
 
Act, or
 
ERISA, defaults
 
resulting in
 
liability of
 
a material
 
amount. In
 
the
event of a
 
default by the Borrowers (beyond
 
any applicable grace or cure
 
period, if any), the
 
Administrative Agent
may and, at the direction
 
of the requisite number of Lenders, shall
 
declare all amounts owing under the
 
New ABL
Facility immediately due and payable, terminate such
 
Lenders’ commitments to make loans under the New
 
ABL
Facility,
 
require
 
the
 
Borrowers
 
to cash
 
collateralize
 
any
 
letter of
 
credit
 
obligations
 
and/or exercise
 
any
 
and all
remedies and other
 
rights under the
 
New ABL Facility. For certain
 
defaults related to
 
insolvency and receivership,
the commitments
 
of the Lenders
 
will be automatically
 
terminated, and
 
all outstanding
 
loans and other
 
amounts
will become
 
immediately due
 
and payable.
 
A review
 
event will
 
occur under
 
the New
 
ABL Facility
 
if any
 
one or
more of
 
the following
 
occurs: (a)
 
downgrade of
 
the credit
 
rating by
 
S&P or
 
Moody’s
 
in respect
 
of a
 
Loan Party
which applies as at
 
the Closing Date; (b)
 
change of control occurs;
 
or (c) delisting of
 
any listed Loan
 
Party from
the relevant stock
 
exchange on which
 
it was listed or
 
a trading halt in
 
respect of such
 
Loan Party for more
 
than
5 business days. Following
 
the occurrence of a
 
review event, the
 
Borrowers must promptly
 
meet and consult in
good faith
 
with the Administrative
 
Agent and the
 
Lenders to agree
 
a strategy to
 
address the relevant
 
review event.
If at
 
the end of
 
a period of
 
20 business days
 
after the occurrence
 
of the review
 
event, the Lenders
 
are not satisfied
with
 
the
 
result
 
of
 
their
 
discussion
 
or
 
meeting
 
with
 
the
 
Borrowers
 
or
 
do
 
not
 
wish
 
to
 
continue
 
to
 
provide
 
their
commitments,
 
the
 
Lenders
 
may
 
declare
 
all
 
amounts
 
owing
 
under
 
the
 
New
 
ABL
 
Facility
 
immediately
 
due
 
and
payable, terminate such Lenders’
 
commitments to make loans
 
under the New ABL
 
Facility, require the Borrowers
to cash collateralize
 
any letter of
 
credit obligations and/or
 
exercise any and
 
all remedies and
 
other rights under
the New ABL Facility.
Curragh Housing Transaction
On May 8, 2023,
 
the Company entered into an
 
agreement for accommodation services and to
 
sell and leaseback
housing and
 
accommodation
 
assets included
 
in property,
 
plant and
 
equipment. The
 
transaction did
 
not satisfy
the
 
sale
 
criteria
 
under
 
ASC
 
606
 
 
Revenues
 
with
 
Contracts
 
with
 
Customers
 
and
 
was
 
deemed
 
a
 
financing
arrangement. As a result, the Company continued to recognize
 
the underlying property,
 
plant and equipment on
its
 
condensed
 
consolidated
 
balance
 
sheet.
 
The
 
proceeds
 
of
 
$
23.2
 
million
 
(A$
34.6
 
million)
 
received
 
from
 
the
transaction will
 
be recorded as
 
“Other Financial
 
Liabilities” on
 
the Company’s
 
condensed consolidated
 
balance
sheet. The term of the financing arrangement is
ten years
 
with an effective interest rate of
12.8
%.
 
In connection with this transaction, the
 
Company borrowed an additional amount of $
27.1
 
million (A$
40.4
 
million)
which will be recorded in “Interest Bearing Liabilities”. The term of the arrangement
 
is
ten years
 
with an effective
interest rate of
12.8
%.
In line
 
with the
 
Company’s
 
capital management
 
strategy,
 
the above
 
transactions provide
 
additional liquidity.
 
In
addition,
 
the
 
accommodation
 
services
 
component
 
of
 
the
 
arrangement
 
is
 
anticipated
 
to
 
enhance
 
the
 
level
 
of
service for our employees at our Curragh mine.
 
Coronado Global Resources Inc.
 
Form 10-Q March 31, 2023
 
18
REPORT OF INDEPENDENT REGISTERED PUBLIC
 
ACCOUNTING FIRM
To the Stockholders
 
and Board of Directors of Coronado Global Resources
 
Inc.
 
Results of Review of Interim Financial Statements
We
 
have
 
reviewed
 
the
 
accompanying
 
condensed
 
consolidated
 
balance sheet
 
of
 
Coronado
 
Global
 
Resources
Inc.
 
(the
 
Company)
 
as
 
of
 
March
 
31,
 
2023,
 
the
 
related
 
condensed
 
consolidated
 
statements
 
of
 
operations
 
and
comprehensive
 
income
 
for
 
the
 
three-month
 
periods
 
ended
 
March
 
31,
 
2023
 
and
 
2022,
 
the
 
condensed
consolidated statements of stockholders’ equity for the three-month period ended March 31, 2023 and 2022, the
condensed consolidated statements
 
of cash flows
 
for the three-month
 
period ended March
 
31, 2023 and
 
2022,
and
 
the
 
related
 
notes
 
(collectively
 
referred
 
to
 
as
 
the
 
“condensed
 
consolidated
 
interim
 
financial
 
statements”).
Based on
 
our reviews,
 
we are
 
not aware
 
of any
 
material modifications
 
that should
 
be made
 
to the
 
condensed
consolidated interim
 
financial statements
 
for them
 
to be
 
in conformity
 
with U.S.
 
generally accepted
 
accounting
principles.
 
We
 
have
 
previously
 
audited,
 
in
 
accordance
 
with
 
the
 
standards
 
of
 
the
 
Public
 
Company
 
Accounting
 
Oversight
Board (United States) (PCAOB), the
 
consolidated balance sheet of the Company
 
as of December 31, 2022, the
related consolidated statements
 
of operations
 
and comprehensive
 
income, stockholders'
 
equity and cash
 
flows
for the year then ended, and
 
the related notes (not presented herein), and
 
in our report dated February 21, 2023,
we
 
expressed
 
an
 
unqualified
 
audit
 
opinion
 
on
 
those
 
consolidated
 
financial
 
statements.
 
In
 
our
 
opinion,
 
the
information set
 
forth in
 
the accompanying
 
condensed consolidated
 
balance sheet
 
as of December
 
31, 2022,
 
is
fairly stated, in all material
 
respects, in relation to the consolidated balance
 
sheet from which it has been
 
derived.
Basis for Review Results
 
These financial
 
statements
 
are the
 
responsibility
 
of the
 
Company's
 
management.
 
We
 
are a
 
public accounting
firm registered with the PCAOB and are required
 
to be independent with respect to the
 
Company in accordance
with the
 
U.S. federal
 
securities laws
 
and the
 
applicable rules
 
and regulations
 
of the
 
SEC and
 
the PCAOB.
 
We
conducted our review
 
in accordance with
 
the standards of
 
the PCAOB. A
 
review of interim
 
financial statements
consists principally
 
of applying
 
analytical procedures
 
and making
 
inquiries of
 
persons
 
responsible for
 
financial
and accounting matters.
 
It is substantially
 
less in scope
 
than an audit
 
conducted in accordance
 
with the standards
of the PCAOB, the objective of which is the expression of an opinion regarding the financial statements taken as
a whole. Accordingly,
 
we do not express such an opinion.
/s/ Ernst & Young
Brisbane, Australia
May 8, 2023.
 
Coronado Global Resources Inc.
 
Form 10-Q March 31, 2023
 
19
ITEM 2.
 
MANAGEMENT’S DISCUSSION
 
AND ANALYSIS
 
OF FINANCIAL
 
CONDITION AND
 
RESULTS
 
OF
OPERATIONS
The following
 
Management’s Discussion
 
and Analysis
 
of our Financial
 
Condition and
 
Results of
 
Operations, or
MD&A, should be read in conjunction with the unaudited Condensed Consolidated Financial Statements and the
related notes to
 
those statements included
 
elsewhere in this
 
Form 10-Q. In addition,
 
this Form 10-Q report
 
should
be read in conjunction
 
with the Consolidated
 
Financial Statements for
 
year ended December 31,
 
2022 included
in Coronado Global Resources Inc.’s
 
Annual Report on Form 10-K for
 
the year ended December 31, 2022,
 
filed
with
 
the
 
U.S.
 
Securities
 
and
 
Exchange
 
Commission,
 
or
 
SEC,
 
and
 
the
 
Australian
 
Securities
 
Exchange,
 
or
 
the
ASX, on February 21, 2023.
Unless otherwise
 
noted,
 
references
 
in this
 
Quarterly
 
Report on
 
Form 10-Q
 
to “we,”
 
“us,”
 
“our,”
 
“Company,”
 
or
“Coronado” refer
 
to Coronado
 
Global Resources
 
Inc. and
 
its consolidated
 
subsidiaries and
 
associates, unless
the context indicates otherwise.
All production and sales volumes contained in this Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q
 
are expressed in metric tons,
or Mt,
 
millions of
 
metric tons,
 
or MMt,
 
or millions
 
of metric
 
tons per
 
annum, or
 
MMtpa, except
 
where otherwise
stated. One Mt
 
(1,000 kilograms) is equal
 
to 2,204.62 pounds and
 
is equivalent to 1.10231
 
short tons. In addition,
all
 
dollar
 
amounts
 
contained
 
herein
 
are
 
expressed
 
in
 
United
 
States
 
dollars,
 
or
 
US$,
 
except
 
where
 
otherwise
stated.
 
References
 
to
 
“A$”
 
are
 
references
 
to
 
Australian
 
dollars,
 
the
 
lawful
 
currency
 
of
 
the
 
Commonwealth
 
of
Australia. Some numerical figures included in this Quarterly Report
 
on Form 10-Q have been subject to rounding
adjustments. Accordingly, numerical figures shown as
 
totals in certain
 
tables may not
 
equal the sum
 
of the figures
that precede them.
CAUTIONARY NOTICE REGARDING FORWARD
 
-LOOKING STATEMENTS
This Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q contains “forward-looking statements” within the meaning of Section 27A of
the Securities Act of 1933, as
 
amended, and Section 21E of the Securities
 
Exchange Act of 1934, as amended,
or the Exchange
 
Act, concerning
 
our business,
 
operations, financial
 
performance and
 
condition, the
 
coal, steel
and
 
other
 
industries,
 
as well
 
as
 
our
 
plans,
 
objectives
 
and
 
expectations
 
for
 
our
 
business,
 
operations,
 
financial
performance
 
and
 
condition.
 
Forward-looking
 
statements
 
may
 
be
 
identified
 
by
 
words
 
such
 
as
 
“may,”
 
“could,”
“believes,”
 
“estimates,”
 
“expects,”
 
“intends,”
 
“plans,”
 
“anticipate,”
 
“forecast,”
 
“outlook,”
 
“target,”
 
“likely,”
“considers” and other similar words.
Any
 
forward-looking
 
statements
 
involve
 
known
 
and
 
unknown
 
risks,
 
uncertainties,
 
assumptions
 
and
 
other
important factors that
 
could cause actual
 
results, performance,
 
events or outcomes
 
to differ
 
materially from
 
the
results,
 
performance,
 
events
 
or
 
outcomes
 
expressed
 
or
 
anticipated
 
in
 
these
 
statements,
 
many
 
of
 
which
 
are
beyond
 
our
 
control.
 
Such
 
forward-looking
 
statements
 
are
 
based
 
on
 
an
 
assessment
 
of
 
present
 
economic
 
and
operating
 
conditions
 
on
 
a
 
number
 
of
 
best
 
estimate
 
assumptions
 
regarding
 
future
 
events
 
and
 
actions.
 
These
factors are difficult to accurately predict and may be beyond our control. Factors that could affect our results, our
announced plans, or an investment in our securities include,
 
but are not limited to:
 
the prices we receive for our coal;
 
uncertainty in
 
global economic
 
conditions, including
 
the extent,
 
duration and
 
impact of
 
the Russia
 
and
Ukraine war, as well as risks related to government actions with respect to trade agreements, treaties or
policies;
 
a decrease in
 
the availability or increase
 
in costs of
 
key supplies, capital equipment
 
or commodities, such
as diesel fuel, steel, explosives and tires, as the result
 
of inflationary pressures or otherwise;
 
the extensive forms of taxation
 
that our mining operations
 
are subject to, and future
 
tax regulations and
developments. For example,
 
the amendments to
 
the coal
 
royalty regime implemented
 
by the Queensland
state Government in
 
Australia in 2022 introducing
 
higher tiers to the
 
coal royalty rates
 
applicable to our
Australian Operations;
 
severe financial
 
hardship,
 
bankruptcy,
 
temporary or
 
permanent shut
 
downs or
 
operational challenges,
due
 
to
 
future
 
public
 
health
 
crisis
 
(such
 
as
 
the
 
COVID-19
 
pandemic),
 
of
 
one
 
or
 
more
 
of
 
our
 
major
customers,
 
including
 
customers
 
in
 
the
 
steel
 
industry,
 
key
 
suppliers/contractors,
 
which
 
among
 
other
adverse effects,
 
could lead
 
to reduced
 
demand for
 
our coal,
 
increased difficulty
 
collecting receivables
and
 
customers
 
and/or
 
suppliers
 
asserting
 
force
 
majeure
 
or
 
other
 
reasons
 
for
 
not
 
performing
 
their
contractual obligations to us;
 
our ability to generate sufficient cash to service
 
our indebtedness and other obligations;
 
Coronado Global Resources Inc.
 
Form 10-Q March 31, 2023
 
20
 
our indebtedness and ability to
 
comply with the covenants and other
 
undertakings under the agreements
governing such indebtedness;
 
our
 
ability
 
to
 
collect
 
payments
 
from
 
our
 
customers
 
depending
 
on
 
their
 
creditworthiness,
 
contractual
performance or otherwise;
 
the demand for steel products, which impacts the demand for
 
our metallurgical, or Met, coal;
 
risks inherent to
 
mining operations could
 
impact the amount
 
of coal produced,
 
cause delay
 
or suspend
coal deliveries, or increase the cost of operating our business;
 
the loss of, or significant reduction in, purchases by our
 
largest customers;
 
risks unique to international mining and trading operations,
 
including tariffs and other barriers to trade;
 
unfavorable economic and financial market conditions;
 
our ability to continue acquiring and developing coal reserves
 
that are economically recoverable;
 
uncertainties in estimating our economically recoverable coal
 
reserves;
 
transportation for our coal becoming unavailable or uneconomic
 
for our customers;
 
the risk
 
that we
 
may
 
be required
 
to pay
 
for unused
 
capacity
 
pursuant
 
to the
 
terms
 
of our
 
take-or-pay
arrangements with rail and port operators;
 
our ability to retain key personnel and attract qualified
 
personnel;
 
any failure to maintain satisfactory labor relations;
 
our ability to obtain, renew or maintain permits and consents
 
necessary for our operations;
 
potential costs or liability under applicable environmental
 
laws and regulations, including with respect
 
to
any
 
exposure
 
to
 
hazardous
 
substances
 
caused
 
by
 
our
 
operations,
 
as
 
well
 
as
 
any
 
environmental
contamination our properties may have or our operations
 
may cause;
 
extensive regulation of our mining operations and future
 
regulations and developments;
 
our
 
ability
 
to
 
provide
 
appropriate
 
financial
 
assurances
 
for
 
our
 
obligations
 
under
 
applicable
 
laws
 
and
regulations;
 
assumptions underlying our asset retirement obligations
 
for reclamation and mine closures;
 
concerns
 
about
 
the
 
environmental
 
impacts
 
of
 
coal
 
combustion,
 
including
 
possible
 
impacts
 
on
 
global
climate issues, which could result
 
in increased regulation of
 
coal combustion and requirements to
 
reduce
greenhouse gas,
 
or GHG,
 
emissions in
 
many jurisdictions,
 
which could
 
significantly affect
 
demand for
our products or our securities and reduced access to capital
 
and insurance;
 
any cyber-attacks or other security breaches that disrupt
 
our operations or result in the dissemination of
proprietary or confidential information about us, our customers
 
or other third parties;
 
the risk that we may not recover our investments in our mining, exploration and other assets, which may
require us to recognize impairment charges related to those assets;
 
risks related to divestitures and acquisitions;
 
the risk that diversity in interpretation and application of accounting principles in the mining industry may
impact our reported financial results; and
 
other
 
risks
 
and
 
uncertainties
 
detailed
 
herein,
 
including,
 
but
 
not
 
limited
 
to,
 
those
 
discussed
 
in
 
“Risk
Factors,” set forth in Part II, Item 1A of this Quarterly Report
 
on Form 10-Q.
 
We
 
make
 
many
 
of
 
our
 
forward-looking
 
statements
 
based
 
on
 
our
 
operating
 
budgets
 
and
 
forecasts,
 
which
 
are
based upon
 
detailed assumptions.
 
While we
 
believe that
 
our assumptions
 
are reasonable,
 
we caution
 
that it
 
is
 
Coronado Global Resources Inc.
 
Form 10-Q March 31, 2023
 
21
very difficult to
 
predict the impact
 
of known factors,
 
and it is
 
impossible for us
 
to anticipate all
 
factors that could
affect our actual results.
See Part I, Item
 
1A. “Risk Factors”
 
of our Annual Report
 
on Form 10-K for
 
the year ended December
 
31, 2022,
filed with the SEC and ASX on February 21, 2023, for a more complete
 
discussion of the risks and uncertainties
mentioned above
 
and for
 
discussion of
 
other risks
 
and uncertainties
 
we face
 
that could
 
cause actual
 
results to
differ materially from those expressed or implied by
 
these forward-looking statements.
 
All
 
forward-looking
 
statements
 
attributable
 
to
 
us
 
are
 
expressly
 
qualified
 
in
 
their
 
entirety
 
by
 
these
 
cautionary
statements, as well as others
 
made in this Quarterly Report on Form
 
10-Q and hereafter in our other
 
filings with
the
 
SEC
 
and
 
public
 
communications.
 
You
 
should
 
evaluate
 
all
 
forward-looking
 
statements
 
made
 
by
 
us
 
in
 
the
context of these risks and uncertainties.
We caution you that the risks and uncertainties identified by us may not be all of the factors that are important to
you.
 
You
 
should
 
not
 
interpret
 
the
 
disclosure
 
of
 
any
 
risk
 
to
 
imply
 
that
 
the
 
risk
 
has
 
not
 
already
 
materialized.
Furthermore, the
 
forward-looking statements
 
included in this
 
Quarterly Report
 
on Form 10-Q
 
are made only
 
as
of the date
 
hereof. We
 
undertake no
 
obligation to
 
publicly update
 
or revise
 
any forward-looking
 
statement as
 
a
result of new information, future events, or otherwise, except
 
as required by applicable law.
Overview
We
 
are
 
a
 
global
 
producer,
 
marketer
 
and
 
exporter
 
of
 
a
 
full
 
range
 
of
 
Met
 
coal
 
products.
 
We
 
own
 
a
 
portfolio
 
of
operating mines and development
 
projects in Queensland, Australia,
 
and in the states of
 
Virginia,
 
West Virginia
and Pennsylvania in the United States.
 
Our Australian
 
Operations
 
comprise the
 
100%-owned
 
Curragh producing
 
mine complex.
 
Our U.S.
 
Operations
comprise
 
two
 
100%-owned
 
producing
 
mine
 
complexes
 
(Buchanan
 
and
 
Logan),
 
one
 
100%-owned
 
idled
 
mine
complex (Greenbrier) and two development properties (Mon Valley
 
and Russell County). In addition to Met coal,
our Australian
 
Operations sell
 
thermal coal
 
domestically,
 
which is
 
used to
 
generate electricity,
 
to Stanwell
 
and
some thermal
 
coal in
 
the export
 
market. Our
 
U.S. Operations
 
primarily focus
 
on the
 
production of
 
Met coal
 
for
the North American domestic and seaborne export
 
markets and also produce and sell some
 
thermal coal that is
extracted in the process of mining Met coal.
 
Coking coal
 
index prices
 
have continued
 
to increase
 
in the
 
first quarter
 
of 2023
 
compared to
 
fourth quarter
 
of
2022, primarily driven by supply constraints in key Met coal
 
markets caused by wet weather amidst mild demand
recovery from
 
Indian and
 
Southeast Asian
 
steelmakers. The
 
Australian Premium
 
Low Volume
 
Index averaged
$335 per Mt during Q1 2023, $60 per Mt above Q4 2022, however,
 
$153 per Mt below Q1 2022.
 
Coronado has
 
continued to
 
take advantage
 
of its
 
unique geographical
 
diversification as
 
a Met
 
coal supplier
 
of
scale to meet the requirements of steel customers across the globe. Our U.S. Operations have taken advantage
of current unique market fundamentals created
 
by the trade restrictions on Russian coal
 
by switching coal sales
from China to Europe providing higher returns for our
 
products.
 
Our results for the three months ended
 
March 31, 2023, were adversely impacted
 
by (1) significant wet weather
events impacting
 
production
 
at our
 
Australian Operations
 
,
 
(2) continued
 
inflationary
 
pressure (3)
 
reduced coal
availability from
 
equipment breakdown,
 
(4) a
 
train derailment
 
on the
 
Blackwater line
 
which impacted
 
our sales
volume, (5) lower
 
average realized Met
 
price per Mt sold
 
compared to first
 
quarter of 2022
 
and (6) higher sales
related costs (royalties and freight costs).
 
For the three months ended March 31, 2023, we produced and sold 3.7 MMt of coal. Met coal sales represented
74.7% of our
 
total volume
 
of coal sold
 
and 88.8% of
 
total coal revenues
 
for the three
 
months ended
 
March 31,
2023.
Coal revenues of $738.3
 
million for the three
 
months ended March 31,
 
2023, decreased by 21.2%
 
compared to
the same
 
period in
 
2022, driven
 
by decreased
 
average realized
 
Met price
 
per Mt
 
sold from
 
$266.5 to
 
$239.7.
Sales volumes
 
were lower
 
for the
 
three months
 
ended March
 
31, 2023,
 
compared to
 
the same
 
period in
 
2022
due to lower production primarily driven by higher than anticipated wet weather resulting in
 
lower coal availability
at
 
our
 
Australian
 
Operations
 
combined
 
with
 
shipping
 
delays
 
from
 
adverse
 
weather
 
at
 
our
 
U.S.
 
Operations.
Operating costs for
 
the three months
 
ended March 31,
 
2023, were $569.0
 
million, or 7.6%,
 
higher compared to
the corresponding period in
 
2022 primarily driven by
 
inflationary pressure on supply,
 
contractors and fuel costs,
additional
 
fleets
 
mobilized
 
since
 
March
 
31,
 
2022
 
and
 
unplanned
 
equipment
 
breakdown
 
at
 
our
 
Australian
Operations and higher freight costs at our U.S. Operations
 
.
Liquidity
As of March 31, 2023,
 
the Company’s net
 
cash position,
 
comprising of $498.0 million
 
cash (excluding restricted
cash) less
 
$242.3 million
 
aggregate principal
 
amount of Notes
 
outstanding,
 
was $255.7
 
million.
 
Coronado has
 
Coronado Global Resources Inc.
 
Form 10-Q March 31, 2023
 
22
available
 
liquidity
 
of
 
$598.0
 
million
 
as
 
of
 
March
 
31,
 
2023,
 
consisting
 
of
 
cash
 
(excluding
 
restricted
 
cash)
 
and
$100.0 million availability under our ABL facility,
 
which remains fully undrawn.
Safety
For
 
our
 
Australian
 
Operations,
 
the
 
twelve-month
 
rolling
 
average
 
Total
 
Reportable
 
Injury
 
Frequency
 
Rate,
 
or
TRIFR, at
 
March 31,
 
2023 was
 
3.18
compared to
 
a rate
 
of 3.92
 
at the
 
end of
 
December 31,
 
2022. At
 
our U.S.
Operations, the
 
twelve-month rolling
 
average Total
 
Reportable Incident
 
Rate, or
 
TRIR, at
 
March 31,
 
2023 was
2.43
compared to a rate of 2.42
 
at the end of December
 
31, 2022.
 
Reportable rates for our Australian
 
and U.S.
Operations are below the relevant industry benchmarks.
 
The safety
 
of our
 
workforce is our
 
number one priority
 
and Coronado remains
 
focused on the
 
safety and wellbeing
of all employees and contracting parties.
Segment Reporting
In accordance with
 
Accounting Standards Codification,
 
or ASC, 280,
 
Segment Reporting, we
 
have adopted the
following reporting
 
segments: Australia and
 
the United
 
States. In
 
addition, “Other and
 
Corporate” is
 
not a
 
reporting
segment but is disclosed for the purposes of reconciliation
 
to our consolidated financial statements.
Results of Operations
How We Evaluate Our Operations
We
 
evaluate
 
our
 
operations
 
based
 
on
 
the
 
volume
 
of
 
coal
 
we
 
can
 
safely
 
produce
 
and
 
sell
 
in
 
compliance
 
with
regulatory
 
standards,
 
and
 
the
 
prices
 
we
 
receive
 
for
 
our
 
coal.
 
Our
 
sales
 
volume
 
and
 
sales
 
prices
 
are
 
largely
dependent upon
 
the terms
 
of our
 
coal sales
 
contracts, for
 
which prices
 
generally are
 
set based
 
on daily
 
index
averages, on a quarterly basis or annual fixed price contracts.
Our management
 
uses a
 
variety of
 
financial and
 
operating metrics
 
to analyze
 
our performance.
 
These metrics
are significant factors
 
in assessing our
 
operating results
 
and profitability.
 
These financial
 
and operating metrics
include: (i) safety and environmental metrics; (ii) Adjusted EBITDA; (iii) total sales volumes and average realized
price
 
per
 
Mt
 
sold,
 
which
 
we
 
define
 
as
 
total
 
coal
 
revenues
 
divided
 
by
 
total
 
sales
 
volume;
 
(iv) Met
 
coal
 
sales
volumes and average realized Met price per
 
Mt sold, which we define as Met coal
 
revenues divided by Met coal
sales volume; (v) average
 
segment mining costs
 
per Mt sold,
 
which we define
 
as mining costs
 
divided by sales
volumes (excluding non-produced coal) for the respective segment; (vi) average segment operating costs
 
per Mt
sold, which we define as segment operating costs divided by sales volumes for the respective segment; and (vii)
net cash, which we define
 
as cash and cash equivalents
 
(excluding restricted cash) less
 
outstanding aggregate
principal amount of 10.750% senior secure notes due
 
2026.
Coal
 
revenues
 
are
 
shown
 
on
 
our
 
statement
 
of
 
operations
 
and
 
comprehensive
 
income
 
exclusive
 
of
 
other
revenues.
 
Generally,
 
export
 
sale contracts
 
for our
 
Australian
 
Operations
 
require
 
us to
 
bear the
 
cost
 
of freight
from our mines to the
 
applicable outbound shipping
 
port, while freight costs
 
from the port to the
 
end destination
are typically
 
borne by the
 
customer. Sales to the
 
export market from
 
our U.S.
 
Operations are generally
 
recognized
when title to
 
the coal passes
 
to the customer
 
at the
 
mine load
 
out similar
 
to a
 
domestic sale.
 
For our
 
domestic
sales,
 
customers
 
typically
 
bear
 
the
 
cost
 
of
 
freight.
 
As
 
such,
 
freight
 
expenses
 
are
 
excluded
 
from
 
cost
 
of
 
coal
revenues to allow for consistency and comparability in
 
evaluating our operating performance.
Non-GAAP Financial Measures; Other Measures
The
 
following
 
discussion
 
of
 
our
 
results
 
includes
 
references
 
to
 
and
 
analysis
 
of
 
Adjusted
 
EBITDA,
 
Segment
Adjusted EBITDA and
 
mining costs, which are
 
financial measures not recognized
 
in accordance with
 
U.S. GAAP.
Non-GAAP financial
 
measures, including
 
Adjusted EBITDA,
 
Segment Adjusted
 
EBITDA and
 
mining costs,
 
are
used by investors to measure our operating performance.
Adjusted EBITDA, a non-GAAP measure, is defined as earnings before interest, tax, depreciation, depletion and
amortization
 
and
 
other
 
foreign
 
exchange
 
losses.
 
Adjusted
 
EBITDA
 
is
 
also
 
adjusted
 
for
 
certain
 
discrete
 
non-
recurring items that we exclude in
 
analyzing each of our segments’
 
operating performance. Adjusted EBITDA
 
is
not intended to
 
serve as an
 
alternative to U.S. GAAP
 
measures of performance
 
and may not
 
be comparable to
similarly titled measures presented by
 
other companies. A reconciliation
 
of Adjusted EBITDA to its
 
most directly
comparable measure under U.S. GAAP is included below.
 
 
Coronado Global Resources Inc.
 
Form 10-Q March 31, 2023
 
23
Segment
 
Adjusted
 
EBITDA
 
is
 
defined
 
as
 
Adjusted
 
EBITDA
 
by
 
operating
 
and
 
reporting
 
segment,
 
adjusted
 
for
certain
 
transactions,
 
eliminations
 
or
 
adjustments
 
that
 
our
 
CODM
 
does
 
not
 
consider
 
for
 
making
 
decisions
 
to
allocate resources among segments or assessing segment performance.
 
Segment Adjusted EBITDA is used as
a supplemental
 
financial measure
 
by management
 
and by
 
external users
 
of our
 
financial statements,
 
such
 
as
investors, industry analysts and lenders, to assess the operating
 
performance of the business.
Mining costs,
 
a non-GAAP measure,
 
is based on
 
reported cost of
 
coal revenues, which
 
is shown
 
on our
 
statement
of
 
operations
 
and
 
comprehensive
 
income
 
exclusive
 
of
 
freight
 
expense,
 
Stanwell
 
rebate,
 
other
 
royalties,
depreciation,
 
depletion
 
and
 
amortization,
 
and selling,
 
general and
 
administrative
 
expenses,
 
adjusted for
 
other
items that do not relate directly to the costs incurred to produce coal at a mine. Mining costs excludes these cost
components as
 
our CODM
 
does not
 
view these
 
costs as
 
directly attributable
 
to the
 
production of
 
coal. Mining
costs
 
is
 
used
 
as
 
a
 
supplemental
 
financial
 
measure
 
by
 
management,
 
providing
 
an
 
accurate
 
view
 
of
 
the
 
costs
directly
 
attributable
 
to
 
the
 
production
 
of
 
coal
 
at
 
our
 
mining
 
segments,
 
and
 
by
 
external
 
users
 
of
 
our
 
financial
statements, such as
 
investors, industry analysts and
 
ratings agencies, to assess
 
our mine operating
 
performance
in comparison to the mine operating performance of other companies
 
in the coal industry.
Three Months Ended March 31, 2023 Compared to
 
Three Months Ended March 31, 2022
Summary
The financial and operational highlights for the three months ended
 
March 31, 2023 include:
 
Net
 
income
 
of
 
$107.9
 
million
 
for
 
the
 
three
 
months
 
ended
 
March
 
31,
 
2023,
 
was
 
$162.0
 
million
 
lower
compared
 
to
 
$269.9
 
million
 
for
 
the
 
three
 
months
 
ended
 
March
 
31,
 
2022.
 
This
 
was
 
driven
 
by
 
lower
revenues due
 
to lower
 
average realized
 
Met coal
 
price per
 
Mt sold,
 
lower sales
 
volume and
 
by higher
operating costs.
 
Sales volume totaled 3.7 MMt for the three months ended March 31, 2023, compared
 
to 4.4 MMt for the
three months ended March 31,
 
2022. The lower sales volumes
 
were largely driven by the impact
 
of wet
weather
 
and
 
equipment
 
breakdown
 
on
 
production
 
performance
 
and
 
coal
 
availability
 
at
 
our
 
Australian
Operations, and a train derailment on the Blackwater line resulting in coal not being railed for two weeks
while repairs were undertaken.
 
Average realized Met price
 
per Mt sold
 
of $239.7 for
 
the three months ended
 
March 31, 2023,
 
was 10.1%
lower compared to $266.5 per
 
Mt sold for the same
 
period in 2022 as the
 
Met coal supply has readjusted
following the impact of Russia and Ukraine war on the global coal supply chain
 
and supply constraints in
key Met coal markets during the first half of 2022.
 
Adjusted EBITDA for
 
the three months
 
ended March
 
31, 2023, of
 
$190.7 million,
 
a decrease of
 
$220.2
million compared to $411.0
 
million for the three
 
months ended March
 
31, 2022, due to
 
lower coal sales
revenues and higher operating costs.
 
As of March
 
31, 2023,
 
the Company
 
had total
 
available liquidity
 
of $598.0
 
million, consisting
 
of $498.0
million cash (excluding restricted cash) and $100.0 million of availability
 
under the ABL Facility.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Coronado Global Resources Inc.
 
Form 10-Q March 31, 2023
 
24
Three months ended March 31,
2023
2022
Change
%
(in US$ thousands)
Revenues:
Coal revenues
$
738,345
$
936,628
$
(198,283)
(21.2%)
Other revenues
27,369
10,497
16,872
160.7%
Total
 
revenues
765,714
947,125
(181,411)
(19.2%)
Costs and expenses:
Cost of coal revenues (exclusive of items
shown separately below)
380,474
357,500
22,974
6.4%
Depreciation, depletion and amortization
39,423
38,009
1,414
3.7%
Freight expenses
63,353
59,264
4,089
6.9%
Stanwell rebate
39,208
29,053
10,155
35.0%
Other royalties
85,957
83,032
2,925
3.5%
Selling, general, and administrative expenses
7,774
7,876
(102)
(1.3%)
Total
 
costs and expenses
616,189
574,734
41,455
7.2%
Other income (expenses):
Interest expense, net
(14,665)
(17,332)
2,667
(15.4%)
 
Decrease (increase) in provision for
discounting and credit losses
3,988
(428)
4,416
(1,031.8%)
Other, net
3,042
(2,790)
5,832
(209.0%)
Total
 
other expenses, net
(7,635)
(20,550)
12,915
(62.8%)
Net income before tax
141,890
351,841
(209,951)
(59.7%)
Income tax expense
(34,030)
(81,943)
47,913
(58.5%)
Net income attributable to Coronado Global
Resources, Inc.
$
107,860
$
269,898
$
(162,038)
(60.0%)
Coal Revenues
Coal revenues
 
were $738.3
 
million for
 
the three
 
months ended
 
March 31,
 
2023, a
 
decrease of
 
$198.3 million,
compared
 
to
 
$936.6
 
million
 
for
 
the
 
three
 
months
 
ended
 
March
 
31,
 
2022.
 
The
 
decrease
 
was
 
driven
 
by
 
lower
average realized Met coal price of
 
$239.7 per Mt sold for the three
 
months ended March 31, 2023, compared
 
to
$266.5 per Mt sold for the
 
same period in 2022 and lower coal
 
sales volume. Coal sales volume at our
 
Australian
Operations
 
were
 
down
 
by
 
0.6
 
MMt
 
due
 
to
 
reduced
 
production
 
from
 
higher
 
than
 
anticipated
 
wet
 
weather
 
and
equipment breakdown,
 
while sales volume for our U.S. Operations were 0.1 MMt
 
higher.
Other revenues
Other
 
revenues
 
were
 
$27.4
 
million
 
for
 
the
 
three
 
months
 
ended
 
March
 
31,
 
2023,
 
an
 
increase
 
of
 
$16.9
 
million
compared to $10.5
 
million for the
 
three months ended
 
March 31, 2022.
 
This increase was
 
primarily driven by
 
a
one-off termination fee revenue from a coal sales contract
 
cancelled at our U.S. Operations.
Cost of Coal Revenues (Exclusive of Items Shown
 
Separately Below)
Cost of coal revenues comprise costs related
 
to produced tons sold, along with
 
changes in both the volumes and
carrying
 
values
 
of
 
coal
 
inventory.
 
Cost
 
of
 
coal
 
revenues
 
include
 
items
 
such
 
as
 
direct
 
operating
 
costs,
 
which
includes employee-related costs,
 
materials and
 
supplies, contractor services,
 
coal handling
 
and preparation costs
and production taxes.
Total
 
cost of
 
coal revenues
 
were $380.5
 
million for
 
the three
 
months ended
 
March 31,
 
2023, $23.0
 
million, or
6.4% higher,
 
compared to $357.5 million for the three months ended
 
March 31, 2022.
Our Australian Operations
 
contributed $12.0 million
 
to the increase
 
in total cost of
 
coal revenues, largely
 
driven
by the impact of continued inflationary pressure on contractors’
 
costs, fuel, and other supply costs and additional
fleet
 
mobilized
 
in
 
February
 
2022,
 
partially
 
offset
 
by
 
lower
 
purchased
 
coal
 
cost
 
and
 
favorable
 
average
 
foreign
exchange rate on
 
translation of the
 
Australian Operations for
 
the three months
 
ended March 31,
 
2023, of A$/US$:
0.68 compared to
 
0.72 for the
 
same period in
 
2022. Cost
 
of coal revenues
 
for our U.S
 
Operations for the
 
three
months ended March 31,
 
2023, was $11.0
 
million higher compared to
 
the three months ended
 
March 31, 2022,
largely due to the continued impact of inflation on labor
 
and supply costs.
 
Coronado Global Resources Inc.
 
Form 10-Q March 31, 2023
 
25
Freight Expenses
Freight expenses
 
relate to
 
costs associated
 
with rail
 
and port
 
providers,
 
including
 
take-or-pay commitments
 
at
our
 
Australian
 
Operations,
 
and
 
demurrage
 
costs.
 
Freight
 
expenses
 
totaled
 
$63.4
 
million
 
for the
 
three
 
months
ended March 31, 2023, an increase of $4.1 million, compared to $59.3 million for the three months ended March
31, 2022. Our U.S. Operations’ freight
 
cost contributed $10.0 million to
 
this increase, driven by coal sales
 
under
certain contracts
 
for which
 
we arrange
 
and pay
 
for transportation
 
to port
 
that did
 
not exist
 
to the
 
same extent
during the
 
three months
 
ended March
 
31, 2022,
 
partially offset
 
by lower
 
sales volume
 
and a
 
favorable foreign
exchange rate on translation
 
of our Australian Operations.
 
Stanwell Rebate
The Stanwell rebate was $39.2 million for the three months ended March
 
31, 2023,
 
an increase of $10.1 million,
compared to $29.1 million for
 
the three months ended March
 
31, 2022. The increase was
 
largely driven by higher
realized export reference coal pricing for the prior twelve
 
-month period used to calculate the rebate.
 
Other Royalties
Other royalties
 
were $86.0
 
million
 
in the
 
three months
 
ended
 
March
 
31, 2023,
 
an increase
 
of $2.9
 
million, as
compared to $83.0 million for the three months ended March 31,
 
2022. Royalties have increased compared to a
significant decline in
 
coal revenues due
 
to the adverse
 
impact of the
 
new Queensland Government
 
royalty regime
effective
 
from July
 
1, 2022
 
to our
 
Australian Operations,
 
partially offset
 
by lower
 
sales volumes
 
and favorable
foreign exchange rate on translation
 
of our Australian Operations. The new
 
royalty regime has resulted in
 
$29.0
million additional royalty costs for the three months ended
 
March 31, 2023.
Decrease (increase) in Provision for Discounting and
 
Credit Losses
Decrease in provision for
 
discounting and credit losses of
 
$3.9 million in the
 
three months ended March 31,
 
2023,
a favorable movement of $4.4 million compared to increase in provision for discounting and credit losses of $0.4
million for the three months ended March 31, 2022. The lower provision was
 
primarily driven by timely collection
of trade receivables during the three months ended March
 
31, 2023.
 
Interest Expense, net
Interest expense,
 
net was
 
$14.7 million
 
in the
 
three months
 
ended March
 
31, 2023,
 
a decrease
 
of $2.7
 
million
compared to
 
$17.3 million
 
for the
 
three months
 
ended March
 
31, 2022.
 
The decrease
 
was due
 
to lower
 
Notes
outstanding during the three months ended March 31,
 
2023, following redemptions since March 31, 2023.
 
Income Tax Expense
Income tax
 
expense of
 
$34.0
 
million for
 
the three
 
months ended
 
March 31,
 
2023, decreased
 
by $47.9
 
million,
compared to a tax expense of $81.9 million for the three months ended
 
March 31, 2022, driven by lower income
before tax in the 2023 period.
The income tax expense for the three months ended March 31, 2023, is based on an annual effective tax rate of
24.0%.
 
 
Coronado Global Resources Inc.
 
Form 10-Q March 31, 2023
 
26
Supplemental Segment Financial Data
Three months ended March 31, 2023 compared to three months
 
ended March 31, 2022
Australia
Three months ended March 31,
2023
2022
Change
%
(in US$ thousands)
Sales volume (MMt)
2.2
2.8
(0.6)
(21.6)%
Total
 
revenues ($)
398,661
605,298
(206,637)
(34.1)%
Coal revenues ($)
390,804
596,298
(205,494)
(34.5)%
Average realized price per Mt sold ($/Mt)
178.9
214.1
(35.2)
(16.4)%
Met sales volume (MMt)
1.5
1.8
(0.3)
(15.0)%
Met coal revenues ($)
372,519
554,009
(181,490)
(32.8)%
Average realized Met price per Mt sold ($/Mt)
241.9
305.8
(63.9)
(20.9)%
Mining costs ($)
236,056
202,018
34,038
16.8%
Mining cost per Mt sold ($/Mt)
108.5
76.1
32.4
42.6%
Operating costs ($)
385,226
365,707
19,519
5.3%
Operating costs per Mt sold ($/Mt)
176.4
131.3
45.1
34.3%
Segment Adjusted EBITDA ($)
13,233
238,968
(225,735)
(94.5)%
Coal revenues for our Australian Operations,
 
for the three months ended March 31, 2023, were $390.8 million, a
decrease of
 
$205.5 million
 
or 34.5%,
 
compared to
 
$596.3 million
 
for the
 
three months
 
ended March
 
31, 2022.
This decrease
 
was driven
 
by lower
 
average realized
 
Met coal price
 
per Mt
 
sold of
 
$241.9 for
 
the three
 
months
ended March
 
31, 2023, $63.9
 
lower than the
 
$305.8 per
 
Mt sold
 
for the same
 
period in
 
2022 as Met
 
coal price
index
 
readjusts
 
from record
 
highs
 
achieved
 
in
 
the
 
first
 
half of
 
2022.
 
The
 
decrease
 
was
 
exacerbated
 
by lower
sales
 
volume
 
of
 
0.6
 
MMt
 
due
 
to
 
higher
 
than
 
planned
 
wet
 
weather
 
and
 
equipment
 
breakdown
 
and
 
co-shipper
delays.
Operating costs increased
 
by $19.5 million,
 
or 5.3%, for
 
the three months
 
ended March
 
31, 2023, compared
 
to
the three months ended
 
March 31, 2022. The
 
increase was largely driven
 
by higher mining costs,
 
higher Stanwell
rebate and higher royalties as a result of the new
 
royalty regime introduced by the Queensland government from
July
 
1,
 
2022.
 
Mining
 
costs
 
were
 
$34.0
 
million,
 
or 16.8%,
 
higher
 
for
 
the
 
three
 
months
 
ended
 
March
 
31,
 
2023,
compared to the same period in 2022, primarily due to additional fleet mobilized in February 2022 and continued
inflationary pressures on costs including contractor costs and fuel costs. This combined with lower sales volu
 
me
resulted to
 
a higher
 
Mining and
 
Operating cost
 
per Mt
 
sold of
 
$32.4 and
 
$45.1, respectively,
 
compared to
 
the
same period in 2022.
 
Segment Adjusted
 
EBITDA of
 
$13.2 million
 
for the
 
three months
 
ended March
 
31, 2023,
 
decreased by
 
$225.7
million compared to Adjusted
 
EBITDA of $239.0 million
 
for the three months
 
ended March 31, 2022,
 
which was
driven by lower coal revenues and higher operating costs.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Coronado Global Resources Inc.
 
Form 10-Q March 31, 2023
 
27
United States
Three months ended March 31,
2023
2022
Change
%
(in US$ thousands)
Sales volume (MMt)
1.5
1.6
(0.1)
(5.8)%
Total
 
revenues ($)
367,053
341,827
25,226
7.4%
Coal revenues ($)
347,541
340,330
7,211
2.1%
Average realized price per Mt sold ($/Mt)
235.1
217.0
18.1
8.3%
Met sales volume (MMt)
1.2
1.5
(0.3)
(22.2)%
Met coal revenues ($)
283,023
337,720
(54,697)
(16.2)%
Average realized Met price per Mt sold ($/Mt)
236.9
220.0
16.9
7.7%
Mining costs ($)
128,120
115,263
12,857
11.2%
Mining cost per Mt sold ($/Mt)
90.8
76.7
14.1
18.4%
Operating costs ($)
183,766
163,142
20,624
12.6%
Operating costs per Mt sold ($/Mt)
124.3
104.0
20.3
19.5%
Segment Adjusted EBITDA ($)
185,042
179,899
5,143
2.9%
Coal revenues increased by
 
$7.2 million, or 2.1%, to
 
$347.5 million for the three
 
months ended March 31, 2023
compared to
 
$340.3 million
 
for the
 
three months
 
ended March
 
31, 2022.
 
This increase
 
was largely
 
driven by
 
a
higher average realized Met
 
price per Mt sold for
 
the three months ended
 
March 31, 2023 of $236.9,
 
compared
to $220.0 per Mt sold for the same period in 2022, primarily due to
 
higher prices achieved from annual domestic
fixed price contracts compared to 2022.
Operating costs
 
increased by
 
$20.6 million,
 
or 12.6%,
 
to $183.8
 
million for
 
the three
 
months ended
 
March 31,
2023, compared to
 
operating costs of
 
$163.1 million for
 
the three months
 
ended March 31,
 
2022. The increase
was due to higher purchased coal to meet sales commitments and higher mining costs of $12.8 million, primarily
due to the continued impact of inflation on supplies
 
and labor costs.
Segment
 
Adjusted
 
EBITDA
 
of
 
$185.0
 
million
 
for
 
the
 
three
 
months
 
ended
 
March
 
31,
 
2023,
 
increased
 
by
 
$5.1
million
 
compared
 
to
 
$179.9
 
million
 
for
 
the
 
three
 
months
 
ended
 
March
 
31,
 
2022,
 
primarily
 
driven
 
by
 
a
 
higher
average realized Met price per Mt sold, partially offset
 
by higher operating costs.
Corporate and Other Adjusted EBITDA
The following table presents a summary of the components
 
of Corporate and Other Adjusted EBITDA:
Three months ended March 31,
2023
2022
Change
%
(in US$ thousands)
Selling, general, and administrative expenses
$
7,774
$
7,876
$
(102)
(1.3)%
Other, net
(248)
4
(252)
n/m
Total
 
Corporate and Other Adjusted EBITDA
$
7,526
$
7,880
$
(354)
(4.5)%
n/m – Not meaningful for comparison.
Corporate and other costs
 
of $7.8 million for
 
the three months ended
 
March 31, 2023 remained
 
largely consistent
compared to $7.9 million for the three months ended
 
March 31, 2022.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Coronado Global Resources Inc.
 
Form 10-Q March 31, 2023
 
28
Mining and operating costs for the three
 
months ended March 31, 2023 compared to three
 
months ended
March 31, 2022
A
reconciliation of segment
 
costs and expenses,
 
segment operating costs,
 
and segment mining
 
costs is shown
below:
Three months ended March 31, 2023
(in US$ thousands)
Australia
United
States
Other /
Corporate
Total
Consolidated
Total costs and
 
expenses
$
403,868
$
204,263
$
8,058
$
616,189
Less: Selling, general and administrative
expense
(7,774)
(7,774)
Less: Depreciation, depletion and amortization
(18,642)
(20,497)
(284)
(39,423)
Total operating costs
385,226
183,766
568,992
Less: Other royalties
(72,993)
(12,964)
(85,957)
Less: Stanwell rebate
(39,208)
(39,208)
Less: Freight expenses
(33,819)
(29,534)
(63,353)
Less: Other non-mining costs
(3,150)
(13,148)
(16,298)
Total mining costs
236,056
128,120
364,176
Sales Volume excluding non-produced
 
coal
(MMt)
2.2
1.4
3.6
Mining cost per Mt sold ($/Mt)
108.5
90.8
101.6
Three months ended March 31, 2022
(in US$ thousands)
Australia
United
States
Other /
Corporate
Total
Consolidated
Total costs and
 
expenses
$
384,380
$
182,183
$
8,171
$
574,734
Less: Selling, general and administrative
expense
(7,876)
(7,876)
Less: Depreciation, depletion and amortization
(18,673)
(19,041)
(295)
(38,009)
Total operating costs
365,707
163,142
528,849
Less: Other royalties
(69,692)
(13,340)
(83,032)
Less: Stanwell rebate
(29,053)
(29,053)
Less: Freight expenses
(39,767)
(19,497)
(59,264)
Less: Other non-mining costs
(25,177)
(15,042)
(40,219)
Total mining costs
202,018
115,263
317,281
Sales Volume excluding non-produced
 
coal
(MMt)
2.7
1.5
4.2
Mining cost per Mt sold ($/Mt)
76.1
76.7
76.3
Average
 
realized Met
 
price per
 
Mt sold
 
for the
 
three months
 
ended
 
March
 
31, 2023
 
compared
 
to three
months ended March 31, 2022
A reconciliation of the Company’s average realized
 
Met price per Mt sold is shown below:
Three months ended March 31,
2023
2022
Change
%
(in US$ thousands)
Met sales volume (MMt)
2.7
3.3
(0.6)
(18.3)%
Met coal revenues ($)
655,542
891,729
(236,187)
(26.5)%
Average realized Met price per Mt sold ($/Mt)
239.7
266.5
(26.8)
(10.1)%
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Coronado Global Resources Inc.
 
Form 10-Q March 31, 2023
 
29
Reconciliation of Non-GAAP Financial Measures
Adjusted EBITDA
Three months ended March 31,
(in US$ thousands)
2023
2022
Reconciliation to Adjusted EBITDA:
Net income
$
107,860
$
269,898
Add: Depreciation, depletion and amortization
39,423
38,009
Add: Interest expense (net of income)
14,665
17,332
Add: Other foreign exchange (gains) losses
(2,992)
1,991
Add: Income tax expense
34,030
81,943
Add: Losses on idled assets held for sale
1,751
1,386
Add: (Decrease) increase in provision for discounting
 
and credit losses
(3,988)
428
Adjusted EBITDA
$
190,749
$
410,987
Liquidity and Capital Resources
Overview
Our objective is
 
to maintain a
 
prudent capital structure
 
and to ensure
 
that sufficient
 
liquid assets and
 
funding is
available to meet both anticipated and
 
unanticipated financial obligations, including unforeseen events that could
have an
 
adverse impact
 
on revenues
 
or costs.
 
Our principal
 
sources of
 
funds are
 
cash and
 
cash equivalents,
cash flow from operations and availability under our debt facilities.
 
Our main uses of cash have historically been, and are expected to continue to be, the funding of our operations,
working capital,
 
capital
 
expenditure,
 
debt
 
service
 
obligations,
 
business
 
or assets
 
acquisitions
 
and
 
payment
 
of
dividends. Based on our
 
outlook for the next
 
twelve months, which is
 
subject to continued changing demand
 
from
our
 
customers,
 
volatility
 
in
 
coal
 
prices,
 
ongoing
 
interruptions
 
and
 
uncertainties
 
surrounding
 
China’s
 
import
restrictions, such as trade
 
barriers imposed by China
 
on Australian sourced coal
 
and the uncertainty of
 
impacts
from the
 
Russia and Ukraine
 
war on
 
the global
 
supply chain,
 
we believe
 
expected cash generated
 
from operations
together with
 
available borrowing
 
facilities and
 
other strategic
 
and financial
 
initiatives, will
 
be sufficient
 
to meet
the needs of our existing
 
operations, capital expenditure,
 
service our debt obligations
 
and, if declared, payment
of dividends.
Our ability to generate
 
sufficient cash depends
 
on our future performance
 
which may be subject
 
to a number of
factors
 
beyond
 
our
 
control,
 
including
 
general
 
economic,
 
financial
 
and
 
competitive
 
conditions
 
and
 
other
 
risks
described in this document
 
,
 
and Part I, Item
 
1A. “Risk Factors”
 
of our Annual Report
 
on Form 10-K
 
for the year
ended December 31, 2022, filed with the SEC and ASX on
 
February 21, 2023.
Liquidity as of March 31, 2023 and December 31, 2022
 
was as follows:
(in US$ thousands)
March 31,
2023
December 31,
2022
Cash, excluding restricted cash
$
498,048
$
334,378
Availability under ABL Facility
(1)
100,000
100,000
Total
$
598,048
$
434,378
(1)
The ABL
 
Facility contains
 
a springing
 
fixed charge
 
coverage ratio
 
of not
 
less than
 
1.00 to
 
1.00, which
 
ratio is
 
tested if
availability under
 
the ABL facility
 
is less than
 
$17.5 million
 
for five consecutive
 
business days
 
or less than
 
$15.0 million on
any business day.
Our total indebtedness as of March 31, 2023 and December 31,
 
2022 consisted of the following:
(in US$ thousands)
March 31,
2023
December 31,
2022
Current instalments of interest bearing liabilities
$
242,326
$
242,326
Current instalments of other financial liabilities and finance
 
lease obligations
4,304
4,585
Other financial liabilities and finance lease obligations, excluding current
instalments
7,532
8,336
Total
$
254,162
$
255,247
 
Coronado Global Resources Inc.
 
Form 10-Q March 31, 2023
 
30
Liquidity
As of March 31, 2023, available liquidity was $598.0 million, comprising of cash and cash equivalents (excluding
restricted cash) of $498.0 million and $100.0 million of
 
available borrowings under our ABL Facility.
As of
 
December 31,
 
2022, available liquidity
 
was $434.4 million,
 
comprising cash and
 
cash equivalents
 
(excluding
restricted cash) of $334.4 million and $100.0 million of
 
available borrowings under our ABL Facility.
Cash
Cash is held in
 
multicurrency interest bearing
 
bank accounts available to
 
be used to service
 
the working capital
needs of the Company. Cash
 
balances surplus to immediate working capital requirements are invested
 
in short-
term interest-bearing deposit accounts or used to repay
 
interest bearing liabilities.
Senior Secured Notes
As of March 31, 2023, the outstanding principal amount of our Notes was $242.3 million.
 
Interest on the Notes is
payable semi-annually in arrears on May 15 and November 15 of each
 
year. The Notes mature on May 15, 2026
and are senior secured obligations of the Company.
The Notes are guaranteed
 
on a senior secured
 
basis by the Company
 
and its wholly-owned
 
subsidiaries (other
than
 
the
 
Issuer)
 
(subject
 
to
 
certain
 
exceptions
 
and
 
permitted
 
liens)
 
and
 
secured
 
by
 
(i)
 
a
 
first-priority
 
lien
 
on
substantially all of the Company’s assets and the assets of the other guarantors (other than accounts
 
receivable
and other rights to payment,
 
inventory,
 
intercompany indebtedness, certain
 
general intangibles and commercial
tort claims, commodities accounts, deposit accounts, securities accounts and other related assets and proceeds
and
 
products
 
of
 
each
 
of
 
the
 
foregoing,
 
or,
 
collectively,
 
the
 
ABL
 
Collateral),
 
or
 
the
 
Notes
 
Collateral,
 
and
 
(ii)
 
a
second-priority lien on the ABL Collateral, which is
 
junior to a first-priority lien, for the
 
benefit of the lenders under
the ABL Facility.
The terms
 
of the
 
Notes are
 
governed
 
by the
 
Indenture.
 
The Indenture
 
contains
 
customary covenants
 
for high
yield bonds, including,
 
but not limited
 
to, limitations on
 
investments, liens, indebtedness,
 
asset sales, transactions
with affiliates and restricted payments, including payment
 
of dividends on capital stock.
The Company may
 
redeem some or
 
all of the
 
Notes at the
 
redemption prices and
 
on the terms
 
specified in the
Indenture. In addition, the Company may,
 
from time to time, seek to retire or purchase outstanding
 
debt through
open-market purchases,
 
privately negotiated
 
transactions or
 
otherwise. Such
 
repurchases, if
 
any,
 
will be
 
upon
such terms and at such prices as the Company may determine, and will depend on prevailing market conditions,
liquidity requirements, contractual restrictions and other
 
factors.
As of March 31, 2023, we were in compliance with all applicable covenants
 
under the Indenture.
ABL Facility
The ABL
 
Facility,
 
dated May
 
12, 2021,
 
is for
 
an aggregate
 
multi-currency
 
lender commitment
 
of up
 
to $100.0
million, including a $30.0 million
 
sublimit for the issuance
 
of letters of credit and
 
$5.0 million for swingline
 
loans,
at any
 
time outstanding,
 
subject to
 
borrowing
 
base availability.
 
The ABL
 
Facility
 
will mature
 
on May
 
12, 2024.
 
Borrowings under the ABL
 
Facility bear interest at
 
a rate equal to
 
a BBSY rate plus
 
an applicable margin. As
 
at
March 31, 2023, no amounts were drawn and no letters
 
of credit were outstanding under the ABL Facility.
As of March 31, 2023, we were in compliance with all applicable covenants
 
under the ABL Facility.
Refinancing update
On April 28, 2023, we entered
 
into a Syndicated Facility
 
Agreement, or SFA,
 
which will provide for up
 
to $150.0
million
 
in
 
borrowings,
 
including a
 
$100.0
 
million
 
sublimit
 
for the
 
issuance
 
of
 
letters
 
of credit
 
and
 
$70.0
 
million
sublimit for revolving credit facility.
 
The SFA replaced
 
the ABL Facility.
Availability
 
under
 
the
 
SFA
 
is
 
limited
 
to
 
an
 
eligible
 
borrowing
 
base,
 
determined
 
by
 
applying
 
advance
 
rates
 
to
eligible accounts receivable and inventory.
Bank Guarantees and Surety Bonds
We
 
are
 
required
 
to
 
provide
 
financial
 
assurances
 
and
 
securities
 
to
 
satisfy
 
contractual
 
and
 
other
 
requirements
generated in the
 
normal course of
 
business. Some of
 
these assurances are provided
 
to comply with
 
state or other
government agencies’ statutes and regulations.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Coronado Global Resources Inc.
 
Form 10-Q March 31, 2023
 
31
As required by certain agreements,
 
we had cash collateral in the form
 
of deposits in the amount of $86.5
 
million
and $89.1 million
 
as of March
 
31, 2023, and
 
December 31, 2022,
 
respectively,
 
to provide back-to-back
 
support
for bank guarantees, financial
 
payments, other performance obligations, various
 
other operating agreements and
contractual obligations
 
under workers
 
compensation insurance.
 
These deposits
 
are restricted
 
and classified
 
as
long-term assets in the unaudited Condensed Consolidated
 
Balance Sheets.
 
In accordance with the terms of the ABL Facility, we may be required to cash collateralize the ABL Facility to the
extent of outstanding letters
 
of credit after the expiration
 
or termination date of
 
such letter of credit.
 
As of March
31, 2023, no letter of credit was outstanding and no
 
cash collateral was required.
For the U.S. Operations
 
in order to provide
 
the required financial
 
assurance, we generally
 
use surety bonds
 
for
post-mining reclamation.
 
We can also
 
use bank letters
 
of credit to
 
collateralize certain
 
obligations. As of
 
March
31, 2023, we had outstanding
 
surety bonds of $37.6 million
 
and letters of credit of
 
$16.8 million issued from our
available bank guarantees, to
 
meet contractual obligations under
 
workers compensation insurance and to
 
secure
other obligations and commitments.
For
 
the
 
Australian
 
Operations,
 
we
 
had
 
bank
 
guarantees
 
outstanding
 
of
 
$25.5
 
million
 
as
 
at
 
March
 
31,
 
2023,
primarily in respect of certain rail and port arrangements
 
of the Company.
As at March 31, 2023, we had
 
total outstanding bank guarantees provided
 
of $42.3 million to secure obligations
and commitments. Future
 
regulatory changes relating
 
to these obligations
 
could result in
 
increased obligations,
additional costs or additional collateral requirements.
Dividend
On February 21,
 
2023, our Board
 
of Directors declared
 
a bi-annual fully
 
franked fixed ordinary
 
dividend of $8.4
million, or 0.5
 
cents per CDI.
 
On April
 
5, 2023, the
 
Company paid $8.3
 
million, net of
 
$0.1 million foreign
 
exchange
gain on payment of dividends to certain CDI holders
 
who elected to be paid in Australian dollars.
On April 28,
 
2023, we announced
 
that the Company
 
would not declare
 
any dividends to
 
stockholders for the
 
fiscal
quarter ended March
 
31, 2023.
 
Subject to the assessments and outcomes of
 
potential in-organic growth options
in the future,
 
and on-going operational
 
performance and market
 
conditions, our Board
 
of Directors may
 
declare
dividends in future
 
quarters. Coronado’s
 
dividend policy
 
remains unchanged to
 
distribute between 60%
 
- 100%
of Free Cashflow.
Capital Requirements
Our main uses of cash have historically been the funding
 
of our operations, working capital, capital expenditure,
the payment of
 
interest and dividends.
 
We intend
 
to use cash
 
to fund debt
 
service payments
 
on our Notes,
 
the
ABL Facility and our
 
other indebtedness, to fund operating
 
activities, working capital, capital expenditures, partial
redemption of the Notes, business or assets acquisitions and,
 
if declared, payment of dividends.
Historical Cash Flows
The following table
 
summarizes our cash
 
flows for the
 
three months ended
 
March 31, 2023
 
and 2022, as
 
reported
in the accompanying consolidated financial statements:
Cash Flow
Three months ended March 31,
(in US$ thousands)
2023
2022
Net cash provided by operating activities
$
223,626
$
171,849
Net cash used in investing activities
(54,147)
(41,176)
Net cash used in financing activities
(951)
(4,816)
Net change in cash and cash equivalents
168,528
125,857
Effect of exchange rate changes on cash and restricted
 
cash
(4,857)
7,679
Cash and restricted cash at beginning of period
334,629
437,931
Cash and restricted cash at end of period
$
498,300
$
571,467
Operating activities
Net
 
cash
 
provided
 
by
 
operating
 
activities
 
was
 
$223.6 million
 
for
 
the
 
three
 
months
 
ended
 
March
 
31,
 
2023,
compared to $171.8 million for
 
the three months ended March 31,
 
2022. Higher operating cash flows were
 
driven
by
 
the
 
favorable
 
movement
 
in
 
working
 
capital
 
due
 
to
 
higher
 
collection
 
of
 
trade
 
receivables
 
partially
 
offset
 
by
higher operating costs.
 
Coronado Global Resources Inc.
 
Form 10-Q March 31, 2023
 
32
Investing activities
Net cash used in investing activities was $54.1 million
for the three months ended March 31, 2023, compared to
$41.2 million
 
for the
 
three months
 
ended March
 
31, 2022.
 
Cash spent
 
on capital
 
expenditures for
 
the three
 
months
ended March 31,
 
2023 was $54.8
 
million, of which
 
$14.6 million related
 
to the Australian
 
Operations and $40.2
million related
 
to the
 
U.S. Operations. During
 
the three months
 
ended March
 
31, 2023,
 
a net $0.7
 
million restricted
deposits was redeemed relating to our Australian Operations.
Financing activities
Net cash used
 
in financing activities
 
was $1.0 million
for the three
 
months ended March
 
31, 2023, compared
 
to
cash used in
 
financing activities
 
of $4.8 million
 
for the three
 
months ended March
 
31, 2022. The
 
net cash used
in
 
financing
 
activities
 
for
 
the
 
three
 
months
 
ended
 
March
 
31,
 
2022
 
and
 
March
 
31,
 
2023,
 
largely
 
related
 
to
repayment of borrowings and other financial liabilities.
Contractual Obligations
There were no
 
material changes
 
to our contractual
 
obligations from
 
the information
 
previously provided
 
in Item
7.
 
“Management’s
 
Discussion
 
and
 
Analysis
 
of
 
Financial
 
Conditions
 
and
 
Results
 
of
 
Operations”
 
of
 
our
 
Annual
Report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2022, filed with the SEC and
 
ASX on February 21, 2023.
Critical Accounting Policies and Estimates
The preparation
 
of
 
our
 
financial
 
statements
 
in
 
conformity
 
with
 
U.S. GAAP
 
requires
 
us to
 
make
 
estimates
 
and
assumptions that affect the
 
reported amounts of assets and liabilities
 
at the date of the financial statements
 
and
the reported
 
amounts of
 
revenue and
 
expenses during
 
the reporting
 
period. On
 
an ongoing basis,
 
we evaluate
our estimates. Our estimates are
 
based on historical experience
 
and various other assumptions
 
that we believe
are appropriate,
 
the results
 
of which form
 
the basis
 
for making
 
judgements about
 
the carrying values
 
of assets
and liabilities that are not readily apparent from other sources. Actual results may differ from these estimates. All
of these accounting estimates and assumptions, as well as the resulting impact to
 
our financial statements, have
been discussed with the Audit Committee of our Board
 
of Directors.
Our
 
critical
 
accounting
 
policies
 
are discussed
 
in
 
Item
 
7. “Management’s
 
Discussion
 
and
 
Analysis
 
of Financial
Condition and Results of
 
Operations” of our Annual
 
Report on Form 10-K for
 
the year ended December
 
31, 2022,
filed with the SEC and ASX on February 21, 2023.
Newly Adopted Accounting Standards and Accounting
 
Standards Not Yet Implemented
See
 
Note
 
2.
 
(a)
 
“Newly
 
Adopted
 
Accounting
 
Standards”
 
to
 
our
 
unaudited
 
condensed
 
consolidated
 
financial
statements
 
for
 
a
 
discussion
 
of
 
newly
 
adopted
 
accounting
 
standards.
 
As
 
of
 
March
 
31,
 
2023,
 
there
 
were
 
no
accounting standards not yet implemented.
 
Coronado Global Resources Inc.
 
Form 10-Q March 31, 2023
 
33
ITEM 3.
 
QUANTITATIVE
 
AND QUALITATIVE
 
DISCLOSURES ABOUT MARKET RISK
Our activities
 
expose us
 
to
 
a variety
 
of financial
 
risks, such
 
as commodity
 
price risk,
 
interest rate
 
risk, foreign
currency risk, liquidity risk and credit
 
risk. The overall risk management objective is
 
to minimize potential adverse
effects on our financial performance from those
 
risks which are not coal price related.
We manage
 
financial risk
 
through policies
 
and procedures
 
approved by
 
our Board
 
of Directors.
 
These specify
the responsibility
 
of the
 
Board
 
of Directors
 
and
 
management
 
with regard
 
to the
 
management
 
of financial
 
risk.
Financial risks are
 
managed centrally by
 
our finance
 
team under the
 
direction of the
 
Group Chief
 
Financial Officer.
The finance team manages risk exposures primarily through delegated authority limits approved by the Board of
Directors. The finance team regularly monitors our exposure
 
to these financial risks and reports to
 
management
and
 
the
 
Board
 
of
 
Directors
 
on
 
a
 
regular
 
basis.
 
Policies
 
are
 
reviewed
 
at
 
least
 
annually
 
and
 
amended
 
where
appropriate.
We may use
 
derivative financial instruments such
 
as forward fixed
 
price commodity contracts, interest
 
rate swaps
and
 
foreign
 
exchange
 
rate
 
contracts
 
to
 
hedge
 
certain
 
risk
 
exposures.
 
Derivatives
 
for
 
speculative
 
purposes
 
is
strictly prohibited by the Treasury Risk Management Policy approved by our Board of
 
Directors. We use different
methods
 
to
 
measure
 
the
 
extent
 
to
 
which
 
we
 
are
 
exposed
 
to
 
various
 
financial
 
risks.
 
These
 
methods
 
include
sensitivity analysis
 
in the
 
case of
 
interest rates,
 
foreign exchange
 
and other
 
price risks
 
and aging
 
analysis for
credit risk.
Commodity Price Risk
Coal Price Risk
We
 
are
 
exposed
 
to
 
domestic
 
and
 
global
 
coal
 
prices.
 
Our
 
principal
 
philosophy
 
is
 
that
 
our
 
investors
 
would
 
not
consider
 
hedging
 
of
 
coal
 
prices
 
to
 
be
 
in
 
the
 
long-term
 
interest
 
of
 
our
 
stockholders.
 
Therefore,
 
any
 
potential
hedging of coal prices through long-term fixed price contracts is subject to the approval of our Board of Directors
and would only be adopted in exceptional circumstances.
The
 
expectation
 
of
 
future
 
prices
 
for
 
coal
 
depends
 
upon
 
many
 
factors
 
beyond
 
our
 
control.
 
Met
 
coal
 
has
 
been
volatile commodity
 
over the
 
past ten
 
years. Recently,
 
in the
 
second quarter
 
of 2022,
 
seaborne prices
 
reached
record levels with both the Australian and U.S. Met coal price indices exceeding $600 per Mt, largely as result of
supply concerns
 
in key
 
Met coal
 
markets and
 
continued trade
 
flow disruptions
 
caused by
 
geopolitical tensions
following Russian
 
invasion
 
of Ukraine.
 
The demand
 
and supply
 
in the
 
Met coal
 
industry changes
 
from time
 
to
time. There are no assurances that oversupply will not occur, that demand will not decrease or that overcapacity
will not
 
occur,
 
which could
 
cause declines
 
in the
 
prices of
 
coal, which
 
could have
 
a material
 
adverse effect
 
on
our financial condition and results of operations.
Access to
 
international markets
 
may be
 
subject to
 
ongoing interruptions
 
and trade
 
barriers due
 
to policies
 
and
tariffs of individual countries. For example, the imposition of
 
tariffs and import quota restrictions by China on U.S.
and Australian coal
 
imports, respectively,
 
may in the future
 
have a negative
 
impact on our
 
profitability.
 
We may
or may not be able to access alternate markets of our coal should additional interruptions
 
or trade barriers occur
in the future. An
 
inability for metallurgical coal
 
suppliers to access
 
international markets, including China,
 
would
likely
 
result
 
in
 
an
 
oversupply
 
of
 
Met
 
coal
 
and
 
may
 
result
 
in
 
a
 
decrease
 
in
 
prices
 
and
 
or
 
the
 
curtailment
 
of
production.
We manage
 
our commodity
 
price risk
 
for our non-trading,
 
thermal coal
 
sales through
 
the use
 
of long-term
 
coal
supply agreements in our
 
U.S. Operations. In Australia, thermal
 
coal is sold
 
to Stanwell on a
 
supply contract. See
Item
 
1A.
 
“Risk
 
Factors—Risks
 
related
 
to
 
the
 
Supply
 
Deed
 
with
 
Stanwell
 
may
 
adversely
 
affect
 
our
 
financial
condition and results of operations” in our Annual Report on Form 10-K filed with the SEC and ASX on February
21, 2023.
Sales commitments in the
 
Met coal market are typically
 
not long-term in nature, and
 
we are therefore subject
 
to
fluctuations
 
in
 
market
 
pricing.
 
Certain
 
coal
 
sales
 
in
 
our
 
Australian
 
Operations
 
are
 
provisionally
 
priced
 
initially.
Provisionally priced sales
 
are those for
 
which price
 
finalization, referenced
 
to the relevant
 
index, is outstanding
at the reporting date. The final sales price is
 
determined within 7 to 90 days after delivery
 
to the customer.
 
As of
March 31, 2023,
 
we had $57.8
 
million of
 
outstanding provisionally
 
priced receivables
 
subject to
 
changes in
 
the
relevant
 
price
 
index.
 
If
 
prices
 
decreased
 
10%,
 
these
 
provisionally
 
priced
 
receivables
 
would
 
decrease
 
by
 
$5.8
million. See Item 1A. “Risk Factors—Our profitability depends upon the prices we receive for our coal.
 
Prices for
coal
 
are
 
volatile
 
and
 
can
 
fluctuate
 
widely
 
based
 
upon
 
a
 
number
 
of
 
factors
 
beyond
 
our
 
control”
 
in
 
our
 
Annual
Report on Form 10-K filed with the SEC and ASX on
 
February 21, 2023.
 
 
Coronado Global Resources Inc.
 
Form 10-Q March 31, 2023
 
34
Diesel Fuel
We may
 
be exposed
 
to price
 
risk in
 
relation to
 
other commodities
 
from time
 
to time
 
arising from
 
raw materials
used in our operations (such as gas or
 
diesel). These commodities may be hedged through financial instruments
if the
 
exposure is
 
considered material
 
and where
 
the exposure
 
cannot be
 
mitigated through
 
fixed price
 
supply
agreements.
The fuel
 
required
 
for
 
our operations
 
for
 
the remainder
 
of fiscal
 
year
 
2023
 
will
 
be
 
purchased
 
under
 
fixed-price
contracts or on a spot basis.
 
Interest Rate Risk
Interest rate risk is the risk that a change in interest rates
 
on our borrowing facilities will have an adverse impact
on
 
our
 
financial
 
performance,
 
investment
 
decisions
 
and
 
stockholder
 
return.
 
Our
 
objectives
 
in
 
managing
 
our
exposure
 
to
 
interest
 
rates
 
include
 
minimizing
 
interest
 
costs
 
in
 
the
 
long
 
term,
 
providing
 
a
 
reliable
 
estimate
 
of
interest costs for the
 
annual work program
 
and budget and
 
ensuring that changes
 
in interest rates will
 
not have
a material impact on our financial performance.
As of March 31, 2023, we had $254.4 million of fixed rate borrowings and Notes and no
 
variable-rate borrowings
outstanding.
We currently do not hedge against interest rate
 
fluctuations.
 
Foreign Exchange Risk
A significant portion of our
 
sales are denominated in US$.
 
Foreign exchange risk is
 
the risk that our earnings
 
or
cash flows are adversely impacted by movements in exchange
 
rates of currencies that are not in US$.
Our main exposure
 
is to the
 
A$-US$ exchange rate
 
through our Australian
 
Operations, which have
 
predominantly
A$ denominated costs. Greater than 60% of expenses incurred at our Australian Operations are denominated in
A$. Approximately 40%
 
of our Australian Operations’ purchases are
 
made with reference to US$,
 
which provides
a natural hedge against foreign
 
exchange movements on these
 
purchases (including fuel, several
 
port handling
charges, demurrage,
 
purchased coal
 
and some
 
insurance
 
premiums). Appreciation
 
of the
 
A$ against
 
US$ will
increase our Australian
 
Operations’ US$ reported
 
cost base and
 
reduce US$ reported
 
net income. For
 
the portion
of US$ required to purchase A$ to settle our Australian Operations’ operating costs, a 10% increase in the A$ to
US$ exchange rate
 
would increase reported
 
total costs and
 
expenses by approximately
 
$25.7 million for
 
the three
months ended March 31, 2023, respectively.
Under normal market conditions, we generally do not consider it necessary to hedge our exposure
 
to this foreign
exchange risk.
 
However,
 
there
 
may be
 
specific commercial
 
circumstances,
 
such
 
as
 
the hedging
 
of significant
capital
 
expenditure,
 
acquisitions,
 
disposals
 
and
 
other
 
financial
 
transactions,
 
where
 
we
 
may
 
deem
 
foreign
exchange hedging
 
as appropriate
 
and
 
where a
 
US$ contract
 
cannot
 
be negotiated
 
directly with
 
suppliers
 
and
other third parties.
For our Australian
 
Operations, we
 
translate all
 
monetary assets
 
and liabilities
 
at the period-end
 
exchange rate,
all
 
nonmonetary
 
assets
 
and
 
liabilities
 
at
 
historical
 
rates
 
and
 
revenue
 
and
 
expenses
 
at
 
the
 
average
 
exchange
rates in effect during
 
the periods. The net
 
effect of these
 
translation adjustments is
 
shown in the accompanying
consolidated financial statements within components of
 
net income.
We currently do not hedge our non-US$ exposures
 
against exchange rate fluctuations.
Credit Risk
Credit risk is the risk of
 
sustaining a financial loss
 
as a result of a counterparty
 
not meeting its obligations
 
under
a financial instrument or customer contract.
We are exposed
 
to credit risk
 
when we have financial
 
derivatives, cash deposits,
 
lines of credit, letters
 
of credit
or bank guarantees
 
in place with
 
financial institutions. To mitigate against credit risk
 
from financial counterparties,
we have minimum credit rating requirements with financial
 
institutions where we transact.
We
 
are
 
also
 
exposed
 
to
 
counterparty
 
credit
 
risk
 
arising
 
from
 
our
 
operating
 
activities,
 
primarily
 
from
 
trade
receivables. Customers who wish to trade on
 
credit terms are subject to credit
 
verification procedures, including
an assessment of their independent credit rating, financial position, past experience and industry reputation. We
monitor the financial performance
 
of counterparties on a routine
 
basis to ensure credit
 
thresholds are achieved.
Where required, we will request additional credit
 
support, such as letters of credit,
 
to mitigate against credit risk.
Credit
 
risk
 
is
 
monitored
 
regularly,
 
and
 
performance
 
reports
 
are
 
provided
 
to
 
our
 
management
 
and
 
Board
 
of
Directors.
As of
 
March 31,
 
2023, we
 
had financial
 
assets of
 
$896.7 million,
 
comprising of
 
cash and
 
restricted cash,
 
trade
receivables and
 
restricted deposits,
 
which are
 
exposed to
 
counterparty credit
 
risk. These
 
financial assets
 
have
been assessed under ASC
 
326, Financial Instruments – Credit
 
Losses, and a provision
 
for discounting and credit
losses of $1.1 million was recorded as of March 31, 2023
 
.
 
Coronado Global Resources Inc.
 
Form 10-Q March 31, 2023
 
35
ITEM 4.
 
CONTROLS AND PROCEDURES
Disclosure Controls and Procedures
We
 
maintain
 
disclosure
 
controls
 
and
 
procedures
 
that
 
are
 
designed
 
to
 
ensure
 
that
 
information
 
required
 
to
 
be
disclosed in our Exchange Act reports is recorded, processed, summarized and
 
reported within the time periods
specified
 
in
 
the
 
SEC’s
 
rules
 
and
 
forms,
 
and
 
that
 
such
 
information
 
is
 
accumulated
 
and
 
communicated
 
to
 
our
management, including the
 
Chief Executive Officer
 
and the Group
 
Chief Financial Officer, as appropriate,
 
to allow
timely
 
decisions
 
regarding
 
required
 
disclosure
 
based
 
solely
 
on
 
the
 
definition
 
of
 
“disclosure
 
controls
 
and
procedures” in Rule 13a-15(e) promulgated under the
 
Exchange Act. In designing and evaluating the disclosure
controls
 
and
 
procedures,
 
management
 
recognized
 
that
 
any
 
controls
 
and
 
procedures,
 
no
 
matter
 
how
 
well
designed and operated, can provide only reasonable
 
assurance of achieving the desired control
 
objectives, and
management necessarily was
 
required to apply
 
its judgment in
 
evaluating the cost-benefit
 
relationship of possible
controls and procedures.
As of the end
 
of the period
 
covered by this Quarterly
 
Report on Form
 
10-Q, we carried
 
out an evaluation
 
under
the supervision and
 
with the participation
 
of our
 
management, including the
 
Chief Executive Officer
 
and the
 
Group
Chief Financial
 
Officer, of the effectiveness of
 
the design and
 
operation of
 
our disclosure controls
 
and procedures.
Based on
 
the foregoing,
 
the
 
Chief Executive
 
Officer
 
and the
 
Group Chief
 
Financial
 
Officer
 
concluded
 
that our
disclosure controls and procedures were effective.
Changes to Internal Control over Financial Reporting
During the
 
fiscal quarter covered
 
by this
 
Quarterly Report on
 
Form 10-Q,
 
there were
 
no changes
 
in the
 
Company's
internal
 
control
 
over
 
financial
 
reporting,
 
as
 
such
 
term
 
is
 
defined
 
in
 
Rule
 
13a-15(f)
 
of
 
the
 
Exchange
 
Act,
 
that
materially affected,
 
or are
 
reasonably
 
likely to
 
materially
 
affect,
 
the
 
Company’s
 
internal controls
 
over financial
reporting.
 
Coronado Global Resources Inc.
 
Form 10-Q March 31, 2023
 
36
PART II – OTHER
 
INFORMATION
ITEM 1.
 
LEGAL PROCEEDINGS
We are subject to various legal
 
and regulatory proceedings. For a description of
 
our significant legal proceedings
refer
 
to
 
Note 14. “Contingencies” to
 
the
 
unaudited
 
condensed
 
consolidated
 
financial
 
statements
 
included
 
in
Part I,
 
Item 1. “Financial
 
Statements”
 
of
 
this
 
Quarterly
 
Report,
 
which
 
information
 
is
 
incorporated
 
by
 
reference
herein.
ITEM 1A.
 
RISK FACTORS
Except as set forth below,
 
there were no material changes
 
to the risk factors previously
 
disclosed in Part I, Item
1A, “Risk Factors”, of
 
our Annual Report on
 
Form 10-K for the
 
year ended December 31,
 
2022, filed with the
 
SEC
and ASX on February 21, 2023:
Concerns
 
about
 
the
 
environmental
 
impacts
 
of
 
coal
 
combustion,
 
including
 
possible
 
impacts
 
on
 
global
climate
 
issues,
 
are
 
resulting
 
in
 
increased
 
regulation
 
of
 
coal
 
combustion
 
and
 
coal
 
mining
 
in
 
many
jurisdictions,
 
which
 
could
 
significantly
 
affect
 
demand
 
for
 
our
 
products
 
or
 
our
 
securities
 
and
 
reduce
access to capital and insurance.
 
Global considerations
 
regarding climate
 
change continue
 
to attract
 
attention, particularly
 
in relation
 
to the
 
coal
industry. Greenhouse Gas, or GHG, emissions from coal consumption, both directly and
 
indirectly, and from coal
mining
 
itself
 
are
 
subject
 
to
 
existing,
 
pending
 
and
 
proposed
 
regulation
 
as
 
part
 
of
 
initiatives
 
to
 
address
 
global
climate change.
 
A number
 
of countries,
 
including Australia
 
and the
 
United States,
 
have already
 
introduced, or
are
 
contemplating
 
the
 
introduction
 
of,
 
regulatory
 
responses
 
to
 
GHG
 
emissions,
 
including
 
the
 
extraction
 
and
combustion of fossil fuels, to address the impacts of climate
 
change.
For example,
 
the Australian
 
Government is
 
reforming the
 
existing Safeguard
 
Mechanism that
 
was established
under
 
the
 
National
 
Greenhouse
 
and
 
Energy
 
Reporting
 
Act
 
2007,
 
or
 
NGER
 
Act,
 
to
 
incentivize
 
emissions
reductions,
 
through
 
declining
 
emissions
 
limits,
 
called
 
baselines,
 
predictably
 
and
 
gradually
 
on
 
a
 
trajectory
consistent with
 
achieving the
 
Government’s emissions
 
reduction target
 
of 43%
 
below 2005
 
levels by
 
2030 and
net
 
zero
 
by
 
2050.
 
On
 
March
 
31,
 
2023,
 
the
 
Australian
 
Federal
 
Parliament
 
passed
 
the
 
Safeguard
 
Mechanism
(Crediting) Amendment
 
Bill 2023
 
amending the
 
NGER Act
 
and other
 
legislation, to
 
establish the
 
framework
 
to
give effect to
 
key elements
 
of the reforms,
 
such as introducing
 
credits to the
 
scheme to provide
 
an incentive to
companies to go below their baselines.
 
The
 
Safeguard
 
Mechanism
 
applies
 
to
 
industrial
 
facilities
 
emitting
 
more
 
than
 
100,000
 
tons
 
of
 
carbon
 
dioxide
equivalent per
 
year,
 
including in
 
electricity,
 
mining, oil
 
and gas
 
production, manufacturing,
 
transport and
 
waste
facilities.
 
In accordance with
 
Safeguard Mechanism,
 
under this
 
reformed legislation
 
and once
 
the Federal Government’s
finalises the
 
National Greenhouse
 
and Energy
 
Reporting (Safeguard
 
Mechanism) Amendment
 
(Reforms) Rule
2023, Curragh must establish a
 
new baseline for covered emissions
 
(Scope 1). Curragh must take
 
action to keep
its net Scope
 
1 emissions at
 
or below the
 
baseline through emissions reduction,
 
purchasing emissions reductions
from
 
another
 
facility
 
to
 
which
 
the
 
Safeguard
 
Mechanism
 
applies,
 
or
 
purchasing
 
and
 
surrendering
 
Australian
Carbon Credit Units, or ACCUs, or face enforcement
 
measures.
The
 
potential
 
direct
 
and
 
indirect
 
financial
 
impact
 
on
 
us
 
from
 
existing
 
laws,
 
regulations
 
policies,
 
including
 
the
Safeguard Mechanism,
 
and future laws,
 
regulations, policies,
 
and technology
 
developments may
 
depend upon
the degree
 
to which
 
any such
 
laws, regulations
 
and developments
 
result in
 
reduced reliance
 
on coal
 
as a
 
fuel
source. Such developments could result in adverse impacts
 
on our financial condition or results of operations.
For further information see Part I, Item
 
1A, “Risk Factors”, of our Annual Report on Form
 
10-K for the year ended
December 31, 2022, filed with the SEC and ASX on February
 
21, 2023.
ITEM 2.
 
UNREGISTERED SALES OF EQUITY SECURITIES
 
AND USE OF PROCEEDS
None.
 
 
Coronado Global Resources Inc.
 
Form 10-Q March 31, 2023
 
37
ITEM 3.
 
DEFAULTS
 
UPON SENIOR SECURITIES
None.
ITEM 4. MINE SAFETY DISCLOSURES
Safety is the cornerstone of the Company’s values and is the number one priority
 
for all employees at Coronado
Global Resources Inc.
 
Our U.S. Operations
 
include multiple mining
 
complexes across
 
three states and
 
are regulated by
 
both the U.S.
Mine Safety
 
and Health
 
Administration, or
 
MSHA, and
 
state regulatory
 
agencies. Under
 
regulations mandated
by the Federal Mine Safety and Health Act of 1977, or the Mine Act, MSHA inspects our U.S. mines on a regular
basis and issues various citations and orders when it believes
 
a violation has occurred under the Mine Act.
In accordance
 
with
 
Section 1503(a) of
 
the
 
Dodd-Frank
 
Wall
 
Street
 
Reform
 
and
 
Consumer
 
Protection
 
Act
 
and
Item
 
104
 
of
 
Regulation
 
S-K
 
(17
 
CFR
 
229.104),
 
each
 
operator
 
of
 
a
 
coal
 
or
 
other
 
mine
 
in
 
the
 
United
 
States
 
is
required to report certain mine safety results in its periodic reports
 
filed with the SEC under the Exchange Act.
Information
 
pertaining
 
to
 
mine
 
safety
 
matters
 
is
 
included
 
in
 
Exhibit 95.1
 
attached
 
to
 
this
 
Quarterly
 
Report
 
on
Form 10-Q. The disclosures reflect the United
 
States mining operations only, as these requirements do not
 
apply
to our mines operated outside the United States.
ITEM 5.
 
OTHER INFORMATION
None.
 
ITEM 6.
 
EXHIBITS
The following documents are filed as exhibits hereto:
Exhibit No.
Description of Document
3.1
3.2
15.1
31.1
31.2
32.1
95.1
101.INS
Inline XBRL Instance Document
101.SCH
Inline XBRL Taxonomy
 
Extension Schema Document
101.CAL
Inline XBRL Taxonomy
 
Extension Calculation Linkbase Document
101.DEF
Inline XBRL Taxonomy
 
Extension Definition Linkbase Document
101.LAB
Inline XBRL Taxonomy
 
Extension Label Linkbase Document
101.PRE
Inline XBRL Taxonomy
 
Extension Presentation Linkbase Document
104
Cover Page Interactive Data File (formatted as Inline
 
XBRL and contained in Exhibit 101)
 
___________________________
 
 
Coronado Global Resources Inc.
 
Form 10-Q March 31, 2023
 
38
SIGNATURES
Pursuant to the requirements
 
of the Securities Exchange
 
Act of 1934, the registrant
 
has duly caused this
 
report
to be signed on its behalf by the undersigned, thereunto
 
duly authorized.
Coronado Global Resources Inc.
By:
/s/ Gerhard Ziems
Gerhard Ziems
Group Chief Financial Officer (as duly authorized officer
and as principal financial officer of the registrant)
Date: May 8, 2023