USAC February 17, 2026

USA Compression Partners Fourth Quarter 2025 Earnings Call - J-W Power Deal Upsizes Fleet and Guidance, Raises Lead-Time Questions

Summary

USA Compression closed the J-W Power acquisition on January 12 and walked into 2026 with a larger, more geographically diverse fleet, higher 2026 guidance, and a clear plan to squeeze operational synergies. Management posted record 2025 results, with Adjusted EBITDA of $613.8 million, DCF of $385.7 million, utilization above 94%, and an aggressive 2026 budget that includes roughly 105,000 new horsepower and higher gross capex to service a broader customer base.

The tone was pragmatic, not celebratory. JW brings scale, roughly 200,000 idle horsepower and a manufacturing business that provides optionality, but it also dilutes contract compression margins in the near term and creates integration and equipment-timing headaches. Lead times for large packages are now north of 120 weeks, pushing much of 2026 growth to the back half of the year and putting pressure on 2027 planning. Management expects modest run-rate synergies of $10 million to $20 million by end of 2027, targets near-term leverage of 3.75x, and is watching distribution coverage as the path to future payout decisions.

Key Takeaways

  • Company closed J-W Power acquisition on January 12, 2026, expanding geographic reach and horsepower mix across U.S. basins.
  • 2025 was a record year: Adjusted EBITDA of $613.8 million and Distributable Cash Flow of $385.7 million.
  • Management provided 2026 guidance including Adjusted EBITDA of $770 million to $800 million and DCF of $480 million to $510 million, inclusive of JW contribution.
  • Total fleet at quarter end roughly 3.9 million horsepower; average active horsepower in Q4 was ~3.579 million and utilization remained high at 94.5%.
  • Company acquired approximately 200,000 idle horsepower from JW, with around 50,000 horsepower identified as readily deployable with limited capital spend.
  • USA Compression budgeted ~105,000 new horsepower for 2026, about a 2% increase in active horsepower; roughly half of that new HP is already contracted.
  • Expansion capital guidance for 2026 is $230 million to $250 million, including just over 100,000 new HP and roughly $40 million of other capital (vehicles, tools, IT, telemetry).
  • Maintenance capital guidance is $60 million to $70 million for 2026, up from $39.4 million in 2025 to support consistent preventive maintenance across a larger combined fleet.
  • Lead times for new large compression packages have stretched to over 120 weeks, driven primarily by Caterpillar engine availability; much of the 2026 new HP is back-loaded into late Q3 and Q4.
  • Management expects ~$10 million to $20 million of annual run-rate synergies by the end of 2027 from the JW integration, with modest one-time integration costs in 2026.
  • J-W assets initially reduce aggregate gross margins for the contract compression business; management plans to align those margins with USA Compression levels over two years.
  • Company increased average pricing to $21.69 per horsepower in Q4, up 4% year-over-year, and reported Q4 adjusted gross margins of 66.8%.
  • Leverage was 4.0x at Q4 end with a near-term target to improve to 3.75x; management flagged potential to target 3.5x further out.
  • Liquidity and capital structure: ABL improvements reduced borrowing costs by ~50 basis points relative to recent note refinance; ABL capacity ~ $500 million plus an accordion of $300 million.
  • Distribution coverage normalized to ~1.55x in Q4 (after certain one-time unit movements) and management expects coverage to be 1.6x+ in the coming year, which will drive conversations on future distribution policy.
  • Operating cash flow in Q4 was $139.5 million; cash interest net was $43.4 million; net income for Q4 was $27.8 million and operating income was $76.6 million.
  • JW brought a manufacturing business that management expects to use to partially self-fund growth, provide flexibility given long vendor lead times, and offer third-party sales optionality.
  • Telemetry and panel upgrades are included in capex plans to improve remote monitoring, reduce on-site dispatches, and enable more predictive maintenance and parts logistics.

Full Transcript

Conference Call Operator: Good morning. Welcome to USA Compression Partners’ fourth quarter 2025 earnings conference call. During today’s call, all parties will be in a listen-only mode. At the conclusion of management’s prepared remarks, the call will be opened for Q&A. At this time, I would like to remind everyone, in order to ask a question, please press star, then the number 1 on your telephone keypad. This conference is being recorded today, February 17, 2026. I now would like to turn the call over to Clint Green, President and Chief Executive Officer.

Clint Green, President and Chief Executive Officer, USA Compression Partners: Good morning, everyone, and thank you for joining us. With me today is Chris Paulsen, Senior Vice President and Chief Financial Officer; Chris Wauson, Senior Vice President and Chief Operating Officer; and other members of our leadership team. This morning we released our operational and financial results for the year and quarter ending December 31, 2025. Today’s call will contain forward-looking statements based on our current beliefs and certain non-GAAP measures. Please refer to our earnings release and SEC filings for reconciliations, definitions of non-GAAP measures, and related risk factors. Please note that the historical information presented excludes the results of J-W Power acquisition, which closed on January 12. With that, I would like to congratulate the team for closing the J-W transaction. With this transaction, we are leaning into the USA Compression name, with broader reach all across this great country.

The transaction makes us a clear choice for operators who want to provide her with a reputation of high quality, reliable service in every major oil and gas basin in the U.S. and across all horsepower classes. I want to highlight the tremendous year we had across our operations, commercial, and finance organizations. On the safety front, we recorded a TRIR of 0.39, which is approximately half of the industry average. We delivered full-year Adjusted EBITDA of $613.8 million and DCF of $385.7 million, both are records for the company. We maintained high average utilization in excess of 94% throughout the year and ended the year at 94.5%. Finally, we refinanced our ABL in one of our senior notes, significantly reducing our weighted average borrowing costs and improving strategic flexibility.

These accomplishments occurred as the company embraced a new leadership team, a change in headquarters, a new shared services model, and new ERP platform. The resilience and grit showcased across our organization in 2025 gave us confidence to pursue and now integrate the JW acquisition in 2026. Last year, the energy macroenvironment stabilized following early tariff discussions, but the development pace slowed in the Permian as rigs continued to reduce throughout the year in response to lower oil prices. Of note, while oil production flattened in the last half of the year, natural gas continued to move upward, ending approximately 9% higher year-over-year. We continue to be bullish on the Permian longer term. With the acquisition of JW, we maintain a large presence and have increased our active horsepower in the Permian to around 1.7 million.

We have also increased our horsepower in oil and liquids-rich basins, as well as major gas basins like the Marcellus, Utica, and Haynesville, which returned to growth in 2025. This growth was tied to increased local demand, additional infrastructure debottlenecking, and a higher average natural gas price of $3.52 per MMBTU. This is a 56% increase from the prior year. We are encouraged by these fundamentals and believe the acquisition of JW strengthens our leadership within these natural gas basins. The broader compression industry continues to forge ahead with strong margins and a disciplined approach to new compression capital, and USA Compression is no different. Of note, lead times for new equipment have increased to over two years, which presents a new set of opportunities and challenges that our team continues to work through.

In 2026, we have budgeted approximately 105,000 new horsepower, representing a 2% increase in active horsepower, with half of that new horsepower under contract. We also have new units contracted for the first half of 2027 and are in active discussions to procure additional horsepower in 2027. With that, I will turn the call over to Chris Wauson, our Chief Operating Officer.

Chris Wauson, Senior Vice President and Chief Operating Officer, USA Compression Partners: Thanks, Clint. Since the close of the transaction on January 12, we have begun planning to optimize route management, inventory, contracts, and operational structures to begin to realize synergies as early as this year. As we have previously noted, we moved forward with the go-live of a new ERP system in Q1 of 2026 for the legacy USA Compression assets and now plan to integrate the JW assets during 2026. We will have modest one-time costs associated with the transaction in 2026 but expect to lay the groundwork for substantial synergy capture by 2027. Our assessment is still ongoing, but at this time, we anticipate approximately $10 million-$20 million in annual run-rate synergies that will be achieved by the end of 2027.

We expect these synergies to create improvements in both operating margins and G&A, with the additional potential for commercial synergies as we better serve our combined customer base. As we discussed in our announcement, we are excited about increasing the extent and depth of our asset offering and customer base. Customer retention and review of existing contracts are top of mind, and we have already begun moving contracts under USA Compression MSAs and will work to extend average contract duration throughout this year. We hope our customers will realize the best of both organizations. I am personally excited to see the strength of our organization grow, especially across the Midcontinent, the Rockies, and Northeast with the addition of the JW assets. We will focus on continuing to be the operator of choice across these basins and others, providing customers commercial and operational consistency across the U.S.

No other contract compression company in the market can support its customers’ diverse horsepower and geographic needs like USA Compression can today. Finally, with the acquisition of JW, we acquired approximately 200,000 idle horsepower that will undergo significant review over the course of the next year. As we indicated in December’s JW acquisition call, we believe approximately 50,000 horsepower is readily deployable with limited capital spend. As it relates to the remainder, we will analyze best path, including potential monetization of a portion of the horsepower. We also acquired a manufacturing business that provides strong optionality for third-party sales and internal reconfigurations. I will now turn it over to Chris Paulsen to discuss our 2025 financial results in detail and our 2026 guidance.

Chris Paulsen, Senior Vice President and Chief Financial Officer, USA Compression Partners: Thanks, Chris. In Q4, we increased pricing to an all-time high, averaging $21.69 per horsepower, a 1% increase in sequential quarters, and a 4% increase compared to the year-ago period. Average active horsepower increased approximately 1% relative to Q3 to 3.579 million. Our fourth quarter adjusted gross margins came in at 66.8%, right on historical trend. Regarding the consolidated financial results, our fourth quarter 2025 net income was $27.8 million, operating income was $76.6 million, net cash provided by operating activities was $139.5 million, and cash interest expense net was $43.4 million. Our leverage ratio at the end of the fourth quarter was 4.0 times. Turning to operational results, our total fleet horsepower at the end of the quarter was approximately 3.9 million horsepower, adding approximately 21,000 horsepower as compared to the prior quarter.

Our average utilization for the fourth quarter was 94.5%, a slight increase compared to the prior quarter. Fourth quarter 2025 expansion capital expenditures were $40 million, and our maintenance capital expenditures were $7.8 million. Expansion capital spending in Q4 primarily consisted of new units. Turning to 2025 full-year results, we ended the year with Adjusted EBITDA of $613.8 million. We also ended the year with Distributable Cash Flow of $385.7 million, above the recently increased guidance, in part due to the final preferred unit conversion in December. Maintenance capital ended at $39.4 million, and expansion capital was $117.6 million, both towards the lower end of previously provided guidance. Looking ahead and with the contribution full year of JW, we are forecasting Adjusted EBITDA of $770 million-$800 million and Distributable Cash Flow of $480 million-$510 million.

Maintenance capital range is forecasted to be $60 million-$70 million, allowing for consistent preventative maintenance intervals across our combined fleet. Expansion capital range is $230 million-$250 million, which includes just over 100,000 new horsepower or over 2% of our active fleet being added and panel upgrades for improved telemetry practices. The expansion capital range also includes approximately $40 million of other capital, including vehicles, tools, investments in technology, and other items. This expanded gross capital budget relative to prior years will enable us to better respond to the needs of our broader customer base and enable us to get new horsepower in both the Permian and the Northeast. The net result of our budget should enable us to improve upon our debt metrics, with our near-term targets at 3.75x debt to EBITDA, a quarter-term improvement over the next 12 months.

We remain committed to managing debt levels and will remain open to transactions that can further delever the balance sheet and/or accretive the unit holders. We also continue to evaluate our capital structure in its fixed versus floating proportion as it relates to DCF and business certainty. Today, at current Fed rates, our borrowing costs are improved by approximately 50 basis points by utilizing our ABL relative to our most recent notes refinance. We also have approximately $500 million capacity, not including the $300 million of additional accordion. Overall, I’m very pleased with the operational momentum we carry into 2026 with the legacy USA Compression business and the J-W Power assets. In the near term, the addition of J-W assets will reduce our aggregate gross margins for the contract compression business.

Our clear goal is to more closely align those margins with our own over the next two years, contributing to the synergies Chris Wauson spoke of earlier. With that, I will turn the call back to Clint for concluding remarks.

Clint Green, President and Chief Executive Officer, USA Compression Partners: Thank you, Chris. I want to thank all of our employees for the advanced planning and early integration efforts that have taken place across the two companies. We are honored to be part of the J-W Power legacy and are confident it will be improved going forward given the broader reach and resources of USA Compression. It is our goal to provide the same level of excellence throughout every region in the U.S., something that continues to set us apart. I will now open the call up to questions.

Conference Call Operator: At this time, I would like to remind everyone, in order to ask a question, please press star, then the number 1 on your telephone keypad. We request that you limit yourself to one question and one follow-up. We will pause for just a moment to compile the Q&A roster. Your first question comes from the line of Doug Irwin with Citi. Your line is open.

Doug Irwin, Analyst, Citi: Hey, thanks for the question. I just wanted to start with the growth CapEx guidance here. Could you maybe just help dissect a bit how much of that $250 million growth budget is tied to kind of organic base growth versus maybe the backlog inherited from J-W Power? And then just curious if this level is kind of the right way to think about your run rate moving forward for CapEx, particularly as we kind of think about the potential impact of two-year lead times here.

Chris Paulsen, Senior Vice President and Chief Financial Officer, USA Compression Partners: Yeah, great question. Appreciate that. So just to break down the growth capital this year a little bit, about $205 million of growth capital is tied in with the typical compression business, both new units, make-ready, and reconfigurations. Approximately $150 million of that, $205 million, is tied to new units. So as we mentioned in the call, approximately 105,000 new units overall. Then we have another just less than $40 million in other capital tied to vehicles, IT, tools, etc. We’re really trying to add consistency across our fleet as it relates to that other capital. We think there’s a scenario by which that can come in lower. But hopefully, overall, that kind of breaks down what we call growth and expansion capital.

Doug Irwin, Analyst, Citi: Yeah, that’s helpful. And then on the balance.

Chris Paulsen, Senior Vice President and Chief Financial Officer, USA Compression Partners: As it relates to your other question and apologies, as it relates to your other question in terms of percentage growth going forward, as we mentioned, this year is approximately around 2% growth overall relative to our active horsepower. As it relates to 2027, those long lead times do make for difficult planning. The beauty of our manufacturing entity is that it does allow us to start to dissect some of that a little bit differently than we have in the past as we’ve kind of been beholden to packagers. Today, we do have manufacturing capacity into 2027. We’re trying to load up that relative capacity. We have about 10,000 horsepower already contracted for that capacity. We’re looking to utilize probably the remainder of that capacity for our own compression this next year.

Certainly, as it relates to smaller horsepower and I say smaller, it’s still around 1,500 horsepower or so. The lead times are less. It’s really some of those really large 2,500 horsepower-plus packages that are the long lead times. So we do have some flexibility as it relates to that. And frankly, this year, we’ve even packaged smaller horsepower than 1,000 horsepower. So we’ll continue to listen to our customers, talk about their needs, and be responsive as it relates to kind of horsepower for 2027 and decide whether or not that number is kind of 1.5%-2% range that we’ve been in over the last several years.

Doug Irwin, Analyst, Citi: Got it. That’s helpful detail. Now, I just wanted to follow up on some of the comments made in the prepared remarks about just some of the actions you’ve taken to improve the balance sheet. And then J-W Power is obviously accretive from a leverage perspective as well. Just curious if these actions kind of impact the way you think about the right level of distribution coverage moving forward and whether they might give you some runway to start thinking about potentially growing the distribution from here.

Chris Paulsen, Senior Vice President and Chief Financial Officer, USA Compression Partners: Yeah, great question. So last year was really about, as you noted, kind of making sure that our balance sheet trajectory was set along the right path. We were able to do that transaction and able to put the cash forward because we did go through the process of a notes refinance beforehand. We went through an ABL restructuring and grew that relative ABL. As I mentioned, we also have capacity to even expand it further with our accordion feature of around $300 million. So we’re on the right track as it relates to our balance sheet and the relative improvement there. 3.75x, I think, is a worthy goal in the near term. The question is, do we move down further from there to 3.5?

I ultimately would like to be there, but we also need to balance, as you noted, the fact that our distribution coverage has continued to improve. Net of the dividends that were or distribution, excuse me, that were paid a week ago, our number on normalized basis is 1.55x. We did pay the Westerman family some units associated with Q4 that was factored into that 1.36x, and those units were ultimately repaid. So our normalized number is about 1.55x on Q4. We’re looking for that number to be in the 1.6+ range next year or this coming year, that is. And as that number starts to expand beyond 1.6 and grow beyond there, we need to continue to have conversations with all of our unit holders as to what the right answer is in terms of distribution growth.

Conference Call Operator: Your next question comes from the line of James Rollinson with Raymond James. Your line is open.

James Rollinson, Analyst, Raymond James: Hey, good morning, everyone. Clint, just to circle back to the capacity adds of 105,000, it’s in the budget for this year. Maybe just kind of given this can really sway how things lay out across the quarters, if you could talk about the timing of delivery and when you expect that capacity to actually be in the field.

Clint Green, President and Chief Executive Officer, USA Compression Partners: Yeah. I’ll start, and then Chris Wauson will probably add into that. I think most of what’s coming on this year is in the back half of the year, July forward. Chris, do you have anything to add to that?

Chris Wauson, Senior Vice President and Chief Operating Officer, USA Compression Partners: Yeah. So thanks, Clint. So majority of the horsepower, there’s a little bit that trickles in in Q3, but mainly the bulk of the horsepower comes in late Q3 into Q4. So we’ll see good numbers of growth in the back half of the year.

James Rollinson, Analyst, Raymond James: Gotcha. And maybe just kind of following up, Clint, on your comment, it seems like every call I hear on compression lately, the lead time’s getting longer and longer. Wondering if that’s showing up. You go back 2, 3, 4 years, and obviously, guys like CAT had really ramped up the cost of equipment, which was translating into higher pricing for everybody on new orders. And then it seems like as we were originally kind of late last year, prices were just more inflationary, like typical annual CAT increases. But I’m curious, as lead times continue to stretch out, are you seeing that, or do you expect to see that translate at some point into higher equipment costs again, like a bigger step up?

Clint Green, President and Chief Executive Officer, USA Compression Partners: I don’t think that any manufacturer ever misses opportunity to increase prices. But yeah, the main driver in the lead times is Caterpillar engines. And the data center demand for generation has driven that lead time out. We still have some other options with some other manufacturers out there. They’re not as sought after, what have you. I expect we’ll see some type of increase at some point this year. I haven’t heard of one yet, but I’m sure one will come down later on this year.

Conference Call Operator: Your next question comes from the line of Gabe Moreen with Mizuho. Your line is open.

Gabe Moreen, Analyst, Mizuho: Hey, good morning, guys. Obviously, one of your competitors recently announced a pretty big step out into the distributed power space. Just wondering kind of your latest thinking on potentially evaluating that space, whether it’s something you’re looking at or reconsider?

Clint Green, President and Chief Executive Officer, USA Compression Partners: Yeah. Hey, Gabe. It’s Clint. Yeah, absolutely. We believe those business the distributed power business and the compression business are a lot alike. We have mechanical equipment that has to run or has a guaranteed runtime, several synergies with the type of folks you need to work on it. So we’ve definitely evaluated several of those over the last 18 months or 12 months, what have you. We put them into our model. The ones we’ve looked at haven’t quite met the requirements that we wanted for whether to make our model like we wanted it to be. And so we haven’t jumped out there yet, but we are always evaluating that. It’s a business we think that we could drive the same type of margins out of that we do in the compression business.

Gabe Moreen, Analyst, Mizuho: Gotcha. Thanks, Clint. And then maybe if I can pivot a little bit to the 50% of the new HP for 2016 place, can you just talk about what expectations are placed in the rest of it? And sorry if I missed it. Is that going to be next quarter, quarter after, kind of what you’re hearing from customers about demand from that HP, which you haven’t signed up customers yet for?

Chris Wauson, Senior Vice President and Chief Operating Officer, USA Compression Partners: Yeah. Hey, it’s Chris Wauson. I’ll take that one. We strive for kind of consistent margins, and our new unit growth has primarily been focused on our tier one customers. So I’m pretty confident that the remaining balance of what we have available will get contracted up here in the near future. So we look forward to working through that for our customers.

Conference Call Operator: Your next question comes from the line of Nate Mendleton with Texas Capital Bank. Your line is open.

Nate Mendleton, Analyst, Texas Capital Bank: Good morning. Congrats on the strong year. I wanted to go back for a moment to the new unit timelines. How do those timelines impact your longer-term horsepower growth strategy, be it organic or inorganic? And could we see the timelines impact contract compression pricing with customers in the near term?

Chris Wauson, Senior Vice President and Chief Operating Officer, USA Compression Partners: Yeah. Hey, thanks. It’s Chris Wauson. With the lead times pushing out for a new package at 120+ weeks, it gets challenging, right? It’s not going to affect our 2026 growth, but in 2027, we are working to secure that and figure that out. Picking up the manufacturing business with JW, that gives us a lot of optionality that Chris Paulsen spoke to earlier. We do have around 10,000 horsepower already contracted into 2027. So we are looking at every angle to work through that and add growth. So we’re going to continue to push for that as well.

Clint Green, President and Chief Executive Officer, USA Compression Partners: I want to add that the size of the JW manufacturing business is, it’s almost the exact same size as our expected growth over the next couple of years. We’re not looking to expand that manufacturing facility or go out and try to sell a huge amount of packages, but we want to be able to fund some of our own growth internally and give us that flexibility that we need when packages move out to 100 weeks that we can still provide for our customers.

Nate Mendleton, Analyst, Texas Capital Bank: Got it. I appreciate that detail. And then as my follow-up, in the prepared remarks, Chris Paulsen mentioned expansion CapEx, including the new telemetry being added to units. Can we get any more detail on what that can entail for customers?

Chris Wauson, Senior Vice President and Chief Operating Officer, USA Compression Partners: Yeah, I’ll take that. It’s Chris Wauson. One thing we’re looking at is always looking for efficiencies to drive efficiencies. And with that, we have to invest in our units. So panel upgrades, unit upgrades is huge. So it allows us to have some dashboards to really see what’s going on without having employees out there on site 24/7. So that gives you a little color as to what that looks like. But it’s our eyes and ears, basically, without folks on the ground.

Clint Green, President and Chief Executive Officer, USA Compression Partners: I’m going to add to that too. It also gives us the ability to manage how our folks, when they leave to go work on a piece of equipment that’s down, maybe it got called out in the middle of the night, they can have the right parts. That’s where we’re trying to get to with this, with some form of AI going forward. This is the first step in our business to move that direction.

Nate Mendleton, Analyst, Texas Capital Bank: Got it. Appreciate it.

Conference Call Operator: Again, if you would like to ask a question, please press star, then 1 on your telephone keypad. I will turn the call back over to Clint Green, President and Chief Executive Officer, for closing remarks.

Clint Green, President and Chief Executive Officer, USA Compression Partners: Yeah. Just to add a little bit there, I want to explain how happy we are with the J-W acquisition, how excited we are to be able to get into all those basins, and then the excitement that we have for the overall gas industry and the way that the demand from data centers and LNG, and it’s real. It’s coming online. And we’re excited to be in this business at this time and look forward to creating unit holder value as we move forward. Thank you for all for joining our call, and good day.

Conference Call Operator: Ladies and gentlemen, that concludes today’s call. Thank you all for joining. You may now disconnect.