Albemarle - Q1 2024
May 2, 2024
Transcript
Operator (participant)
Hello, and welcome to Albemarle Corporation's Q1 2024 Earnings Call. I will now hand it over to Meredith Bandy, Vice President of Investor Relations and Sustainability.
Meredith Bandy (VP of Investor Relations and Sustainability)
Thank you, and welcome everyone to Albemarle's First Quarter 2024 Earnings Conference Call. Our earnings were released after the close of market yesterday, and you'll find the press release and earnings presentation posted to our website under the investors section at albemarle.com. Joining me on the call today are Kent Masters, Chief Executive Officer, and Neal Sheorey, Chief Financial Officer. Netha Johnson, President of Specialties, and Eric Norris, President of Energy Storage, are also available for Q&A. As a reminder, some of the statements made during this call, including our outlook, guidance, expected company performance, and timing of expansion projects, may constitute forward-looking statements. Please note the cautionary language about forward-looking statements contained in our press release and earnings presentation. That same language applies to this call. Also note that some of our comments today refer to non-GAAP financial measures. Reconciliations can be found in our earnings materials.
Now I'll turn the call over to Kent.
Kent Masters (CEO)
Thank you, Meredith. During the first quarter, our team demonstrated its ability to navigate dynamic market conditions with actions that position Albemarle for profitable growth and deliver on the operational steps that we have set out to achieve this year. We recorded net sales of $1.4 billion and adjusted EBITDA of $291 million. We saw continued volumetric growth driven by energy storage segment, highlighting the demand growth in the segment and our ability to capture it. We also ramped new conversion facilities, executed on our productivity plans, and strengthened our competitive position and financial flexibility. During the quarter, we delivered more than $90 million in productivity and restructuring cost savings, consistent with our efforts to align our costs with the current market environment.
We are on track to deliver more than $280 million in productivity improvements in 2024, demonstrating our excellent execution. To drive lithium market transparency and discovery, we held several successful bidding events for spodumene concentrate and lithium carbonate in March and April. We are encouraged by the results and level of participation to date and plan to continue these efforts. We continue to advance our in-flight growth projects that are near completion or in startup to deliver near-term volume growth and cash flow. In particular, we've reached important new milestones at Kemerton One and Meishan. Finally, the year so far has developed as we expected, and we are reaffirming our full-year 2024 outlook ranges that are based on observed lithium market price scenarios that we included for the first time last quarter.
Our operational and strategic playbook positions us well to serve our customers today and for the future. With our focused execution and our continued confidence in the elements we provide, Albemarle is well-positioned to drive sustainable growth and create value. I'll now hand it over to Neal to talk about our financial results during the quarter.
Neal Sheorey (CFO)
Thanks, Kent, and good morning, everyone. Beginning on slide five, let's jump into our first quarter performance. In Q1 2024, we recorded net sales of $1.4 billion, compared to $2.6 billion for the prior year quarter, a year-over-year decline of 47%, driven principally by lower pricing, partially offset by volume growth. Adjusted EBITDA was $291 million, significantly down from the same period last year, when pricing and margins across our energy storage and specialties businesses were at peak levels. Diluted EPS was -$0.08. Adjusted diluted EPS was $0.26, which excludes primarily restructuring charges and mark-to-market losses on public equity securities held or sold in the quarter. Our earnings decline was driven mostly by margin compression on lower pricing, especially within our energy storage segment.
Additionally, we had some margin pressure due to timing of higher cost spodumene flowing through cost of goods sold and reduced equity earnings at the Talison joint venture. These factors were partially offset by volumetric growth, primarily lithium carbonate and hydroxide, and we also recorded spodumene sales at favorable pricing. Also, the Ketjen business recorded increased net sales and EBITDA, driven primarily by higher volumes. Looking at slide six, we'll break down the company's first quarter adjusted EBITDA by driver. Compared to the prior year quarter, the decline in EBITDA was $1.4 billion related to lower lithium pricing in both energy storage and specialties, $90 million in cost of goods sold due to timing of higher price spodumene inventories built in prior periods, and $270 million related to pre-tax equity income, primarily from our Talison JV.
Offsetting these declines were improvements of $251 million related to higher volumes as our energy storage projects continue to ramp, as well as better clean fuel technologies volumes at Ketjen, and $80 million of net improvements, mainly due to restructuring and productivity benefits across multiple areas, including procurement, manufacturing, and back office spend. This demonstrates our team's agility and focus on delivering higher volumes and productivity improvements in the current market environment. Turning to slide seven. As we did last quarter, we are providing outlook ranges based on historically observed lithium market pricing scenarios. We are reaffirming our outlook considerations published last quarter. There are two notable updates here related to our tax rate and share count expectations. We are updating our adjusted effective tax rate guidance to reflect the range of lithium price scenarios, as well as our updated expectations of geographic income mix.
At the $15 lithium price scenario, we'd expect a modest tax expense benefit in our P&L. At higher pricing, we'd expect a more typical tax rate in the mid- to high-20% range. We have also accounted for the adjusted change in the diluted share count to reflect our $2.3 billion public mandatory convertible preferred stock offering. Moving to slide eight, where we provide some operating cash flow considerations. We had previously highlighted that our cash flow conversion would be constrained this year, and I want to provide some additional color on those drivers. As you see here, our cash flow conversion in 2024 is expected to be below historical averages for four reasons. First, Talison is progressing its chemical-grade plant, or CGP3 expansion, resulting in lower dividends from the JV.
Second, working capital release related to lower lithium pricing is expected to be mostly offset by increased working capital investments for our new plants at Kemerton, Meishan, Salar Yield, and Qinzhou. Third, cash tax is expected to be similar to last year, primarily reflecting jurisdictional mix. For example, we will pay Australian cash taxes in mid-year based on earnings estimates from the prior year period. And finally, we expect to have higher interest expenses year-over-year. Turning to slide nine, I'll provide further details on trends in each segment's outlook. First, in energy storage, we continue to expect approximately two-thirds of our 2024 volumes to be sold on index-referenced variable price contracts. The remaining one-third of the volume is still expected to be sold on short-term purchase agreements, including our recently announced bidding events, which Kent will discuss in a moment.
Year-over-year energy storage volume growth is trending toward the high end of our expected 10%-20% range, driven by timing of project ramps and spodumene sales. We continue to anticipate increased year-over-year volumes in the second half of the year due to the ramp of our expansions. All else being equal, we continue to expect improving margins through the year as lower-cost spodumene offsets new facility ramp costs. However, we expect some quarterly variance in EBITDA and margin due to the timing of Talison shipments. Specifically, in Q2, we expect a lift to our EBITDA margin of about 10 points from higher offtake by our partners at the Talison JV. Next, on specialties. Our outlook reflects continued softness in consumer electronics, partially offset by solid demand in oilfield services, agriculture, and pharmaceutical applications.
Furthermore, we are seeing higher costs for logistics as we manage through regional challenges, notably at our site in Jordan. We anticipate higher sales in the second half of the year on the expectation of modest end-market recovery and improved pricing in bromine specialties. Taken together, we now expect specialties adjusted EBITDA to be toward the lower end of the outlook range. Finally, at Ketjen, we are seeing the building success of our turnaround program. We are optimistic about increased volumes driven by high refinery utilization. In Q1, we have seen end-market strength, primarily in clean fuel technology, and expect higher volumes across each of the Ketjen businesses in 2024. Turning to slide 10 in our financial position. As you know, during the quarter, we took action to maintain a solid investment-grade credit rating and further enhance Albemarle's financial flexibility as we navigate this market downcycle.
In March, we closed a $2.3 billion public preferred stock offering to fortify our competitive position and stay ahead of dynamic market conditions. Together, with the amended credit facility we discussed in February, these actions put Albemarle in a position to invest in and finish our last-mile expansion projects, as well as capitalize on the secular growth trends we see in our core, core end markets of mobility, energy, connectivity, and health. Following the offering, we repaid our outstanding commercial paper, resulting in improved leverage. We ended the quarter with a larger than normal cash balance, and the primary use of that cash will be to complete our in-flight capital projects. Our balance sheet management highlights our focus on adapting to changing market conditions and controlling the things in our control. Finally, turning to slide 11 for a reminder of our capital allocation priorities.
This is a slide you've seen before, and we're touching on it briefly to acknowledge that our capital allocation priorities have not changed. We'll continue to selectively invest in high-return growth, but we'll be patient and disciplined. Our near-term focus remains on operational execution, and you can expect that our actions will be aligned with driving cost and productivity improvements, ramping our assets to full contribution, and preserving our financial flexibility. While we believe current lithium prices are unsustainable for most of the industry in the long term, we are managing to the current environment. To support our ability to reinvest and grow for the future, we are taking the prudent steps to rightsize our capital spending and cost structure, focusing on ramping our plants to full contribution and volume growth capture, and taking steps to boost cash flow and enhance our financial flexibility.
With that, I'll turn it back over to Kent to provide more details on the proactive actions Albemarle is taking in the current market to preserve long-term growth and value creation.
Kent Masters (CEO)
Thanks, Neal. Moving to slide 12. We continue to believe in the EV transition and the growth in lithium demand, as well as the opportunity it creates for Albemarle. Despite a downshift in demand growth in Europe and the United States, global EV sales are up 20% year to date, led by strong growth in China, which represents over 60% of the global EV market. We continue to anticipate 2.5x lithium demand growth from 2024-2030. Additionally, we see battery size growing over time, driven by technology developments and EV adoption. These factors all translate to significantly higher global lithium needs. To put all this in perspective, we expect that this industry needs more than 300,000 metric tons of new lithium capacity every year to satisfy this growth.
This means we need more than 100 new lithium projects across resources and conversion between now and 2030 to support this demand. Moving to slide 13, Albemarle is actively contributing to the progress of price discovery and efficiency in the lithium market. We have conducted four successful bidding events for chemical-grade spodumene and battery-grade carbonate. These events inform the market of real-time physical trading dynamics and promote greater transparency in the evolving lithium market. While the majority of our sales will continue to be on long-term agreements with our core strategic customers, bidding events give us another sales channel to expand our market access. We have partnered with Metalshub, an industry-leading source to contract platform, to host efficient and transparent bidding events.
On the slide, you can see a few of the ways we've designed these events to promote transparency and efficiency while meeting customer needs, including zero cost to participate, sealed bids and bidder confidentiality, as well as the winning price disclosed to all bidders following the event's conclusion. Going forward, you should expect that we will have a regular cadence of these bidding events, including additional products for sale in various jurisdictions. The primary reason for holding these bidding events is to drive fair and transparent price discovery, something that is good for all market participants. Looking at slide 14, the Albemarle Way of Excellence remains our operational standard and continues to serve us well. Within the operating model, our focus continues to be on efficiency and ensuring our costs reflect the current environment.
As I mentioned earlier, we remain on track to exceed our 2024 target of $280 million in productivity benefits through manufacturing, procurement, and back-office initiatives. Recently, we've added cash management to our tracker to enhance cash flow, with particular emphasis on optimizing our cash conversion cycle. Looking beyond our cost actions, we also remain focused on the other elements of our model. This quarter, we plan to publish our sustainability report and host our fourth annual Sustainability Day, featuring key highlights of our sustainable approach and updates on our environmental targets. Moving now to slide 15, we've said that our focus this year is on getting our in-flight projects to completion and full production, allowing us to drive near-term volume growth and cash flow. We're making solid progress on multiple fronts.
The Salar Yield Improvement Project in Chile is ramping well and has achieved over 50% operating rates. This project allows us to increase lithium production while reducing carbon and water intensity through the application of innovative proprietary technology. It also allows us to capture the full benefits of the capacity expansion at the La Negra conversion facility. In Australia, the first two trains, Kemerton One and Two, are in startup, ramp, and qualification phases. Kemerton One recently achieved the key milestone of 50% operating rates for battery-grade product, and that product is currently in qualification. The remaining capital spend for these facilities is modest, and our focus is on continuing to ramp the facilities and get production qualified with customers. At Train Three, we are progressing through construction in a prudent way.
In China, the Qinzhou plant is ramping on schedule and is expected to achieve nameplate capacity by mid-year. Meishan marked its grand opening in April and is progressing through commissioning, having achieved a 50% operating rate for battery-grade material. The remaining capital spend on Meishan is relatively small and related to the ongoing startup activities. Looking at slide 16, our in-flight projects put us in a position to deliver volumetric growth of approximately 20% per year from 2022-2027. First quarter sales volumes were recorded at 40,000 tons LCE. We expect 2024 total volumes weighted toward the second half of the year due to demand seasonality and project ramp.
We also have the flexibility to toll or sell excess spodumene to maximize economic returns, depending on market conditions, as we exercise that ability in the first quarter by selling some chemical-grade spodumene. Moving on to slide 17. It's important to highlight the unique advantages that Albemarle has today, and how we see those advantages translating to significant margin expansion and earnings generation in the near term. It all starts with our high-quality, low-cost resource portfolio, including the Salar de Atacama, Greenbushes, Wodgina, and Kings Mountain. Our global portfolio is arguably the best in the industry. Large-scale, high-grade assets are also low-cost assets, and the advantages they provide are not insignificant, as you can see on the left-hand side of this slide. Access to world-class assets is, in turn, one key factor to help us maintain robust energy storage margins across the cycle.
For example, at the $15 per kilogram lithium price scenario, we estimate energy storage margins would normalize above 30% after adjusting for the temporal impacts from lower partner offtake at Talison and lower fixed cost absorption at our new plants. That's before the tailwind of price upside. We estimate that every $1 per kilogram of LCE price improvement would translate to more than 200 basis points of margin expansion. We are also diversified across resource types and finished products, vertically integrated and able to source product from free trade agreement jurisdictions such as Australia, Chile, and the United States. Turning to slide 18. Our comments today reflect the competitive strengths that position Albemarle for success. Beyond our world-class resource base, additional competitive advantages include our process chemistry knowledge and manufacturing expertise allow us to efficiently operate large-scale assets and drive down operating cost.
Our targeted innovations, product reliability, and reputation for quality make us a trusted partner of choice for our customers, and our people and stewardship are a point of pride and competitive strength. We have a proven management team that has operated through cycles and continues to lead with a disciplined mindset. On slide 19, these factors give Albemarle a strong value proposition and position us to win in the market. Our strategy and path to capitalize on the opportunities align with attractive trends in mobility, energy, connectivity, and health is clear. We will continue to lead with discipline and to scale and innovate, accelerate profitable growth, and advance sustainability to drive value for shareholders. I hope to see some of you face-to-face at these upcoming events listed here on slide 20.
With that, I'd like to turn the call back over to the operator to begin the Q&A portion.
Operator (participant)
We will now move to our Q&A portion. If you'd like to ask a question, please press star five to raise your hand. Also, please bear in mind this Q&A session is limited to one question and one follow-up per person. Our first question is from Aleksey Yefremov at KeyBanc Capital Markets. Your line is open. Please go ahead.
Aleksey Yefremov (Managing Director and Equity Research - Chemicals)
Thanks, and good morning, everyone. I just wanted to ask about your lithium volumes projection on slide 16. If current prices don't change, can you get to these volumes and capacities without raising more equity or debt?
Kent Masters (CEO)
Yeah, so well we forecast for the year. Looking out for the year, so 10%-20%, and we'd say we'd probably be at the upper end of that. And those, the long-term volumes that we show are based on the capital program that we have in place, and the projects that we're executing currently, and no need for additional capital for that.
Aleksey Yefremov (Managing Director and Equity Research - Chemicals)
Thanks. And just as a follow-up, I mean, you gave us scenarios for your EBITDA based on pricing, and I was hoping to get a similar idea for your medium-term CapEx. If, say, prices stay where they are today, would you be able to sustain your current level of CapEx in 2025, or does CapEx need to come down to balance your cash needs?
Kent Masters (CEO)
if prices stayed where they were today, you'd see us ramping CapEx down. It'd take us a little bit of time, but we have a run rate that we think is kind of a minimum CapEx level of about $1 billion a year to maintain assets. We wouldn't get there in 2025, but kind of a run rate in line with that toward the end of 2025, we could if we felt prices were gonna stay where they are today.
Operator (participant)
Our next question is from Arun Viswanathan at RBC Capital Markets. Your line is open. Please go ahead.
Arun Viswanathan (Senior Equity Analyst - Chemicals, Agriculture, and Packaging)
Sorry about that. I was on mute. Thanks for taking my question. Hope you guys are well. I guess what I just wanna get your thoughts on maybe fundamentals that you're observing in the lithium markets these days, you know, it sounds like there was some disruption in some spodumene production. There was some, you know, I think curtailments in China related to disposal of waste. Altogether, that has taken some production off the market and may potentially stabilize the price environment. Could you maybe highlight some of those issues for us, and maybe describe the inventory side as well, what you're observing in both the downstream cathode manufacturers and upstream lithium producers? Thanks.
Kent Masters (CEO)
So let me start. I'll start with that. Eric can give you a little bit more detail on inventory. But you, I mean, you described the situation reasonably well. We've seen, we've seen, as we expected, some production come offline, lithium in China and some higher cost spodumene resources, and we've seen price respond to that, marginally, I would say, 15% or so change in price as a result of that. But that's what we thought the market would do. We don't really see it running dramatically up, and we still expect to see other resources coming off if prices stay where they are. So it's gonna balance as the market kind of figures out exactly what price is doing and how production responds to that.
So I think you'll see new projects that are planned, coming off and struggling to get capital if we stay at prices like they are. So I think we're in a balancing mode at the moment, and we do expect to see additional resources come out. Eric, you wanna talk about inventories?
Eric Norris (President of Energy Storage)
Sure. First of all, I'll just hit the other factor that's important, is demand. China stands as a market in stark contrast. First of all, it's the majority of demand in the world, over 60% of the demand. It stands in stark contrast to the U.S. or Europe, with very strong growth. You may have seen reported even in April, growth that was quite significant for various automotive producers, BYD being up 49%. So there's very strong growth in China, coming off of very low inventory levels, and that's obviously a favorable indicator for price in light of the pressure on producers at these price levels that Ken described.
And the inventory, more specifically, what we're seeing is inventory is pretty much at very low levels, ending in March, relatively speaking. So, less than two weeks, from a lithium producer standpoint, and about a week for downstream cathode companies. It's, that's in China. It's a little higher for battery producers, or for, excuse me, for battery inventories, but again, at levels that are very low compared to the average we saw in 2023. That, coupled with this demand signal we're getting from China, we see as a positive signal for price going forward, and obviously we don't know for sure, but we'll watch that carefully, and should that happen, that'll benefit our, earnings going forward.
Arun Viswanathan (Senior Equity Analyst - Chemicals, Agriculture, and Packaging)
Thanks for that. I know there's gonna be a lot of other questions on lithium, so maybe I'll ask one on specialties. Do you see any risk, maybe, to given where geographically where some of your resources are in Jordan? I know there's been some activity there, obviously, so maybe you can just give us your thoughts on is that part of what's leading you to the lower end of guidance for specialties, or what else would you cite, I guess, other than that?
Kent Masters (CEO)
Yeah, I think it's a fair, fair, fair assumption. You know, there's always risk in the Middle East. But in terms of our operational, we've seen limited operational impacts year to date, but the logistics is where the challenge is, and we are incurring additional costs to secure those logistics out of that part of the world. So that's what's impacting our business. But that's different than what it was last year. So yeah, that's, that's definitely a risk in the second half as we move into that for specialties.
Operator (participant)
Our next question is from David Deckelbaum at TD Cowen. Your line is open. Please go ahead.
David Deckelbaum (Managing Director - Sustainability and Energy Transition)
Thanks for taking my questions, everyone. I wanted to just follow up on, you know, the outlook if prices were to stay the same. You know, you've obviously seen the impact of lower near-term production at Greenbushes, and then obviously, you have CGP-3, which is still under construction and ramping. You know, we've heard from Wodgina, with the third train kind of being deferred a bit. Do you anticipate any more, I guess, corrective actions or responses under some of the JV spodumene facilities that you're involved with, if prices were to remain where they are today?
Kent Masters (CEO)
So, the resources that we operate, and we have made adjustments just to the market condition, but I don't think we'd make further ones. These, these are world-class resources and the lowest cost position, so we, we still operate and make money at this pricing level there. These were investments that were kind of happening in the near term, and we had opportunities to adjust the execution profile, as we have around conversion assets as well, and our, our partners agreed to that, so we've made some adjustments. But long term, we still expect to exploit these resources because they're some of the best in the world.
David Deckelbaum (Managing Director - Sustainability and Energy Transition)
Appreciate that. You know, I'm curious on the second question, just, I think you've highlighted some EBITDA margin recovery in the second quarter, with increased partner offtake at Talison, and some variability there throughout the year. But as we think about your EBITDA margins in 2024 versus 2025, is there a ballpark range that you would estimate that commissioning new facilities has as sort of a drag on EBITDA margins this year versus next year?
Neal Sheorey (CFO)
Yeah. Hi, David, this is Neal. Yeah, absolutely. That's actually one of the reasons why we put that slide in the deck that showed that our range found that. I think that's slide 17. So the way that we think about it, it's about a 500 basis point drag, this year, from the ramp-up of these new plants. Now, you won't get all 500 basis points, back in 2025, because obviously we will still be working through the ramp of these facilities. But certainly you can expect over the next couple of years, as these facilities come up to full rates, that you should start to see that, margin expansion from those plants running full.
Operator (participant)
Our next question is from Steve Byrne at Bank of America. Your line is open. Please go ahead.
Rock Hoffman (Equity Research Associate)
Hi, you have Rock Hoffman on for Steve Byrne. Out of the $280 million productivity benefits goal that you guys set for 2024, given that you're already, I guess, above pace of $90 million in Q1, is this faster pace apparent in results and guidance?
Kent Masters (CEO)
So I think we're using the 280, and as we forecast that out, it's still early in the year. We're, we're probably a little ahead of schedule, but not ready to call it and build into our forecast that will beat that. But we'll be. We're optimistic. We're, we're comfortable with the program, and the target is a pretty big target for us across the organization, and we feel pretty good we're on a run rate that we can meet that or maybe beat it, but we've not built that into our forecast.
Neal Sheorey (CFO)
Yeah, and this is Neil. To the point of can you see it in the financials? Maybe just one example I'll give you is if you look at our SG&A line. So, just remember that on the face of the income statement, our SG&A line includes about $35 million of one-time charges that was related to our restructuring activities that we announced in the first quarter. When you back that out and then look at our SG&A line versus the fourth quarter, versus where we ended 2023, you will see about a $20 million-$25 million decline in our SG&A costs. So that gives you an idea that we are starting to see some traction on the productivity and restructuring savings that we already announced.
Rock Hoffman (Equity Research Associate)
That's helpful. And just to follow up, in terms of your longer-term volume growth chart here, why doesn't the potential tolling volume go down over time? Wouldn't you generate higher margins at your own conversion plants?
Eric Norris (President of Energy Storage)
Let's see, the question, your question, just to make sure I'm clear on it, this is Eric speaking, was why would we see tolling volume go down over time?
Rock Hoffman (Equity Research Associate)
Why, why wouldn't tolling volume go down?
Eric Norris (President of Energy Storage)
Oh, I'm sorry. Yeah, I think fair enough. It's all a factor of ramp of plants, right? When it comes down to, we have a plant in China, Meishan, that's ramping at a faster speed than the plant in Australia, and that has to do with operating experience. But if you look on this over a long-term basis, ultimately, our intention is to be fully integrated and to take all the available resources and convert them with company-built assets as opposed to tolling assets. Increasingly, those we would target those to be outside of the U.S. We have a considerable base, as you know, today, in China.
But again, depending upon the speed with that, tolling always remains a flywheel, an option for us to go to it, depending on the speed of ramps, to go to another alternative. But you're right. I mean, in time, that's why there's a ± on it. It should come down.
Kent Masters (CEO)
The tolling, for the most part, is a bridging strategy for us. Sorry.
Operator (participant)
Our next question is from Andrés Castaños at Berenberg. Your line is open. Please go ahead.
Andrés Castanos (Chemicals Equity Research)
Hello. I wanted to understand better why are you running spodumene auctions now? To have a sense on what is the percentage of volume that goes in these auctions. Are deals with tollers somewhat impacted by this?
Kent Masters (CEO)
Yeah. So I'm not sure I got the last part of the question. Let me start on the front, and you catch that in the follow-up if I don't answer your question. So look, we're doing the auctions both on spodumene and on salts to help transparency in the marketplace, price discovery, to really understand, make the market a little clearer, a little more transparent. We get good information for it, and then we've decided to include spodumene as part of that, just more transparency in the market, more knowledge that we get around that, and it's an opportunity for us to participate in a different part of the value chain. So it's not a change in our strategy of being an integrated producer.
We'll sell most of our product through these long-term agreements on a salts basis, as we have historically. So that strategy didn't change, but it's just, it's an adjustment to take it to try and get more transparency in the marketplace, and then to sell spodumene a different value, a different product at a different value in the marketplace. So if there are dislocations, we can take advantage of that.
Andrés Castanos (Chemicals Equity Research)
Right. So I take it's a small percentage of the total volumes that essentially the deals with the tollers are still in place, and they take the majority of the excess spodumene. My second question would be on the level of cost of inventory that you have at the moment, for spodumene, for the one you take on board from Wodgina now. Can you comment on that more or less, where it sits versus the index? Thank you.
Eric Norris (President of Energy Storage)
So I think the question was the cost of our spodumene in inventory versus the index. As we showed in our first quarter results, we are still working off a little bit of spodumene that went into inventory in prior periods. That is at a little bit higher cost than where it is today, and we documented how much of that was in our first quarter results, in our EBITDA bridge. You can expect that there'll be a little bit more of that spodumene that we'll have to work off, but for the most part, you will start to see a spodumene cost rolling through our COGS that is consistent with what is in the market, as we get towards the middle of the year and in the back half of the year.
And that's built into the outlook scenarios that we've been publishing.
Operator (participant)
Our next question is from John Roberts at Mizuho Securities. Your line is open. Please go ahead.
John Roberts (Managing Director - Americas Chemical Industry Lead for Equity Research)
Thank you. Last quarter, slide 13 on Greenbushes has discussed the lag and the lower of cost or market issue. It projected a spodumene inventory cost for the March quarter of about $4,000 a ton. Did that play out the way you projected last quarter?
Neal Sheorey (CFO)
John, so this is Neal. So I would have to check your numbers. One of the big adjustments we made in the fourth quarter was that LCM, which really collapsed the gap, that we previously had, that sort of six-month lag, that we had in the spodumene cost and how it rolls through, cost of goods sold. Now, even after taking the LCM, prices did still come down as we started the first quarter, so we did still have a little bit of higher priced, spodumene that rolled through our PNL. But I think the numbers you're referring to maybe are before we took the LCM adjustment, and we collapsed a lot of that gap with that adjustment.
John Roberts (Managing Director - Americas Chemical Industry Lead for Equity Research)
That's correct. All right. And then have your thoughts on the role of Ketjen in the portfolio changed at all since the last call?
Kent Masters (CEO)
We've said it's not the core business for us, so we would look to divest that at some point. But, and we went through a process, which I think, you know, we, we talked quite a bit about, didn't get the value we wanted, so we're doing a turnaround. That program is going pretty well, but we would still anticipate, doing a transaction on that business when the timing is right.
Operator (participant)
Our next question is from John Roberts, Sorry, Christopher Parkinson at Wolfe Research. Please go ahead.
Harris Fein (VP Equity Research - Chemicals, Agriculture and Packaging)
Great. Thanks. This is Harris Fein on for Chris. So I'm not sure if I'm reading too much into this. You left the EBITDA sensitivities unchanged, but also, you know, volumes seem like they're trending towards the high end of the guide. Is it wrong to think that EBITDA would trend to the higher end of those ranges as well, all else equal?
Neal Sheorey (CFO)
Yeah, actually, it's a fair assumption. Basically, the way that we constructed those EBITDA ranges, the reason they're ranges is driven by that volume consideration that we have, the 10%-20%. So I think all things being equal, that's a fair assumption to make.
Harris Fein (VP Equity Research - Chemicals, Agriculture and Packaging)
Then for my follow-up. You know, there are a lot of moving pieces in the cash flow guide. I guess when I look at the reasoning for the lower conversion rate this year, it doesn't seem like those things are necessarily going away after this year. Like, you'll always be ramping projects. So, you know, how, how are you thinking about the operating cash conversion going forward?
Neal Sheorey (CFO)
Well, actually, I, I have a little different viewpoint on that. I do think that our cash conversion should be improving in 2025 for a few reasons. Number one, as I mentioned, or as we mentioned in the prepared remarks, our cash taxes are very similar this year to what we had last year, and that's primarily because of Australia, and we're paying taxes based on income from last year. If you assume that pricing is sort of flat for the rest of the year, I think you should assume that our cash taxes will be lower next year, all things being equal. The other part is that our facilities are so far, as you heard in Kent's remarks, ramping quite well.
And so we would expect that those will start to contribute as we get into the back end of this year and into 2025. And as Kent mentioned, right now, for, for where we are, the ramp that you see in our volume growth is just based on the projects that we are finishing up right now and are ramping right now. So we won't be ramping plants forever. That, that will most certainly come to an end, and those, those plants will, will begin contributing in the back half of this year and into 2025. So I do anticipate our cash conversion to get better.
Kent Masters (CEO)
Yeah, and just a little finer point on Neal's point. I mean, we are. The new plants that are ramping will become, as we grow, our business grows, they become a smaller part of the portfolio. So we'll still be building new plants and ramping over time, but they become a smaller percentage of the portfolio. And then at the moment, we have a lot of plants ramping in that particular phase. Didn't necessarily plan it that way, but that's how it's worked out. We've got, I think, four plants actually ramping now at the same time, and that's not the plan. Going forward, it won't be that many, and if they were, it would be a smaller part of the portfolio just because we've grown.
Operator (participant)
Our next question is from Kevin McCarthy at Vertical Research Partners. Your line is open. Please go ahead.
Matt Hettwer (Equity Research Associate - Chemicals)
Hi, this is Matt Hewer on for Kevin McCarthy. Regarding the spodumene and carbonate auctions that you just touched on, what has the customer feedback been like, and how has the auction participation rates trended?
Eric Norris (President of Energy Storage)
Yes, this is Matt. This is Eric. We've had very good participation. We're very early in our process, and so we're with a qualification process to make sure we're inviting people to these auctions that meet certain standards, but that's growing over time. The participation rate we received and the corresponding conversion of those invited versus those who put in a bid has been strong. The interest has been therefore good, and the outcome has been well-received, we think, by the market, particularly from a price reporting agency. We found that these through the normal surveying process, the results of these bids have found their way into the price reporting agencies.
Of course, they determine how they use that in their index calculations, but it's our anticipation that they're lending there as well.
As we turn to our sort of contracted customer base, they appreciate that what we're doing is better understanding in what is a pretty immature market, how to segment, you know, what the drivers are, as Kent was referring to, different types of prices, whether that's inside a country, outside a country, or an IRA-compliant, a non-IRA compliant product, or a spodumene versus a battery-grade carbonate. It's giving us better intelligence to better segment, understand what's happening in the market, and allowing the same for our customers in the contract side ultimately, because that would be reflected in the indices they reference.
Matt Hettwer (Equity Research Associate - Chemicals)
Thanks. And then, as a follow-up, I believe in the prepared remarks, you mentioned expanding the auctions to other geographies and products. What other geographies are you looking at? And in the future, might you include hydroxide in the auctions?
Eric Norris (President of Energy Storage)
Yes. So we—I touched on it a little bit when I talked about IRA compliance. But just as reference, almost, or actually, all four auctions that we've done to date have all been inside of China, with available inventory on the ground there. We'll be looking for product outside of China, shipped on a CIF basis, for example. We'll be looking at that certainly for our Australia product. We'll be looking at it for products that are IRA compliant, shipped to the U.S. and across our product range, including hydroxide.
Operator (participant)
Our next question is from Ben Isaacson at Scotia Capital Inc. Your line is open. Please go ahead.
Apurva Kilambi (Senior Equity Research - Forestry, Agriculture, Fertilizers, Chemicals, and Lithium)
Good morning. This is Apurva on for Ben. We're heading into what has historically been a peak buying season in China. Just off of the earlier comments on demand, are you starting to see this, this restocking materialize?
Eric Norris (President of Energy Storage)
Yes. This is Eric. As I pointed out, we've seen inventories at a fairly low level, ending in March, and I do think a part of the demand is the restock and anticipation of the mid-year and into later year seasonality of EVs. It's one reason why it's very hard to look at Q1 sales of EVs and correlate that to real on-the-ground demand. Because the EVs that are being sold in the first quarter of this year were – lithium for that was sold late last year, middle to late of last year. I think it's a part of the demand that I referred to earlier.
It's, it's not only fundamental demand for what are increased EV sales that, that are coming in, that, we see in April and we expect in May and June, but also it's a result of some restocking. Because some of the levels of which inventory had gone to just weren't sustainable for these operations to, to run, without taking considerable risk of not being able to meet demand.
Apurva Kilambi (Senior Equity Research - Forestry, Agriculture, Fertilizers, Chemicals, and Lithium)
Great. Thank you. As my follow-up, looking back, with your 10-K, you actually published an updated technical report on Greenbushes. With that report, we saw something of a step down in both grades and recoveries, and concurrently, costs have moved upwards. Given those technical specs, where do you see the next phase of resource growth coming from for Greenbushes?
Eric Norris (President of Energy Storage)
Well, that's—you're correct. You're referencing a report that we published on our SEC guidelines, which are have a different standard. And it's not uncommon in mining for different standards around the world, and different standards are more strict in how they should be exercised, and that produced some of the results you're describing. This is still, even in that report, on a relative basis, the best spodumene resource reported in the world. And our aims are to continue, as we've described, to we are now executing with our joint venture partners as CGP-3 expansion.
There is the possibility long term, although we have not announced this formally or committed to it, for further expansion of CGP4, and continued operation of that grade of that operation, at its current grade, reported for quite some years, decades to come. So our intention is to maximize that resource, given its low cost potential.
Operator (participant)
Our next question is from Michael Sison at Wells Fargo Securities. Your line is open. Please go ahead.
Michael Sison (Equity Research - Chemicals and Materials)
Hey, good morning. Good start to the year. You have a slide on sort of minimum capital, and I think the line looks like $1 billion. So if pricing kind of stays here, is that where CapEx will go in 2025? And what would that mean to your capacity potential in the, you know, longer term, if that has to be the case?
Kent Masters (CEO)
Yeah, so I think we, we commented on that earlier. So we would look at the $1 billion, that's kind of maintenance capital for us around the, you know, to maintain our assets and continue to operate there. And we could, if prices stay where they are, we could get to that kind of on a run rate by the end of 2025. So a 2026 number, so to speak. 2025 would be a little bit higher, but we get to the run rate by 2025. That would impact our long-term growth, if we went to that level. So the current planning that we have, the projects we're executing, at the moment, get us kind of a 20% growth rate through 2027 or so.
If we were to cut back to those levels, we'd impact that materially beyond that.
Michael Sison (Equity Research - Chemicals and Materials)
And as a follow-up, you know, your EBITDA margins for energy storage, you know, they're pretty good. And I know you think we need-- you need higher pricing for the industry. So, I mean, what price do you think lithium needs to be at to support the growth that is expected for the end of the decade? And maybe any thoughts on, you know, where you think others around the world who are, where their margins are? Because yours are pretty again, from a are pretty good. Not as good as they used to be, but I think they're still a pretty good margin.
Kent Masters (CEO)
Right. So I'm not gonna comment on other people's margins, but if we stay where we are, we can operate at about, you know, at a 30%-ish type margin, right? Once we get the noise out of the P&L, out of the transition from the big prices and some of the spodumene costs. So on a run rate, we could get to around 30% and still grow our business. For us, I think that's the good margins that you're talking about. We've had stronger margins than that, and they would be stronger if prices move up. The issue with price is really about returns on new investment projects, more than it is about our existing business P&L and the margins that we can deliver.
So prices need to be to move up in order to develop new projects, to get the growth the industry needs to support the EV transition. I'm not gonna comment on, 'cause it's different by every project and every geography as to what price you need, and you need to believe that for, you know, 10 or 15 years in order to get a return on the project when you go through FID. So I can't say a number, and if I had one, I probably wouldn't say it. But they are different by geography, by region, by technology, what the resource looks like, it's quite different. There's no way to pick one particular number.
Operator (participant)
Our next question is from Joshua Spector at UBS. Your line is open. Please go ahead.
Chris Perrella (Director Equity Research - Chemicals and Paper/Packaging)
Hi, good morning, everyone. It's Chris Perrella on for Josh. I just wanted to follow up on, I think, Neal, the 2Q energy storage EBITDA margin that you guided to. Given the puts and takes, you have the higher cost spodumene inventory, which is maybe a $50 million drag in the second quarter, but you also have the one-off from Talison. So how does that, you know, how does that bridge together to get to your 2Q margin? And then does it step down with the absence of the Talison one-off in the second half of the year?
Neal Sheorey (CFO)
Let's talk about the second quarter first. You know, so basically, the way to think about this, I think your numbers are probably all in the right kind of range. If you do the math based on the first quarter and what we said in the prepared remarks, that we expect about a 10-point bump in energy storage's EBITDA margin in the second quarter, you probably will get into the range of about a $100 million bump to EBITDA, Q2 versus Q1. And that's really just driven primarily by the expectation that all partners are taking their allotment off of Talison, plus we have that additional 200,000 tons that is getting off-taken in the second quarter as well.
And so, you know, that's basically what serves as the basis for the 10 percentage point bump. In terms of then going forward, it is sort of a one-time bump up. And then what you should expect in the third and the fourth quarter is that we'll come back down to, again, pretty healthy margins. It won't be as healthy as the second quarter, but you can expect that we will, as our plants continue to ramp up and we continue to absorb fixed cost, that we'll continue to get some margin expansion versus the first quarter, for sure, in the third and the fourth quarters as we exit the year.
Chris Perrella (Director Equity Research - Chemicals and Paper/Packaging)
No, that's perfect. No, thank you for explaining that. And then a quick follow-up. Sequentially into the second quarter, do you expect volumes to be up? I'm just trying to bridge the seasonality to get to the, you know, 190 KT for you for the full year.
Neal Sheorey (CFO)
We will have volume at least sequentially, what you're asking about is, yes, we will have some higher volumes as we get into Q2 versus Q1. Remember that the peak for energy storage demand is usually in the third quarter, so we're building to that peak. So it won't be the highest quarter of the year, but yeah, I would expect that, you'll see a little bit higher volume in Q2 versus Q1.
Operator (participant)
Our next question is from Colin Rusch at Oppenheimer. Your line is open. Please go ahead.
Colin Rusch (Managing Director, Head of Sustainable Growth and Resource Optimization Research)
Thanks so much, guys. You know, given the dynamics around geopolitical positioning on manufacturing for batteries and some of the evolution of that, you know, the tariffs that we're seeing on the solar side and other areas, you know, can you talk a little bit about the importance of refining and your thought process around that importance in North America, as you enter into the balance of this year and next year?
Kent Masters (CEO)
Yeah, so okay, interesting question. So the politics is playing into the market significantly, and, and we've got the integrated strategy. So we've got a good resource position, and it's spread around the world, so we have nice diversity around that. And we've built conversion, so we, we have conversion in Chile, in the U.S., lower scale at the moment, and Australia and China. So we're spread around the world, and we've got nice diversity around that, and it allows us to kind of plan for some of these aspects. So our goal would be to have larger scale conversion in North America to satisfy the North American market. And but we've paused on that a little bit, just on some of the issues that you've described, price being a big one, how geopolitics plays into it.
And we, we're gonna use that pause to figure out exactly what we do around that.
Colin Rusch (Managing Director, Head of Sustainable Growth and Resource Optimization Research)
Okay, great. And then in terms of some of the evolving cathode chemistries, obviously, we're seeing, you know, some activity around, you know, doped LFP. And, you know, I'm assuming that the precursor materials are evolving a little bit. Can you talk a little bit about some of the specific adjustments that you're making around some of the refining processes to meet those cathode needs in a more tangible way as you go through the balance of this year and into next year?
Kent Masters (CEO)
I'll start on that. Eric can fill in the gaps. But I think, I mean, the biggest thing for us at the moment is, with the primary products around hydroxide and carbonate, balancing that. So as LFP has become more prevalent, it's got stronger demand on carbonate. So we've been a stronger, a larger percentage of our portfolio is carbonate. Historically, we've been building out hydroxide, and then balancing those two is understanding where those chemistries go. And then long term, it's gonna be about solid state, and then how you shift from so much being more about carbonate and hydroxide to about lithium metal. But that's a longer term scenario. The carbonate and hydroxide is playing out in the assets we're building now.
Eric Norris (President of Energy Storage)
Yeah, so Colin, just a little shred more of color around that. I would say that we still see a market that is for hydroxide, high nickel is favored outside of China versus in with carbonate and LF- and supporting LFP being a very big part of the China market. The innovations that have been coming out of largely out of China and LFP chemistries for higher energy density and efficiencies as well as the cost profile of that cathode are obviously very increasingly now interesting to the West. And so we expect that certainly our Chile position is a position of power in which we can supply into that opportunity. We'll watch that carefully.
As Kent talks about, had talked about earlier, about pausing the investment here in the U.S. or North America, to figure out, you know, in this uncertain market direction and develop our own strategy there. One of those—one of the components of that has to be a, an assessment of LFP in the U.S., and that'll be, so that'll be part of that equation as well.
Operator (participant)
Our final question is from Patrick Cunningham at Citi. Your line is open. Please go ahead.
Patrick Cunningham (VP - Senior Analyst)
Good morning. Thank you for taking my question. You know, in the past, you've talked about, you know, the marginal cost of production being, you know, $20 a kilo and maybe new projects pushing that curve up over time. Do you still believe that to be the case, given we've seen, you know, relatively tepid supply response at current prices?
Kent Masters (CEO)
Yeah, and it changes, excuse me. It changes over time with volumes in the industry, but as most new projects come on are gonna be higher on the cost curve and be moving that up. So, we still think that, you know, look, within $1 or $2, the accuracy of that, but I think we still believe that fundamentally is about the target of marginal cost today.
Patrick Cunningham (VP - Senior Analyst)
Got it, and then just a quick follow-up. Did price floors play a meaningful impact with price levels in the low teens for a good part of the quarter?
Eric Norris (President of Energy Storage)
I'm sorry, your question was the price floor impact on our realized price for the quarter. Was that the question, Patrick?
Patrick Cunningham (VP - Senior Analyst)
It was meaningful. Yeah. Was there a meaningful impact?
Eric Norris (President of Energy Storage)
Let's put it this way: we don't disclose a lot of our price floors, and they tend to range, 'cause, often based on age of contract. At current prices, some of those floors are being tested, floors have held. And so, you know, we certainly are seeing the floors come into play for some of our business.
Operator (participant)
Thank you. That's all the time we have for questions. I'll now pass it back to Kent Masters for closing remarks.
Kent Masters (CEO)
Okay, thank you, and thank you all for joining us today. We continue to innovate, adapt, and lead the world in transforming essential resources into the critical ingredients for modern living, with people and planet in mind. We're focused on continuing to be the partner of choice for our customers and investment of choice for both the present and the future. Thank you for joining us.
Operator (participant)
This concludes today's conference call. Thank you for your participation. You may now disconnect.