PE
PEABODY ENERGY CORP (BTU)·Q2 2025 Earnings Summary
Executive Summary
- Q2 2025 results were mixed: revenue fell to $890.1M and GAAP diluted EPS was −$0.23; Adjusted EBITDA was $93.3M as Seaborne prices softened, but cost discipline in Seaborne Thermal and PRB partially offset the pressure .
- Versus S&P Global consensus, revenue missed ($890.1M vs $947.1M*) while Adjusted EBITDA marginally exceeded the consensus proxy; EPS comparisons are complicated by differing definitions (GAAP diluted EPS −$0.23 vs S&P Primary EPS estimate −$0.05*) .
- Guidance improved: full‑year volumes were raised for PRB (to 80–84Mt) and Seaborne Thermal, and full‑year cost targets were lowered across three segments; total 2025 CapEx was cut to $420M from $450M .
- Catalysts: (1) July passage of federal legislation cutting federal royalties (12.5%→7%) supports PRB margins and volumes in 2H25; management estimates $15–$20M 2H benefit . (2) Centurion longwall start accelerated to Feb 2026 . (3) Post‑quarter, Peabody terminated the planned Anglo acquisition due to a MAC at Moranbah North, removing deal uncertainty and refocusing capital allocation on organic assets .
What Went Well and What Went Wrong
What Went Well
- PRB outperformed: shipments exceeded expectations; costs well below targets; Adjusted EBITDA rose to $43.0M and margin improved >$1/ton YoY as demand strengthened .
- Seaborne Thermal “controlled the controllables”: costs below company targets despite weather‑related port disruption; segment delivered $33.5M Adjusted EBITDA and 17% margins; full‑year volume guidance raised and cost guidance reduced .
- Management execution and strategic progress: “strong execution and a resilient performance” with cost management enabling operations through lower pricing; longwall at Centurion pulled forward to Feb 2026, reflecting development meters ahead of schedule .
- “Our ability to manage costs is a key driver of success at a time of cyclical market softness” – CEO Jim Grech .
- “We ended the quarter with $586M of cash and nearly $1B of liquidity” – CFO Mark Spurbeck .
What Went Wrong
- Seaborne Metallurgical faced pricing headwinds: realized revenue/ton fell; Adjusted EBITDA loss of $9.2M; management cited challenging price environment despite costs below target .
- Operational disruptions: weather‑driven port congestion reduced Seaborne Thermal shipments by ~400k tons at quarter end; Bear Run rail issues and Twentymile geology lowered Other U.S. Thermal volumes and EBITDA to $13.5M .
- GAAP results under pressure: operating loss of $(38.4)M and net loss attributable to common stockholders of $(27.6)M, driven by lower pricing and transaction costs related to business combinations ($18.8M) .
Financial Results
Consolidated metrics vs prior quarters
Consensus vs Actual (Q2 2025)
Values retrieved from S&P Global*.
Note: S&P “Primary EPS” may differ from GAAP diluted EPS reported by the company; we anchor actual EPS to GAAP diluted EPS from the 8‑K .
Segment revenue and Adjusted EBITDA
KPIs and Balance Sheet
Guidance Changes
Full‑Year 2025 guidance: previous (May 6) vs current (July 31)
Q3 2025 segment guidance (point‑in‑time)
Earnings Call Themes & Trends
Management Commentary
- “Peabody closed out the first half of the year with strong execution and a resilient performance… Effective cost management in the seaborne platforms allowed us to work through a period of lower pricing, while robust PRB demand demonstrated the benefit of our leading U.S. thermal coal business.” – CEO Jim Grech .
- “We ended the quarter with $586M of cash and nearly $1B of liquidity… Our U.S. thermal platform led the way, generating $57M of adjusted EBITDA.” – CFO Mark Spurbeck .
- “We are pleased to increase our full-year volume guidance for Powder River Basin and Seaborne Thermal coal while reducing our full-year cost targets for three of the four segments.” – CEO Jim Grech .
- “We are highly confident that sustainable longwall mining won’t take place at Moranbah North until after a new longwall is fully commissioned… Any revised deal would require a substantial revision in value and structure.” – CEO Jim Grech .
Q&A Highlights
- Anglo MAC and deal status: Management reiterated high confidence in the MAC; no credible restart at Moranbah North; termination right after the 90‑day cure period; any BUMA (Dawson) transaction would also terminate if the main deal is terminated .
- Centurion sell‑down: No commitment or timing provided; decision will be based on shareholder value; development remains ahead of schedule .
- Royalty reduction mechanics: Net ~$0.40/ton benefit to Peabody after customer give‑backs; expected $15–$20M benefit in 2H25, annualized potential closer to ~$60M depending on contracts .
- Operational offsets: Asset sales and resource management results offset lost tons due to port congestion and Bear Run rail issues; lumpy and not forecastable .
- Liquidity and capex: $586M cash unencumbered; ~$100M remaining in 2H to reach Centurion longwall production; initial target ~$489M, now ~$495M .
Estimates Context
- Q2 revenue missed consensus ($890.1M vs $947.1M*) amid lower Seaborne pricing and port disruptions; Adjusted EBITDA was near/slightly above consensus proxy as cost control mitigated pricing pressure .
- EPS comparison is definition‑dependent: GAAP diluted EPS was −$0.23 vs S&P Primary EPS consensus −$0.05*, reflecting metric differences; investors should anchor on GAAP for reported results .
- Target Price Consensus Mean: $34.47*; coverage light (Q2 revenue estimates: 5; EPS: 3), suggesting limited sell‑side visibility and higher dispersion risk*.
Values retrieved from S&P Global*.
Key Takeaways for Investors
- PRB is the earnings anchor near term: stronger demand, lower royalty rates, raised volumes and lower costs support margin expansion into 2H25 .
- Seaborne Thermal cost execution remains a differentiator; despite pricing pressure, segment margins and lowered cost guidance de‑risk 2H targets .
- Seaborne Met likely remains choppy until cycle recovery; cost guidance lowered but pricing headwinds persist; watch India restocking and Chinese production quotas for inflection .
- Centurion schedule pull‑forward is strategically positive; expect incremental de‑risking as shields install in November and workforce ramps; ~$100M remaining spend to longwall start .
- Capital allocation flexibility enhanced post‑Anglo termination; management reiterated the framework to return 65–100% of available FCF (buybacks prioritized), with balance sheet resilience intact .
- Near‑term trading: headline catalysts include ongoing PRB strength, Q3 shipment catch‑up from Q2 port disruptions, and legislative royalty benefits flowing into reported margins .
- Medium‑term thesis: diversified asset base with U.S. thermal cash flow, improving Seaborne cost curve, and Centurion growth optionality supports counter‑cyclical free cash flow generation and shareholder returns .
Note: Shoal Creek insurance recovery in prior-year comparables inflates YoY metrics (Q2 2024 had $80.8M BI insurance); Q2 2025 excludes such items, and includes $18.8M transaction costs related to business combinations **[1064728_0001064728-25-000111_btu8k20250731ex991.htm:1]** **[1064728_0001064728-25-000111_btu8k20250731ex991.htm:5]** **[1064728_0001064728-25-000111_btu8k20250731ex991.htm:10]**.