CONSOL Energy Inc. (CEIX)·Q2 2024 Earnings Summary
Executive Summary
- Q2 2024 results were resilient despite the Francis Scott Key Bridge closure: revenue $501.1M, GAAP diluted EPS $1.96, adjusted EBITDA $124.5M, and free cash flow $58.6M .
- Sold 5.8M PAMC tons (2.9M export) with average revenue per ton $66.83, supported by mix shifts toward domestic and crossover metallurgical markets amid higher transport costs .
- Bold action on FY24 guidance: raised the bottom end for average coal revenue/ton to $63.50–$66.50 and PAMC sales volume to 24.5–26.0M tons; increased CapEx by $10M to $165–$190M as supply chains eased; Itmann volume maintained at 700–900k tons .
- Operations at Baltimore resumed May 20 with full channel restoration June 10, positioning volumes to normalize and enabling potential backlog catch-up; management is pursuing a business interruption recovery claim .
- Stock catalysts: raised guidance, contracting momentum (near fully contracted in 2024; 14.5M tons booked for 2025), and domestic demand tailwinds (PJM capacity auction indicating tightening grid and data center-led load growth) .
What Went Well and What Went Wrong
What Went Well
- Agility in logistics: “Black swan event… we quickly pivoted to identify an alternate route” and sold ~5.8M tons with ~$59M FCF despite the closure .
- Pricing resilience via mix: management focused shipments to domestic and crossover met, lifting realized price; “average price of our domestic tons exceeds our export tons” .
- Contracting wins: near fully contracted 2024; 14.5M tons in 2025; new fixed-price multiyear domestic contract for 4M tons through 2028 .
What Went Wrong
- Higher unit costs: PAMC average cash cost/ton rose to $39.82 (from $36.33) on lower fixed-cost leverage and inflation .
- CMT throughput/income hit: Q2 throughput 2.3M tons vs 5.4M; CMT adjusted EBITDA $5.2M vs $23.9M YoY due to the closure .
- Itmann ramp delays: Q2 sales fell to 164k tons on fewer purchased tons and equipment delays, with staffing improved but productivity constrained .
Financial Results
Consolidated headline metrics
Why: YoY declines reflect reduced export capacity, incremental transport costs (~$10/ton to alternative port), and lower API2/nat gas prices vs 2023; mix and domestic crossover met supported realizations; Q2 FCF remained positive .
Operating/KPI metrics (PAMC + consolidated drivers)
Why: Cash margin compression driven by higher unit costs (fixed-cost under-absorption, inflation) and increased transport costs on diverted export tons; price supported by mix to domestic/crossover met and modest API2 recovery .
Segment breakdown
PAMC
CMT (CONSOL Marine Terminal)
Itmann Mining Complex (sales including third-party)
Guidance Changes
Context: Bottom-end lifts reflect earlier-than-expected Baltimore reopening and strong operational performance; CapEx raised as supply-chain bottlenecks eased (equipment deliveries) .
Earnings Call Themes & Trends
Management Commentary
- “During the second quarter, CONSOL Energy boasted a strong financial and operational performance… Despite the nearly 2-month closure of the Port of Baltimore export channel… we achieved strong PMC cash margins per ton sold” (James Brock) .
- “We sold 5.8 million tons of PMC coal… average coal revenue per tonne sold of $66.83… incurred incremental transportation cost of approximately $10 per ton on those tons redirected to the alternative port in Virginia” (Mitesh Thakkar) .
- “We are near fully contracted in 2024… 14.5 million tons contracted for 2025… completed a fixed‑price multiyear contract for 4 million tonnes with a domestic utility through 2028” (Robert Braithwaite/Mitesh Thakkar) .
- “We are increasing the bottom end of our average coal revenue per tonne sold range by $1… moving up the bottom end of our PMC sales volume guidance by 0.5 million tonnes… increasing our CapEx guidance range by $10 million” (Mitesh Thakkar) .
Q&A Highlights
- Pricing drivers: mix to domestic and crossover met lifted realized price; China a key taker of crossover met, >800k tons YTD .
- FY24 price guidance and API2 sensitivity: midpoint based on $110 API2; current ~120 could add ~$1; ~$0.09 sensitivity across portfolio .
- 2025 book and sensitivity: 14.5M tons contracted; low-$60s at $100 API2; ~$0.14/ton sensitivity on current index-linked volume, scales with added exports .
- Capital returns pacing: buybacks slowed in Q2; H2 focus balanced with refinancing, revolver upsizing, and securitization renewal; intent remains to return capital at highest IRR .
- Itmann cost curve: productivity to improve with equipment arrivals and retreat mining; staffing near full but guidance depends on stable production .
Estimates Context
- S&P Global Wall Street consensus estimates for CEIX Q2 2024 were unavailable via our SPGI pipeline due to a CIQ mapping issue; therefore a beat/miss assessment versus consensus could not be determined. Values retrieved from S&P Global were not available due to mapping constraints.
Where estimates may need to adjust: Management raised FY24 bottom-end pricing and volume ranges and expects normalized production in H2 post‑Baltimore; models should reflect higher FY24 realized pricing midpoint sensitivity to API2 (~$0.09 per $1), and increased CapEx range ($165–$190M) .
Key Takeaways for Investors
- Operations normalized post-Baltimore with potential backlog catch-up in H2; volumes guided higher and pricing bottom end raised, indicating improved visibility .
- Export pricing leverage: portfolio sensitivity to API2 (~$0.09–$0.14 per $1) and active crossover met placement (China, Egypt, Brazil) support realized pricing trajectory .
- Domestic demand tailwinds: PJM capacity auction reset (just under $270/MW-day) and data center load growth may extend coal fleet life and support fixed-price contracting .
- Margin watch: unit cost inflation and fixed-cost under-absorption compressed cash margins; as volumes normalize, expect better fixed-cost leverage, but transport costs remain a swing factor .
- Itmann execution risk: staffing improved but equipment delivery delays persist; retreat mining slated to enhance productivity—monitor ramp cadence and purchased-coal mix .
- Capital returns opportunistic: buybacks continue, but H2 allocation will balance liability management (refinancing, facilities) with repurchases .
- Insurance recovery: business interruption claim in process—potential offset to Q2 operational headwinds not yet reflected in results .
Why the Quarter Moved the Numbers
- Revenue/EPS/EBITDA compression vs 2023 primarily from temporary export constraints, incremental ~$10/ton transport costs to Virginia ports, and lower benchmark/API2/nat gas prices; mix decisions favored domestic and crossover met to support realized pricing .
- Guidance uplift driven by earlier-than-expected Baltimore reopening, resilient pricing, and contracting progress; CapEx raised as equipment deliveries improved, supporting H2 execution .
- The narrative shifted toward durable demand signals (PJM auction, AI/data center load), providing a basis for multi-year domestic contracting and export pricing optionality .