CI
CLEVELAND-CLIFFS INC. (CLF)·Q4 2024 Earnings Summary
Executive Summary
- Q4 2024 was the trough: revenue fell to $4.33B and diluted EPS to -$0.92; Adjusted EBITDA was -$81M, driven by weak automotive pull and low index pricing, with management expecting a 2025 rebound as order books and lead times improved and pricing began rising .
- Mix shifted toward spot/non-automotive after the Stelco acquisition; average selling price per ton dropped to $976 and shipments were 3.83M net tons, while unit costs fell sequentially by ~$15/ton with Stelco’s inclusion .
- 2025 guidance introduced: ~$700M capex, ~$625M SG&A, ~$1.1B DD&A, ~$150M cash pension/OPEB; management targets steel unit cost reductions of ~$40/ton vs 2024 and prioritizes deleveraging with ~$3B liquidity .
- Policy/trade tailwinds are a core narrative catalyst: management highlighted newly announced 25% tariffs on steel imports and downstream products, expecting demand/pricing support and synergy capture from Stelco (~$120M year-one targeted) .
What Went Well and What Went Wrong
What Went Well
- Order book strength and lead times: hot-rolled lead times extended from ~3 to ~7 weeks; early-2025 demand signs across automotive and non-automotive bolster confidence in a rebound .
- Cost actions and Stelco impact: sequential unit cost reduction (~$15/ton) from Stelco’s cost structure; SG&A down ~16% in 2024 vs 2023; management guides a further ~$40/ton decline in 2025 .
- Strategic footprint: Stelco adds spot-heavy, low-cost capacity and resilience; synergy plan of ~$120M in year one already “set in motion” with upside potential .
What Went Wrong
- Q4 profitability: Adjusted EBITDA of -$81M and diluted EPS of -$0.92, with automotive shipments the lowest since the pandemic and lagged pricing headwinds; C6 blast furnace idled .
- Pricing/mix pressure: average selling price fell to $976/ton in Q4 (from $1,045 in Q3); mix dilution from Stelco’s lower-priced portfolio .
- Cash use and leverage: Q4 cash from operations was -$472M (inventory build ahead of anticipated demand), long-term debt rose to $7.07B with acquisition financing, pushing leverage above the 2.5x net debt/EBITDA target (management committed 100% FCF to debt paydown) .
Financial Results
Consolidated P&L and EPS vs Prior Periods and Prior Year
Steelmaking KPIs
Cash Flow and Balance Sheet Snapshots
Segment / End-Market Mix
Guidance Changes
Earnings Call Themes & Trends
Management Commentary
- “Order book has picked up substantially... lead times for hot-rolled steel were 3 weeks... now 7 weeks” .
- “We view the fourth quarter of 2024 as the trough... with inclusion of Stelco, for every $100 increase in HRC... yearly revenue would increase roughly $1 billion... largely flow directly down to EBITDA” .
- “Steel unit cost reductions of approximately $40 per net ton compared to 2024; capex ~$700M; SG&A ~$625M; DD&A ~$1.1B; cash pension/OPEB ~$150M” .
- “Best year for Stelco... 2018 when 25% tariffs... were in place... We expect to have the $120M in synergies set in motion before the end of this year” .
- “Q4 was a heavy period of cash use... inventory build... pellets... sets us up well to rapidly respond to improved demand” .
Q&A Highlights
- Tariffs scope/impact: management expects broad benefit from 25% import tariffs, including downstream products; Stelco’s Canadian mix mitigates tariff risk while broader footprint benefits from pricing uplift .
- ASP and contracting: Q1 ASPs expected up at least $10/ton vs Q4; fixed-price automotive resets “slightly down” but tonnage preserved; Stelco’s spot exposure tempers consolidated ASP but lowers costs .
- Working capital and cash: Q4 inventory build will be worked down over 2025; Q1 relatively neutral; strong liquidity and plan to apply 100% FCF to debt reduction; no equity issuance, no buybacks near term .
- C6 furnace: remains indefinitely idled; restart contingent on demand/price recovery; management anticipates 2025 improvement .
- Synergies and capex: Stelco synergies at least $120M in year one with likely upside; 2025 capex cadence ~$700M total including Stelco; strategic projects’ timing outlined (Weirton late-2025/early-2026, Middletown 2026/27) .
Estimates Context
- S&P Global consensus estimates for Q4 2024 EPS, revenue, and EBITDA were unavailable due to SPGI request limits at time of analysis; as a result, explicit beat/miss vs consensus cannot be determined at this time [Values retrieved from S&P Global unavailable].
- Based on reported actuals, CLF’s Q4 2024 revenue ($4.33B) and adjusted EPS (-$0.68) declined vs Q3 2024 and vs Q4 2023, reflecting mix/pricing and auto demand pressures; revisions to Street models likely to reflect 2025 guidance on costs and capex, tariff tailwinds, and Stelco integration .
Key Takeaways for Investors
- Q4 marked the trough; early-2025 indicators (order book, lead times, pricing) are encouraging, with management calling for sequential ASP and shipment improvement in Q1 .
- Cost-down remains the core lever: ~$40/ton unit cost reduction targeted for 2025; Stelco lowers average costs and adds nimble spot exposure; SG&A and sustaining capex are lean vs historical .
- Tariff policy is a major catalyst: broad 25% tariffs on imports and downstream products expected to tighten supply, support domestic pricing, and benefit CLF’s integrated footprint and automotive recovery .
- Capital allocation pivots to deleveraging: ~$3B liquidity, 100% FCF to debt reduction; no buybacks/equity issuance near term; bond tranches become callable starting 2025, creating optionality .
- Working capital reversal should aid cash generation: Q4 inventory build (pellets, coke) positions CLF to capture demand; management expects neutral Q1 and beneficial unwind through 2025 .
- Project pipeline adds medium-term EBITDA: Weirton transformer JV progress (late-2025/early-2026 start), Middletown/Butler DOE-supported efficiency projects underpin structural margin expansion .
- Near-term trading lens: watch tariff implementation breadth, auto pull rates, HRC curve, and ASP progression; Stelco synergy updates and cost cadence are key to narrative momentum into 1H25 .