CM
COMPASS MINERALS INTERNATIONAL INC (CMP)·Q1 2025 Earnings Summary
Executive Summary
- Q1 FY25 was seasonally soft due to a late start to winter; revenue fell 10.1% YoY to $307.2M, adjusted EBITDA was $32.1M, and diluted EPS was -$0.57. Salt volumes fell 13% YoY, while Plant Nutrition volumes rose 36% YoY despite lower pricing .
- Management lowered FY25 Salt guidance (revenue to $900–$1,000M; adj. EBITDA to $205–$230M) and cut total company capex to $75–$85M, but raised Plant Nutrition guidance (volumes, revenue, and adj. EBITDA) as Ogden pond restoration starts to improve costs; total company adj. EBITDA now $152–$193M (down from $169–$209M) .
- Key callouts: inventory reduction remains a core focus (NA highway deicing inventories down ~10% YoY through Dec), Goderich curtailment increases cost per ton near term, and potential Canadian import tariffs are excluded from guidance; management also plans a 2025 debt stack refinancing to gain covenant flexibility .
- Stock reaction catalysts ahead: tariff decision path, pace of winter activity through March, execution on capex cuts and cost actions, and milestones on refinancing; management subsequently announced corporate cost reductions and winding down the Fortress fire retardant business (Mar 25) to boost free cash flow and deleverage .
What Went Well and What Went Wrong
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What Went Well
- Plant Nutrition volumes +36% YoY (102k tons), supporting a 24% revenue increase to $61.4M; per-unit distribution costs -2% and all-in product costs per ton -10% YoY as Ogden pond restoration shows early benefits .
- Salt pricing resilient: total Salt ASP +1% YoY to $97.16/ton; C&I pricing +6% to ~$206/ton despite elevated industry inventories, reflecting disciplined bidding .
- Liquidity improved to $126.3M at quarter end (cash $45.8M, revolver availability $80.5M); net cash used in operations improved sharply YoY (-$4.1M vs. -$52.3M) on working capital progress .
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What Went Wrong
- Late winter (minimal Oct–Nov snowfall) and full customer inventories led to Salt volumes -13% YoY; Salt adjusted EBITDA declined 28% YoY to $47.8M, with adjusted EBITDA/ton down 17% to $19.17 .
- Goderich curtailment lifted production cost per ton (lower fixed-cost absorption), raising all‑in product costs/ton +16% YoY and weighing on Salt margins .
- Consolidated profitability remained weak: operating margin 0.2%, adjusted operating margin 0.5%, and net loss of $23.6M; adjusted EBITDA down ~48% YoY to $32.1M .
Financial Results
Consolidated results (oldest → newest):
Segment breakdown (key items; oldest → newest):
KPIs and operating metrics:
Guidance Changes
Note: Guidance excludes potential impacts from any U.S. tariffs on products imported from Canada; highway deicing impact seen as negligible for FY25 given inventory already deployed. Tariff impacts under evaluation for C&I and Plant Nutrition .
Earnings Call Themes & Trends
Management Commentary
- “This quarter we began to see results from our back‑to‑basics strategy and initiatives to reduce inventory volumes, improve our cost structure, and enhance profitability.” — Edward C. Dowling Jr., CEO .
- “We made good progress… Salt inventory volumes decline 10% year over year… In Plant Nutrition, the efforts… are taking root, which is enabling us to increase adjusted EBITDA guidance… despite a decline in expected pricing due to softness in the MOP market.” — CEO .
- “In the Plant Nutrition business… ongoing restoration of the pond complex at Ogden… having a positive impact on the ponds… additional opportunities to improve productivity… beginning to take effect.” — press release commentary .
- “In the Salt business… pricing was up 1% YoY… volumes down 13%… decrease in margin reflects the increase in production cost per ton due to the curtailment of production at Goderich last year.” — Peter Fjellman, CFO .
- “We are moving the range for total adjusted EBITDA down by roughly $15 million… main driver… lighter start in sales… [but] January came in better than forecast… We are reducing the range of capital guidance by approximately $25 million.” — CEO on guidance .
Q&A Highlights
- Why reduce full‑year volume guidance amid strong January weather? Management cited a conservative approach after a light Oct–Nov and said guidance could be adjusted if Feb–Mar weather significantly outperforms .
- SG&A progress vs. headwinds: Headcount lower, but legal costs (e.g., class action) offset reductions; cost remains a focus (later reinforced by Mar 25 cuts) .
- Working capital and inventories: Continued drawdown targeted; Goderich to remain curtailed until inventories normalize .
- Capex cut detail: ~$25M reduction comes from deferring lower‑risk projects; EHS and emergency needs protected; projects could reappear in 2026 .
- Tariffs: Minimal impact on current season (inventory forward‑deployed); potential scenarios for C&I and SOP; flexibility via Cote Blanche discussed .
- Product recall accounting: ~$35M accounts receivable gross‑up tied to insurance claim noted by IR .
Estimates Context
- Wall Street consensus from S&P Global was unavailable at the time of analysis due to an API request limit, so we cannot provide vs‑consensus comparisons for Q1 FY25 revenue/EPS or forward periods. We attempted to retrieve “Revenue Consensus Mean” and “Primary EPS Consensus Mean” for Q1 and Q2 FY25 but were rate‑limited by SPGI. As a result, the report anchors to company results and guidance and notes estimate comparison as unavailable [functions.GetEstimates error].
Key Takeaways for Investors
- Salt remains volume‑sensitive; late winter depressed Q1 volumes and margins, compounded by higher cost inventory from 2024 curtailments. Focus remains on inventory drawdown and disciplined pricing to protect ASPs .
- Plant Nutrition shows early operational traction (pond restoration, efficiency), lifting guidance despite softer global potash pricing; sustained volume execution and cost relief are the watch‑items .
- Guidance reset: Salt down, Plant Nutrition up; total adj. EBITDA cut and capex reduced to align with cash generation—improving FCF resilience if execution holds .
- Tariffs on Canadian imports are excluded from guidance; FY25 highway deicing impact seen as negligible, but C&I/SOP exposure is a swing factor to monitor .
- Balance sheet/liquidity manageable near‑term; refinancing in 2025 is a key milestone to reduce covenant constraints and improve flexibility .
- Cost actions accelerating: beyond capex cuts, the Mar 25 SG&A reductions and Fortress wind‑down sharpen focus on core and support deleveraging/FCF objectives .
- Near‑term trading setup centers on weather through March, tariff headlines, and cadence of inventory normalization and capex discipline; medium‑term thesis hinges on structural cost improvements at Goderich and Ogden and successful refinancing .
Additional Detail (Salt and Plant Nutrition Narratives)
- Salt: Revenue $242.2M (-12% YoY); operating earnings $29.4M (down 42% YoY), adjusted EBITDA $47.8M (down 28% YoY); volumes 2.49Mt (-13% YoY), total ASP +1% YoY; distribution costs/ton -2% YoY; all‑in product costs/ton +16% YoY from curtailed production cost absorption. C&I pricing +6% to ~$206/ton .
- Plant Nutrition: Revenue $61.4M (+24% YoY); volumes 102k tons (+36% YoY); ASP ~$603/ton (-9% YoY); adjusted EBITDA $4.4M (down from $7.2M YoY) as per‑unit EBITDA was lower given DD&A dynamics despite cost improvements .
Notes:
- Q1 special items included a $0.9M product recall cost (EPS impact ~$0.02) .
- Liquidity at quarter end was $126.3M; management cited approximately $195M “last week” (post‑quarter) .
- Forward‑looking commentary excludes tariff effects; “negligible” impact expected on FY25 highway deicing given inventory positioning .