CG
Coronado Global Resources Inc. (CODQL)·Q3 2025 Earnings Summary
Executive Summary
- Q3 2025 revenue fell short of consensus and prior year, driven by persistently weak met coal pricing and sales mix, while GAAP diluted EPS improved year-over-year and versus consensus; Adjusted EBITDA was negative as inventory build and lower realizations weighed on earnings. Bolded: Revenue miss and EBITDA miss; EPS beat. [*S&P Global]
- Operations executed well: saleable production rose 21% QoQ, Mammoth reached ~65% of nameplate and Buchanan expansion commissioning continued; average mining cost/tonne improved to $89.7/t for the quarter and $80.1/t in September.
- Liquidity actions advanced: proposed US$265M Stanwell ABL (5-year, 9–12%) plus rebate waiver from 2026 and prepayment support; near-term liquidity at Q3 end was $187M (cash $172M, undrawn ABL $16M).
- Key risks/catalysts: Q3 10-Q includes going-concern language; closing/approval of Stanwell facility expected by late November; continued ramp to planned run rates by year-end and unit cost tailwinds may support estimate revisions.
What Went Well and What Went Wrong
What Went Well
- “Q3 delivered material increases in all production and sales metrics... Saleable production highest since Q1 2021... Mammoth doubled production to ~65% of nameplate.”
- Unit cost improvement: Average mining cost/tonne was $89.7 in Q3 and $80.1 in September month; second consecutive quarter below guidance thresholds.
- Strategic liquidity: Proposed Stanwell transaction (US$265M ABL, 2026 rebate waiver, flexible covenants, prepayment support) aims to underwrite near-term liquidity through the low-pricing cycle.
What Went Wrong
- Pricing and mix headwinds: Group realized met price ~$148.6/t (flat QoQ, -23% YoY), with higher thermal sales mix catching up contracted volumes; group met realization at ~81% of PLV index.
- Earnings pressure: Adjusted EBITDA negative (~$22.5M) and GAAP net loss widened QoQ with Q3 coal revenues of $482.1M vs $600.7M in Q3 2024; inventory build and sales mix reduced realized price.
- Going-concern uncertainty: Management notes substantial doubt absent successful execution of financing and operational plans; covenant waivers and downgrades highlight funding fragility.
Financial Results
Segment revenue mix (geography):
Production, pricing and cost KPIs:
Consensus vs Actual (S&P Global):
Values retrieved from S&P Global.*
Estimates comparison notes:
- Bold: Revenue miss (-$49.4M vs consensus). EBITDA miss (swing to -$22.7M). EPS beat (less negative than expected). [*S&P Global]
Guidance Changes
Earnings Call Themes & Trends
Note: No Q3 2025 call transcript found; investor call was announced on Oct 30 (AEST) but transcript was not available in the document set.
Management Commentary
- “Q3 delivered material increases in all production and sales metrics... Our performance is expected to continue to improve into Q4, with our expansion projects scheduled to hit planned run rates by the end of year... and benefits from our cost reduction programs.” — Douglas Thompson, CEO
- “The arrangement with Stanwell... is expected to support our liquidity needs through the sustained low pricing cycle... removes the rebate obligations to Stanwell from 2026... and only requires repayment when we have more than $300 million in available liquidity.”
- “We remain confident in the strength of our asset base... strategically located operations, highly sought-after products... solid foundation for long-term value creation... operate efficiently and safely, protect cash, secure liquidity and preserve optionality through the current market downturn.”
Q&A Highlights
- Liquidity strategy: Management worked to restructure/replace ABL, considered prepayments, emphasized getting through to 2026 when Stanwell obligations step down materially.
- Cost actions: ~$100M savings targeted (idling Logan surface ops, rephasing development at Buchanan, contractor reductions at Curragh).
- Breakeven sensitivity: Management avoided specific price breakevens, focused on cost-out and ramp to improve margins under current PLV assumptions.
- Operational detail: Mammoth deployment of 3 continuous miners on schedule, secondary mining options for low-cost tonnage in 2026 discussed.
Note: These Q&A items are from Q1 2025 call due to lack of Q3 transcript availability. -
Estimates Context
- Q3 2025 results vs S&P Global consensus: Revenue miss (-$49.4M), EBITDA miss (vs ~$20.4M expected), EPS beat (actual -$0.064 vs -$0.24 expected). Bolded: Misses and beat. [*S&P Global]
- Given ramp execution and unit cost reductions, consensus may lower revenue/EBITDA trajectories near term unless PLV improves; EPS resilience reflects mix, cost actions, and deferred Stanwell rebate impact in 2025.
Values retrieved from S&P Global.*
Key Takeaways for Investors
- Execution is improving: saleable production up 21% QoQ, Mammoth/Buchanan ramp on track, with unit cost tailwinds (Q3 $89.7/t; Sept $80.1/t). Near-term production gains should support margin recovery when pricing stabilizes.
- Liquidity hinge: The proposed Stanwell US$265M facility (and 2026 rebate waiver) is the critical catalyst; closure/approvals by late November would materially de-risk covenants and working capital seasonality.
- Pricing remains the swing factor: Group met realizations stuck ~$148–$149/t across Q2–Q3; any PLV uplift and improved mix toward met coal would meaningfully leverage earnings and cash flow.
- Inventory release potential: ~0.56 Mt product inventory build late in Q3 should convert to cash in Q4, partially offsetting prior mix/price pressure.
- Mind the going-concern footnote: Until financing closes and covenants reset with improved run-rate volumes, capital structure risks remain elevated; monitor covenant test dates and any waivers.
- Tactical positioning: Near-term catalysts include Stanwell facility closing, confirmation of year-end run-rate, and Q4 cost performance; stock likely sensitive to any PLV index moves and AU/US logistics normalization.
- Medium-term thesis: With low-cost underground tonnage ramp and rebate waiver from 2026, Coronado’s earnings power and free cash flow can inflect if met coal markets normalize; current actions preserve optionality to capture that turn.