GP
Green Plains Inc. (GPRE)·Q4 2024 Earnings Summary
Executive Summary
- Q4 2024 results deteriorated sharply: revenue $584.0M, EPS $(0.86), EBITDA $(18.9)M, and consolidated crush margin $(15.5)M, reflecting weak ethanol margins and lower pricing across ethanol, DDGs, and corn oil .
- Management launched a corporate reorganization with up to $50M annualized SG&A savings (first $30M implemented), idled Fairmont due to localized margin pressure, and targeted SG&A per gallon reduction from ~$0.08–$0.09 to $0.02–$0.03, shifting from innovation to commercialization .
- “Advantage Nebraska” CCS remains on track; laterals are under construction, targeting in-service late Q3/early Q4 2025, with run‑rate carbon earnings “at least” ~$130M (at $70/ton private credit) and combined SG&A+carbon contribution potentially ~$180M annually .
- Renewable corn oil (DCO) gained relative value; management cited current $0.04–$0.05/lb premium vs soybean oil and a view toward $0.07–$0.10 premium given low-CI advantages and regulatory changes restricting imported UCO .
- Wall Street consensus (S&P Global) was unavailable; estimate comparisons omitted (values would have come from S&P Global).
What Went Well and What Went Wrong
What Went Well
- Strategic cost reset underway: “we executed on the first $30 million… identified up to $50 million in annualized cost savings,” including SG&A rationalization and Fairmont idling to stem losses .
- Carbon strategy progress and favorable rules: Class VI permits and construction milestones achieved; updated GREET model boosts economics; CCS laterals underway, with anticipated H2 2025 start and “at least” ~$130M annualized carbon earnings .
- DCO pricing tailwind: Management sees clear premium pricing vs soybean oil with low CI advantages and CORSIA certification across plants, enhancing feedstock competitiveness for renewable diesel/SAF markets .
What Went Wrong
- Ethanol margin compression: Q4 consolidated crush margin swung to $(15.5)M from $53.0M YoY; EBITDA fell to $(18.9)M from $44.7M; revenue down 18% YoY amid lower selling prices and volumes in ethanol/ DDGs/ corn oil .
- Hedging posture: Company entered Q4 largely unhedged, which “was the wrong choice to make” given the speed of margin deterioration; management will reassess governance and balance sheet constraints around hedging .
- Protein volumes and market dynamics: Ultra-High Protein production volumes fell sequentially (54 tons in Q4 vs 69 in Q3), amidst oversupplied protein markets and operational downtime (Wood River rebaseline; Mount Vernon maintenance) .
Financial Results
Sequential Performance (Q2 → Q3 → Q4 2024)
Year-over-Year (Q4 2023 → Q4 2024)
Segment Breakdown (Q4 YoY)
KPIs
Guidance Changes
Earnings Call Themes & Trends
Management Commentary
- “We have identified up to $50 million in annualized cost savings… executed on the first $30 million” as part of a move “from innovation to commercialization” and SG&A rationalization .
- “Our outlook for the annualized run rate financial contribution for carbon… is on track for at least $130 million using a $70 per ton private carbon credit value” with CCS start late Q3/early Q4 2025 .
- “We were largely unhedged and open to the crush going into the fourth quarter, which was the wrong choice to make” and will reassess programs and governance .
- “We would have no problem selling $0.04 to $0.05 premium to soybean oil… our view is it should trade at a $0.07 to $0.10 premium” for DCO given low CI advantages and certification .
- CFO: normalized tax rate ~23%–24%; 2025 plant CapEx $20–$35M; remaining ~$110M for carbon equipment with financing in place .
Q&A Highlights
- SG&A plan granularity: Rapid 90-day program to reach $50M run-rate savings; Phase I executed; Phase II underway; significant innovation platform downsizing .
- CCS monetization: In-service late Q3/early Q4 2025; active markets for tax credits and offsets; plan to use/monetize credits, with LCFS pathways as baseline .
- Protein market/operations: Q4 downtime at Mount Vernon; Wood River rebaseline to optimize carbon economics; sequence runs advancing; near-term protein margins pressured .
- Hedging approach: Acknowledged misstep; Board involvement; reassessment to balance margin protection and cash/margin call management .
- Fairmont asset options: Idled now; seeking permits for upgrades; potential monetization considered, with CCS pathway enhancing strategic value .
Estimates Context
- S&P Global consensus estimates for Q4 2024 and FY 2024 were unavailable at the time of analysis due to access limitations. As a result, comparisons to Wall Street consensus are omitted. Values would have been retrieved from S&P Global.
Key Takeaways for Investors
- Near-term earnings pressure stemmed from ethanol oversupply and weak margins; Q4 crush margin and EBITDA turned negative despite high utilization, underscoring sensitivity to hedging and commodity spreads .
- Structural reset is material: up to $50M SG&A savings and SG&A/gal cut to $0.02–$0.03 could meaningfully lift baseline profitability independent of margin cyclicality .
- Carbon capture is the core re-rating catalyst: CCS laterals in progress; in-service late Q3/early Q4 2025; run‑rate carbon earnings “at least” ~$130M with additional upside from offsets/low-CI molecules .
- DCO premium supports forward margins: management cites $0.04–$0.05/lb current premium vs soybean oil and further premium potential given regulatory shifts and CORSIA certification .
- Clean Sugar is validated but ramp-constrained: on-spec product and certifications near, yet wastewater limits imply campaign-mode until full solution; commercialization path intact .
- Capital discipline: 2025 plant CapEx ~$20–$35M (ex-carbon) with ~$110M carbon equipment financed; normalized tax rate ~23–24% supports clearer outlook for after-tax earnings .
- Trading implications: watch CCS construction milestones, DCO pricing vs soybean oil, protein volume/pricing traction, and any hedging policy updates as near-term stock catalysts .