GT
GOODYEAR TIRE & RUBBER CO /OH/ (GT)·Q3 2025 Earnings Summary
Executive Summary
- Q3 net sales were $4.65B and total tire units were 40.0M; adjusted EPS was $0.28, while GAAP EPS was $(7.62) driven by a $1.4B deferred tax asset valuation allowance and a $674M goodwill impairment; total segment operating income (SOI) was $287M and segment margin 6.2% .
- Versus consensus, GT delivered an adjusted EPS beat ($0.28 vs $0.15*), revenue in-line/slight beat ($4.65B vs $4.64B*), but an EBITDA miss ($347M vs $430M*) as tariffs, inefficiencies and lower volumes weighed on profitability . Estimates marked with * are from S&P Global.
- Management completed all planned divestitures (OTR, Dunlop, Chemical) with total gross proceeds of ~$2.2B, enabling significant deleveraging and portfolio focus; Chemical sale proceeds of ~$580M were received at closing (subject to adjustments) .
- Q4 outlook: meaningful sequential SOI increase to ~$370–$375M, with price/mix +$135M, Goodyear Forward benefits ~$180M, and slight raw material tailwind offset by inflation/tariffs/other of ~$190M (tariffs ~$80M); global volume expected down ~4% and production ~4M units lower vs last year . Key stock catalysts: Q4 SOI step-up, deleveraging progress, tariff-driven price/mix uplift vs import normalization .
What Went Well and What Went Wrong
-
What Went Well
- Completed all planned divestitures, achieving ~$2.2B gross proceeds to reduce debt and streamline the portfolio (OTR, Dunlop, Chemical) .
- Goodyear Forward delivered $185M of quarterly benefits; management expects to exit 2025 at a ~$1.5B run-rate benefit, supporting sequential margin expansion .
- Strong OEM share gains continued: Americas consumer OE +4% units and EMEA OE +18.7% units; EMEA returned to profitability with SOI $30M (+$7M YoY) . Management: “We achieved meaningful sequential earnings and margin expansion driven by…Goodyear Forward” .
-
What Went Wrong
- Volume pressure: global units down 6% YoY; Americas replacement down 8.1% on elevated channel inventories of low-end imports; Asia Pac units -9.2% on OTR sale and demand weakness .
- Profitability headwinds: inflation/other costs of $137M including ~$40M tariffs, ~$25M inefficiencies (factory closures/lower production), ~$20M higher freight/warehouse; raw materials headwind ~$81M .
- Significant non-cash charges: $1.4B deferred tax asset valuation allowance and $674M goodwill impairment drove GAAP net loss of $(2.2)B . Analysts flagged ongoing commercial weakness and import gluts pushing normalization into 2026 .
Financial Results
Performance vs prior year and prior quarter
Consensus vs actual (Q3 2025)
Estimates marked with * are from S&P Global.
Segment breakdown (Q3 2025 vs Q3 2024)
Operational KPIs and drivers (Q3 2025)
Non-GAAP reconciliation (Q3 2025): Adjusted net income $82M; adjusted EPS $0.28; GAAP net loss $(2.195)B due to $1.4B tax valuation allowance and $674M goodwill impairment .
Guidance Changes
Earnings Call Themes & Trends
Management Commentary
- “We delivered a meaningful increase in segment operating income relative to the second quarter…in an industry environment…marked by global trade disruption.” — Mark Stewart, CEO .
- “Goodyear Forward contributed $185 million of benefit during the quarter…Inflation and other costs were a headwind of $137 million…tariffs ~$40 million.” — Christina Zamarro, CFO .
- “With the sale of our Chemical business, we have completed all of the planned asset sales…total gross proceeds…approximately $2.2 billion.” — Mark Stewart, CEO .
- “Based on rates in effect today, our annualized tariff costs are expected to be approximately $300 million.” — Christina Zamarro, CFO .
Q&A Highlights
- OE share gains durability: Management emphasized continued wins on premium fitments, USMCA-compliant sourcing tailwinds, and seven straight quarters of OE share gains in Americas and EMEA .
- Channel inventory digestion: U.S. consumer replacement excess likely to clear through Q4; commercial pre-buy digestion may extend into Q1’26 .
- Commercial environment: OEM builds down >30% in U.S.; margin pressure persists amid regulatory uncertainty; focus on premium fleet and “tires-as-a-service” .
- Q4 and 2026 bridges: Q4 SOI ~$370–$375M; 2026 tailwinds include ≥$250M Goodyear Forward carryover,
$200M ROS benefit; tariff carryover $150–$160M partially offset by Chemical sale headwind ($120M total) and ~$60M amortization benefit . - Tariff mitigation: Active policy engagement (U.S./EU), manufacturing footprint optimization, and sourcing shifts to manage landed cost .
Estimates Context
- Q3 2025 vs consensus: Adjusted EPS $0.28 vs $0.15* (beat); revenue $4.65B vs $4.64B* (in-line/beat); EBITDA $347M vs $430M* (miss) . Estimates marked with * are from S&P Global.
- Implications: Street likely raises near-term EPS on Q4 SOI guidance and Goodyear Forward cadence, but trims EBITDA on tariff/inefficiency costs and volume softness; 2026 bridges provide visibility to cost tailwinds but also include divestiture and tariff carryover offsets .
Key Takeaways for Investors
- Sequential improvement with EPS/revenue beats, but EBITDA miss underscores cost and volume headwinds; focus on Q4 SOI step-up (~$370–$375M) as near-term catalyst .
- Portfolio simplification/deleveraging largely de-risked after completing divestitures (~$2.2B gross proceeds), supporting balance sheet health into 2026 .
- Tariffs a double-edged sword: near-term cost pressure (~$300M annualized) but structural price/mix opportunity vs importers; normalization of import pre-buy is a key watch item for 2026 .
- Mix and share story intact: premium SKU launches, retail upgrades, and sustained OE share gains in Americas/EMEA provide medium-term margin levers .
- Near-term trading setup: positive into Q4 on guided SOI/FCF dynamics and deleveraging prints; risks include slower channel normalization, commercial truck weakness, and lingering inefficiencies/tariffs .
- 2026 bridge offers visibility (Goodyear Forward ≥$250M, ROS ~$200M), partly offset by tariff carryover and Chemical sale headwind; net suggests scope for EBITDA/FCF improvement as volumes normalize .
Notes:
- All estimates marked with * are values retrieved from S&P Global.
- The company noted a revision of prior-period financials for a non-material Turkey currency remeasurement error (see 10-Q reference in disclosures) .