HC
Huntsman CORP (HUN)·Q2 2025 Earnings Summary
Executive Summary
- Q2 2025 results missed on both revenue and EPS vs consensus: revenue $1.458B vs $1.497B estimate, and adjusted diluted EPS -$0.20 vs -$0.12 estimate; GAAP diluted EPS was -$0.92 driven by $124M restructuring/impairment and plant closing costs . Estimates marked with an asterisk below; Values retrieved from S&P Global.*
- Segment pressure persisted: Polyurethanes EBITDA fell 61% YoY, Performance Products -30%, Advanced Materials -13% YoY; volumes and pricing were weak, with muted seasonal uplift and a Rotterdam turnaround headwind .
- Management reiterated cost actions (workforce reduction ~10%, multiple site closures) and cash discipline; free cash flow improved to $55M vs $5M YoY; liquidity stood at ~$1.3B .
- 3Q25 outlook: adjusted EBITDA guidance ~$55–$85M total (PU $35–50M, PP $20–30M, AM $40–45M; Corporate ~-$40M); capex expected $180–$190M for 2025 at the lower end; dividend maintained at $0.25 per share for Q3 .
What Went Well and What Went Wrong
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What Went Well
- Free cash flow improved materially: $55M in Q2 vs $5M YoY, supported by working capital actions ($100M primary working capital delta) .
- Advanced Materials delivered more “normalized” earnings; solid demand in power helped offset aerospace headwinds; margins at ~17% with Q3 guidance $40–45M .
- Inventory and cash management actions generated positive cash flow; management emphasized balance sheet protection and cost discipline .
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What Went Wrong
- Pricing and volume pressure: Polyurethanes ASP down ~5% YoY and volumes down ~2%; muted construction seasonality and competitive pressure in Europe .
- Large restructuring/impairment and plant closing costs ($124M) drove GAAP operating loss (-$120M) and diluted loss per share (-$0.92) .
- Equity loss from the China MTBE JV and Rotterdam turnaround weighed on results; CEO cited inventory reductions costing ~$25M of EBITDA in Q2 .
Financial Results
Actuals by period (oldest → newest)
Q2 actual vs consensus (S&P Global)
Segment breakdown
KPIs
Guidance Changes
Earnings Call Themes & Trends
Management Commentary
- “Lower global construction and industrial activity pressured our volumes… seasonal uplift in construction demand… was muted in 2025… restructuring… will ultimately reduce our global workforce by nearly 10%… generated positive cash flow… protecting the balance sheet remains a priority” — Peter R. Huntsman .
- “We will operate our business to create value over volume… possible influences of higher tariffs and duties for MDI… interest rate cut… more cost reductions falling to the bottom line” — Peter R. Huntsman .
- On Europe pricing: “People are putting volume over value… Europe is today our highest cost urethane production in the world and our lowest value of MDI in the world” — Peter R. Huntsman .
Q&A Highlights
- MDI utilization: industry low–mid 80%; North America slightly higher; Europe ~80% .
- Order books: “stable” with thin supply chains; just-in-time ordering suggests low inventories; no clear pickup yet .
- Dividend stance: comfortable for now; Board reassesses quarterly; balance sheet and cash generation prioritized .
- Trade/tariffs: desire for “finality”; volatility harms downstream customers; Huntsman largely regional in sourcing; impacts felt more downstream (auto/construction) .
- Unusual trade flows: increased European MDI imports into US despite higher costs; management baffled; indicates market dislocations .
- Turnarounds/one-offs: Rotterdam turnaround and inventory reductions weighed on Q2; inventory actions cost ~$25M EBITDA (offset by bonus accrual releases) .
Estimates Context
- Q2 2025 actuals missed S&P Global consensus: revenue $1.458B vs $1.497B estimate; adjusted EPS -$0.20 vs -$0.12 estimate; counts: EPS 14, Revenue 11. Free cash flow and liquidity robust, but profitability pressured by restructuring and segment margin compression . Values retrieved from S&P Global.*
- Street likely to adjust near-term EBITDA/segment margin assumptions lower, particularly for Polyurethanes and Performance Products, and reflect continued MTBE JV headwind and European competitive dynamics .
Key Takeaways for Investors
- Near-term setup remains challenged: muted construction seasonality, competitive pricing in Europe, and MTBE JV headwind; watch Q3 segment EBITDA ranges ($55–$85M total) for trajectory confirmation .
- Cost actions are meaningful: ~$100M run-rate benefits targeted by end-2026; workforce reduction and site closures should support margins when demand normalizes .
- Cash discipline effective: Q2 free cash flow improved to $55M; liquidity ~$1.3B and staggered bond maturities (2029/31/34) underpin dividend durability in trough conditions .
- Tariff dynamics could support North American MDI margins longer term; expect pricing/mix improvements if volumes recover and antidumping measures persist .
- Advanced Materials is stabilizing; power strength and aerospace normalization over coming quarters can offset cyclical weakness elsewhere .
- Monitor European rationalization and pricing behavior; management continuing to rightsize footprint to counter structurally higher costs .
- Watch macro catalysts: interest rate path, construction demand recovery, and trade policy clarity—each could drive inventory rebuilds and margin recapture per management commentary .
Footnote on estimates: Values marked with an asterisk (*) are retrieved from S&P Global.