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LSB INDUSTRIES, INC. (LXU)·Q1 2025 Earnings Summary
Executive Summary
- Q1 2025 revenue rose 3.8% year over year to $143.4M on stronger UAN and AN volumes and improved ammonia pricing; GAAP diluted EPS was $(0.02) vs $0.08 last year as materially higher natural gas costs compressed margins .
- Adjusted EBITDA was $29.1M vs $32.6M a year ago, with the improvement in volumes and pricing offset by higher gas input costs; EBITDA (GAAP) was $24.6M .
- Management paused the Houston Ship Channel blue ammonia project amid tariff-driven cost uncertainty and slower-than-expected low-carbon ammonia demand; El Dorado low-carbon ANS production remains targeted by end of 2026 with pre-certification achieved, one of only four North American plants so designated .
- Outlook positives: robust Spring fertilizer demand (UAN/urea pricing strength), tight U.S. supply, and industrial demand for nitric acid/AN; near-term tailwinds include moderating U.S. gas prices heading into Q2 and upgraded mix toward higher-margin products .
What Went Well and What Went Wrong
What Went Well
- Operational reliability and safety improved: overall sales volumes +4% YoY; zero recordable injuries in Q1 .
- Product mix/market strength: higher UAN and AN volumes; stronger ammonia selling prices; healthy ammonia market with inland premiums over Tampa on strong ag demand .
- Low-carbon progress: El Dorado ammonia earned Verified Ammonia Carbon Intensity pre-certification; CCS project advancing with EPA Class VI review; target to begin CO2 injections by end of 2026. “Our El Dorado facility is one of only four North American plants to be granted this status…” .
What Went Wrong
- Input costs: materially higher natural gas prices drove lower operating income and reduced adjusted EBITDA YoY; average NG cost used in production was $3.77/MMBtu vs $2.33 (+62%) .
- Ammonia sales volumes fell 23% YoY as more ammonia was upgraded (positive strategically but pressured ammonia category sales); ASP for UAN declined 5% YoY despite tight supply .
- Tariff uncertainty: management highlighted cost-side risks to parts/components from Europe and broader economic uncertainty, prompting pause of Houston Ship Channel project .
Financial Results
P&L vs prior quarters
Segment/Product Sales Mix
Key KPIs (Q1 2025 vs Q1 2024)
Non-GAAP
Actual vs Wall Street Consensus (S&P Global) – Q1 2025
Values marked with * were retrieved from S&P Global.
Guidance Changes
Earnings Call Themes & Trends
Management Commentary
- “We achieved higher UAN and AN volumes… we saw stronger ammonia selling prices. However… materially higher natural gas prices… offset the higher selling prices and the operating improvements we made.” — Mark Behrman, CEO .
- “Our exposure to direct tariff impacts is limited… less than 10% of our sales are made to customers outside the U.S… we are seeking opportunities to source domestically wherever possible…” — Mark Behrman, CEO .
- “We expect production of low carbon ammonium nitrate solution to begin by the end of 2026… El Dorado… one of only four North American plants to be granted [pre-certification] status…” — Management .
- “We have decided to put a pause on [the Houston Ship Channel] project.” — Management .
- “Cost-plus arrangements… allow us to contract out the volatility of natural gas prices… we expect this to grow to 35% by the end of the year.” — Cheryl Maguire, CFO .
Q&A Highlights
- Realized pricing setup: Company deliberately not sold out to capture Q2 UAN pricing strength; ammonia weaker, but mix optimization supports margins .
- Capital allocation after project pause: Maintain ~$60–$65M reliability capex; consider projects, buybacks, and debt reduction; no new FIDs yet .
- Deregulation impact: Minimal broadly; increased engagement with EPA aiding El Dorado Class VI progress .
- Demand/logistics: Pent-up UAN demand tied to higher corn acres and insufficient imports straining river/rail logistics, supporting pricing .
- Capacity options: Exploring expansion of Pryor urea and El Dorado ammonia/AN solution; engineering studies pending before sizing returns .
- Cost-plus strategy: Target ~35% in 2025, medium-term optimal ~50% of volumes; trades upside in spikes for earnings stability .
- Tariff cost sizing: ~$1M opex impact and ~$2M capex impact estimated for 2025 due to tariffs on inputs/equipment .
Estimates Context
- Q1 2025 revenue beat consensus; EPS missed consensus; EBITDA missed consensus. Given moderating U.S. gas prices, stronger UAN/urea pricing, and higher upgraded product mix into AN/UAN, near-term estimate revisions likely tilt toward higher revenue and adjusted EBITDA in Q2, with EPS sensitivity to gas and realized pricing timing. Values marked with * were retrieved from S&P Global .
Key Takeaways for Investors
- Near-term setup constructive: robust Spring demand, tight U.S. nitrogen supply, and UAN/urea pricing strength should support Q2 volumes/pricing; company positioned to capture late-quarter pricing on unsold UAN .
- Margin sensitivity to gas: Q1 showed gas headwind; management expects moderation toward ~$3/MMBtu into May, improving conversion economics; industrial cost-plus mix buffers volatility .
- Strategic focus shift: Pause on Houston signals capital discipline under tariff/cost uncertainty; emphasis on El Dorado low-carbon ramp and reliability-driven volume gains .
- Product mix optimization: Continued upgrading of ammonia into higher-margin AN/UAN and storage/logistics investments to support industrial growth should enhance margin quality .
- Guidance pivots: 2025 ammonia production outlook increased by ~30k tons; turnaround expense lowered by ~$15M—supports higher utilization and reduced cost drag in 2025 .
- Watch catalysts: EPA Class VI progress at El Dorado; Q2 pricing realization for UAN/urea; execution on cost-plus expansion toward ~35% in 2025; corn acreage and import flows as demand signals .
- Risk checks: Tariff-driven input/equipment costs (~$3M combined est. for 2025) and logistics constraints could pressure timing of realizations; monitor Tampa/NOLA benchmarks and gas trajectory .