MI
Matson, Inc. (MATX)·Q1 2025 Earnings Summary
Executive Summary
- Q1 2025 delivered strong year-over-year growth: revenue $782.0M (+8.3% YoY), EPS $2.18 (+109.6% YoY), operating income $82.1M (+122.5% YoY), EBITDA $131.7M (+59.1% YoY), driven primarily by significantly higher China freight rates and a stronger SSAT JV contribution .
- Ocean Transportation operating income surged to $73.6M (+166.7% YoY), while Logistics operating income declined to $8.5M (-8.6% YoY) on lower freight forwarding and brokerage contributions .
- Management lowered Q2 and FY 2025 outlooks on tariff and macro uncertainty; expects Q2 consolidated OI to be meaningfully below Q2 2024 and FY 2025 OI below FY 2024, citing ~30% YoY China volume decline in April and anticipated rate softness .
- Capital allocation remained active: ~0.5M shares repurchased ($69.2M) and dividend declared at $0.34 in April; subsequently raised to $0.36 in June, marking the 13th consecutive annual increase .
What Went Well and What Went Wrong
What Went Well
- China service: materially higher freight rates carried over from 4Q24, driving Ocean Transportation revenue and OI uplift; “benefitted from the carryover of elevated freight rates… combined with healthy freight demand” (Matt Cox) .
- SSAT JV contribution improved to $6.6M (+$6.2M YoY), supported by higher lift volumes .
- Domestic tradelanes: Hawaii (+3.2% FEU, aided by a competitor drydock) and Alaska (+4.8% FEU) volumes increased YoY .
What Went Wrong
- China volumes fell ~30% YoY in April post-tariffs; management flagged limited visibility and expects Q2 volume and average rates to be lower YoY, pressuring earnings .
- Logistics segment OI declined to $8.5M (-8.6% YoY) on weaker freight forwarding and brokerage; management expects full-year Logistics OI to be lower than 2024 .
- Guam FEU volume down 14.3% YoY on softer retail and F&B demand; near-term recovery expected to be gradual .
Financial Results
Consolidated performance vs prior year, prior quarter, and consensus
Consensus comparison (Wall Street, S&P Global):
Highlights:
- Revenue and EPS modestly missed consensus; revenue -$9.9M and EPS -$0.09 versus S&P Global estimates, reflecting the early tariff impact and April demand softness signaled by management .
Segment breakdown (Q1 2025 vs Q1 2024)
KPIs (FEU volumes, Q1 2025 vs Q1 2024)
Liquidity and capital:
- Cash and cash equivalents: $122.0M; CCF (cash & investments): $685.4M; Total debt: $390.8M; revolver availability $643.9M .
Guidance Changes
Earnings Call Themes & Trends
Management Commentary
- “Our first quarter financial performance was as expected with significantly higher year-over-year consolidated operating income… primarily driven by our China service” (Matt Cox) .
- “Since the tariffs were implemented in April, our container volume has declined approximately 30% year-over-year” (Matt Cox) .
- “We expect both lower rate and lower volume… for the second quarter and for the full year. We still command a very significant premium… but our rates will move in sympathy with the overall market direction” (Matt Cox) .
- “During the first quarter, we repurchased approximately 500,000 shares for a total cost of $69.2 million… Total debt… $390.8 million, a reduction of $10.1 million” (Joel Wine) .
- “We remain committed to maintaining the reliability of our vessel operations and providing high-quality service… Matson’s businesses have historically performed well during periods of supply chain disruption” (Matt Cox) .
Q&A Highlights
- Vietnam catchment expansion: ~20% of weekly volumes now originate from Vietnam; ability to scale via feeder partners and add capacity as needed .
- Rates: Market disruptive and mixed post-tariffs; Matson expects lower volumes and rates but to maintain premium vs market .
- Operations: Management aims to avoid blank sailings to preserve brand/reliability and capture potential snapback when inventories need replenishment .
- De minimis exemption: Near-term airfreight-to-ocean conversion opportunity; change seen as likely persistent, benefiting expedited ocean services .
- April 30% China volume decline contextualization: CFO suggested using Q2 2024 as a baseline to conceptualize impact while acknowledging uncertainty in duration .
Estimates Context
- Q1 2025 revenue and EPS modestly missed S&P Global consensus. Street models likely need to reflect the April tariff shock, expected Q2 rate/volume declines, and lowered FY OI guidance, particularly for Ocean Transportation and Logistics . Values retrieved from S&P Global.
Key Takeaways for Investors
- Near-term headwinds: April tariff shock (~30% China volume decline) and guided Q2/FY OI reductions suggest earnings pressure into Q2; watch tariff amendments and retailer restocking cadence .
- China premium intact but moderating: Matson expects lower rates and volumes in Q2 while maintaining premium pricing vs market; monitor SCFI and expedited demand indicators .
- Diversification efforts: Vietnam/SE Asia catchment expansion provides partial offset to China weakness; capacity can be scaled with feeders; track transshipment flows .
- Capital strength: Robust CCF ($685.4M), reduced debt ($390.8M), ample revolver ($643.9M), and continued buybacks/dividend growth (to $0.36) underpin balance sheet resilience .
- Segment mix: Ocean Transportation is the earnings lever; Logistics faces a challenging environment with expected FY OI lower YoY .
- Watch SSAT contribution: Positive Q1 step-up, but FY 2025 contribution expected below $17.4M; sensitivity to West Coast volumes persists .
- Operational stance: No blank sailings policy aims to capture demand snapbacks and reinforce reliability; brand value is a competitive moat in expedited ocean .
Additional data and details
- Condensed consolidated results (Q1 2025): Revenue $782.0M; OI $82.1M; Net income $72.3M; EPS $2.18; EBITDA $131.7M .
- Liquidity/Capital allocation: Net cash from operations $89.0M in Q1; Capex payments $89.2M; share repurchase ~$69.2M; dividend $0.34 in April .
- Outlook drivers: USTR Section 301 service fees and proposed duties; Matson exempt from the vessel service fee due to size but indirectly impacted via customer tariffs and equipment costs .
Values with asterisks retrieved from S&P Global.