MI
MERCER INTERNATIONAL INC. (MERC)·Q2 2025 Earnings Summary
Executive Summary
- Q2 2025 was weak: revenue fell to $453.5M and Operating EBITDA turned to negative $20.9M, driven by FX headwinds (~$26M EBITDA impact vs Q1), weaker China pulp pricing, higher fiber costs, and an $11M hardwood inventory impairment; diluted EPS was a loss of $1.29 .
- Versus S&P Global consensus, MERC missed on revenue ($453.5M vs $476.7M*), EPS (-$1.29 vs -$0.96*), and EBITDA (-$20.9M vs -$11.2M*); the dividend was suspended to preserve liquidity and focus on debt reduction, a key stock narrative catalyst .
- Management reaffirmed its “One Goal One Hundred” program targeting $100M profit improvement actions by end-2026 (realized ~$5M to date; 2025 target ~$25M), and guided to near-term softness in softwood pulp prices, steady hardwood prices, and lower German pulp fiber costs in Q3 .
- Liquidity remained solid: $146.5M cash, $291.6M undrawn revolvers, ~$438.1M aggregate liquidity; 18 days of planned pulp maintenance downtime expected in Q3 .
- Medium-term positives include increased U.S. lumber pricing on anticipated duties, mass timber backlog of ~$68M, and potential Peace River carbon capture project economics (JV structure, >$100M/yr revenue potential with >60% grants) .
What Went Well and What Went Wrong
What Went Well
- Cost and efficiency program momentum: “One Goal One Hundred” tracking to $100M by 2026; ~$5M achieved, ~$25M targeted in 2025 .
- Lumber pricing improved: Q2 lumber average realizations rose ~19% to $550/Mfbm and revenue +23% YoY to $66.3M; U.S. demand and supply constraints helped .
- Mass timber order book resilience: management cited healthy backlog and improved win rates, with an order book of ~$68M and plans to ramp to two shifts in early 2026 .
What Went Wrong
- FX and China demand: a weaker USD vs EUR/CAD reduced Q2 EBITDA by ~$26M vs Q1, while China pulp prices fell; NBHK China net price decreased to $533/ADMT; NBSK China net price $734/ADMT .
- Inventory impairment: $11M non-cash impairment on hardwood inventory at Peace River due to lower China hardwood prices .
- Solid wood pressures: segment Operating EBITDA went to -$4.9M (vs +$3.1M YoY), with manufactured products (mass timber) realizations down sharply to $1,318/m3 amid elevated U.S. rates .
Financial Results
Actual vs S&P Global Consensus (Q2 2025):
Segment Breakdown ($USD Thousands):
Key KPIs
Guidance Changes
Earnings Call Themes & Trends
Management Commentary
- CEO on Q2 drivers: “Ongoing uncertainties in the global trade environment coupled with the resulting weaker dollar… contributed to weaker demand for pulp in China… [and] had a negative impact of approximately $26 million on our Operating EBITDA… The second quarter also included an $11 million non-cash impairment on hardwood inventory at our Peace River mill” .
- CEO on capital allocation: “We are taking the added step of suspending our quarterly dividend… prudent as we navigate the uncertain global trade environment. We reiterate our long-term commitment to a competitive dividend” .
- CFO on segment results: “Our pulp segment had negative quarterly EBITDA of $10,000,000 in Q2 and our solid wood segment had negative EBITDA of $5,000,000” .
- CEO on mass timber outlook: “Order book is growing… backlog… about $68,000,000… planning on ramping up one of our facilities to two shifts in the early part of next year [2026]” .
- CEO on Peace River carbon capture: “Tied to about 500,000 tons of CO2… close or north of $100,000,000 per year of revenue… >60% covered by grants; our share likely < $100,000,000” .
Q&A Highlights
- Liquidity and revolvers: No maintenance covenants on German revolver; significant headroom (~$150–$200M-ish). Canadian revolver has a springing covenant at high utilization, not close to tripping .
- Cash taxes and interest: 2025 cash taxes ~$25M; interest around ~$110M; working capital slightly negative to flat .
- Inventory/impairment risk: Softwood inventories slightly elevated (Canada) but no impairment risk close; hardwood impairment already taken .
- Pulp price catalysts: Expect restocking post summer, supply tightness (curtailments/closures) to support softwood into late Q3/Q4; modest hardwood recovery .
- Lumber duties impact: Higher U.S. duties likely strain Canadian sawmills, reduce fiber availability; Mercer sees competitive advantage exporting German lumber to the U.S. .
Estimates Context
- Q2 2025 vs consensus: revenue missed ($453.5M vs $476.7M*), EPS missed (-$1.29 vs -$0.96*), EBITDA missed (-$20.9M vs -$11.2M*). FX (~$26M EBITDA headwind vs Q1), China price weakness, and $11M impairment drove the miss .
- Near-term estimates may move lower for Q3 given management’s expectation of softwood price decreases, modest solid wood fiber cost increases, and 18 days of planned maintenance; however, German pulp fiber costs are guided lower, offering some offset .
- Forward context: Consensus shows Q3 revenue ~$459.7M* and EPS -$0.92*, improving into Q4 on revenue ~$464.1M* and EPS -$0.82*; Operating execution and FX path are key sensitivities.*
Values retrieved from S&P Global.*
Key Takeaways for Investors
- The quarter’s broad miss was driven by exogenous FX and China pulp price pressures plus a non-cash inventory impairment; watch FX trajectory and China restocking signals heading into late Q3/Q4 .
- Dividend suspension underscores a debt reduction and liquidity-first stance; with ~$438M in liquidity, the balance sheet is positioned to navigate near-term volatility .
- Near-term guidance points to softer softwood pricing and modest solid wood fiber cost increases; German pulp fiber costs are expected to ease, partially mitigating margin pressure .
- Structural positives: mass timber backlog (~$68M) and U.S. lumber pricing tailwinds from higher duties could support solid wood into 2026; Torgau capacity additions enhance U.S. market reach .
- Optionality: Peace River carbon capture project offers potential >$100M/yr revenue with heavy grant support—strategic upside if executed .
- Trading implications: Expect estimate cuts short-term; stock narrative hinges on FX stabilization, China demand recovery, and confirmation of Q4 restocking; dividend pause may pressure income holders but supports deleveraging .
- Medium-term thesis: Diversification (EU/NA), bio-refinery initiatives (lignin/CO2), and cost program ($100M by 2026) can re-rate the equity as macro and rates normalize .