OT
Otter Tail Corp (OTTR)·Q1 2025 Earnings Summary
Executive Summary
- Q1 2025 diluted EPS of $1.62 was in line with management’s plan and above S&P Global consensus ($1.53) as stronger Electric segment earnings and Plastics volumes offset pricing pressure; consolidated revenue of $337.4M came in below consensus ($349.7M) due to Manufacturing softness and lower Plastics pricing . EPS consensus and revenue consensus values retrieved from S&P Global.*
- Guidance maintained: FY25 diluted EPS range $5.68–$6.08; expected ROE 13.8%–14.6%; segment EPS mix unchanged from February (Electric $2.29–$2.35; Plastics $3.26–$3.50; Manufacturing $0.21–$0.27; Corporate $(0.08)–$(0.04)) .
- Electric segment benefited from near‑normal winter weather, higher volumes, and rider recovery; Manufacturing faced end‑market demand and margin deleveraging; Plastics volumes rose with new capacity while prices fell 11% YoY, pressuring margins .
- Regulatory catalysts: ND rate case implemented in March; SD rate review filed June 4; large-load service agreement (target ~155 MW) advances near Big Stone Plant; management highlighted tariff and IRA policy watch points .
What Went Well and What Went Wrong
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What Went Well
- Electric segment net income up 10% YoY on favorable weather and volume, with interim ND revenues and rider recovery supporting results; CEO: “we produced earnings…in line with our expectations and a good start to the year” .
- Plastics volumes +13% YoY aided by new large‑diameter line at Vinyltech and strong distributor demand; CFO: “First quarter earnings also benefited from lower material costs as resin prices have declined” .
- Balance sheet/liquidity strong: $607M total availability, $284.8M cash; FY25 growth to be financed without external equity; dividend raised 12% YoY to $0.525/qtr .
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What Went Wrong
- Consolidated revenue declined 2.8% YoY and missed consensus as Manufacturing revenues fell 17.8% YoY on broad end‑market softness; Plastics pricing down 11% YoY compressed margins despite volume gains .
- Operating income and margin declined YoY, reflecting lower product pricing in Plastics and deleveraging in Manufacturing; corporate costs rose on higher medical claims .
- Cash from operations fell to $39.5M vs $71.9M in Q1 2024 due to timing of fuel/recovery and operating payments and lower earnings, a near‑term cash flow headwind .
Financial Results
Segment breakdown
KPIs
Guidance Changes
Earnings Call Themes & Trends
Management Commentary
- CEO: “Collectively, we produced earnings of $68.1 million, or $1.62 per diluted share, in line with our expectations and a good start to the year” .
- CEO on tariffs: “We are actively monitoring the evolving tariff landscape…we are well positioned to weather this period of economic turbulence” .
- CEO on ND rate case and growth: “Otter Tail Power finalized its fully settled North Dakota general rate case…we continue to execute on our investment and regulatory priorities, including development work on our renewable generation and large transmission projects” .
- CFO: “Our balance sheet remains very strong…total available liquidity of over $600 million…we are affirming our 2025 diluted EPS guidance range of $5.68 to $6.08” .
- CFO on Plastics: “The average sales price of PVC pipe declined 11%…partially offset by a 13% increase in sales volumes…lower resin costs” .
Q&A Highlights
- Plastics volumes and pricing trajectory: Management assumes low single‑digit volume increase for FY25, strong 1H with risk of 2H demand softness; expects continued ~12% annual price declines until margins revert to pre‑2021 levels by 2027/2028 .
- Competitive capacity expansion: Competitors likely adding incremental line capacity/debottlenecking; no evidence of new plants; company’s new large‑diameter line serving Southwest market effectively .
- Tariff pass‑through: Domestic steel price increases expected to raise raw material costs 2H25; earnings impact minimal due to customer passthrough, while monitoring end‑market demand shifts .
Estimates Context
Values retrieved from S&P Global.*
- EPS beat driven by Electric segment strength and Plastics volume/mix; revenue miss reflects Manufacturing demand headwinds and continued price declines in Plastics .
Key Takeaways for Investors
- EPS beat with revenue miss: Quality of earnings supported by segment mix and cost control; watch Manufacturing volumes and Plastics pricing trajectory for 2H25 risk to topline .
- Guidance intact: FY25 EPS $5.68–$6.08 affirmed; near‑term narrative is execution against rate base growth and managing tariff/tax policy uncertainty—no external equity needs .
- Electric growth durable: ND rates implemented; AMI and wind repowering progressing; large‑load opportunity (~155 MW near Big Stone) could be a multi‑year upside lever if approvals arrive on schedule .
- Plastics normalization: Volume strength from Phoenix capacity offsets price declines; management reiterates normalization path to $45–$50M segment earnings by 2028—key for medium‑term EPS mix shift .
- Manufacturing cyclical trough: End‑market softness (RV/ag/construction) and deleveraging pressured margins; cost actions ongoing—any demand stabilization would be a margin delta .
- Liquidity and dividends: $607M liquidity and $0.525/qtr dividend (12% YoY increase) provide support to TSR while funding utility capex internally .
- Regulatory pipeline: SD rate review filed; potential MN case later in 2025; constructive ND outcome underscores balanced approach—monitor outcomes for allowed ROE/timing .
Estimates Where They May Adjust
- Analysts likely raise EPS modestly post‑beat while trimming revenue on Manufacturing softness and continued Plastics price headwinds; maintain caution for 2H25 volume/demand risk flagged by management . Values retrieved from S&P Global.*
Additional Detail: Segment Narratives
- Electric: Operating revenues +$8.2M YoY, retail MWh +5.8%, heating degree days 100.9% of normal; interim ND revenue and riders offset increased depreciation/interest from capex .
- Manufacturing: Revenues −17.8% YoY, net income −70.9% YoY; volume declines and scrap revenue down with reduced leverage of fixed costs; SG&A down partially offset .
- Plastics: Revenues roughly flat YoY, net income −7.1% YoY; price −11% YoY, volumes +13% YoY; lower resin costs aided margins; Phoenix Phase 1 large‑diameter capacity driving Southwest service capability .