RS
REPUBLIC SERVICES, INC. (RSG)·Q3 2025 Earnings Summary
Executive Summary
- Q3 2025 delivered a clean EPS beat and margin expansion: adjusted EPS $1.90 vs S&P Global consensus ~$1.78*, adjusted EBITDA margin 32.8% (+80 bps YoY), while revenue of $4.21B was slightly below the ~$4.25B* consensus as Environmental Solutions remained soft . EPS beat: +$0.12*, revenue miss: -$38.5M*; adjusted EBITDA vs consensus ~$1.33B* came in higher on a non‑GAAP basis at $1.38B .
- Management reiterated all full‑year 2025 guidance components except revenue, which is now expected near the low end of the $16.675–$16.750B range; adjusted EPS and adjusted EBITDA guidance were reaffirmed .
- Pricing continued to outpace cost inflation (core price +5.9% on total revenue; +7.2% on related business), offsetting cyclical volume pressure and lower recycled commodity prices ($126/ton vs $177/ton LY) .
- Key swing factors: event‑driven landfill work (~$36M in Q3; ~$100M YTD, 30 bps full‑year margin tailwind) will not repeat in 2026; Environmental Solutions stabilized exiting Q3 but remains a drag near‑term .
Note: Asterisks denote S&P Global consensus/estimate values. Values retrieved from S&P Global.
What Went Well and What Went Wrong
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What Went Well
- Margin expansion and EPS beat: adjusted EBITDA margin rose 80 bps YoY to 32.8%, and adjusted EPS grew to $1.90; CEO: “we delivered strong third‑quarter results… drove an 80‑basis‑point expansion in adjusted EBITDA margin” .
- Pricing power: core price +5.9% (total), +7.2% (related business; 8.6% open market/4.8% restricted) supported organic growth despite volume softness .
- Sustainability execution: 6 RNG projects commenced YTD (7 expected for 2025); Indianapolis Polymer Center in production; Blue Polymers facility expected to start late Q4 .
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What Went Wrong
- Environmental Solutions softness: net revenue fell to $433M (vs $465M LY) with adjusted EBITDA margin down to 20.3% (vs 25.2% LY), reflecting weaker manufacturing and fewer emergency response jobs; demand “stabilized” exiting Q3 but comps remain tough .
- Recycling commodity headwind: average commodity price dropped to $126/ton (from $177/ton LY), reducing organic growth by ~20 bps; prices exited ~ $120/ton .
- Labor disruption: recorded $56M impact in Q3 (incl. $16M customer credits and $40M cost of operations), affecting reported revenue and costs; management expects no further residual impact .
Financial Results
Sequential performance (2025 YTD)
Year-over-year snapshot (Q3)
Estimates vs Actuals (S&P Global)
Note: Asterisks denote S&P Global consensus/estimate values. Values retrieved from S&P Global.
Segment breakdown (Business Types)
Guidance Changes
Earnings Call Themes & Trends
Management Commentary
- Strategy and margins: “We delivered strong third-quarter results… our ability to price ahead of cost inflation and disciplined operational execution drove an 80-basis-point expansion in adjusted EBITDA margin.” — Jon Vander Ark, CEO .
- Demand and volumes: “Organic volume decreased… increase in C&D tons related to hurricane recovery… Special waste activity… offset by a decline in the collection business.” .
- Environmental Solutions: “Performance was impacted by… softness in manufacturing… lower event-driven volumes… fewer emergency response jobs… demand stabilized exiting the third quarter.” .
- 2026 framing: “Long-term growth algorithm is intact… 30–50 bps of EBITDA margin expansion per year… ~$100M event-driven landfill volumes in 2025 will not repeat in 2026.” .
- Pricing outlook: “Think about a yield number that’s 75–100 bps above [CPI]” .
Q&A Highlights
- Event-driven revenue cadence: ~$12M (Q1), ~$53M (Q2), ~$36M (Q3); ~$100M YTD; hurricane cleanup in Carolinas ~+$35M in Q3; ~30 bps full-year margin uplift .
- Commodity pricing and hedge approach: Prices stepped down through Q3 (~$126 average; ~ $120 exiting); thin hedging markets; RSG moved to fee-for-service with commodity sharing to reduce volatility .
- ES margins and one-offs: ES margin compression largely from mix/volume; unique items (bad debt recovery last year vs legal settlement this year) added ~140 bps YoY margin headwind in ES .
- Labor disruption accounting: $56M impact recorded in Q3 (incl. $16M revenue credits and $40M operating costs); management does not expect residual impacts into Q4/2026 .
- Capital allocation: ~$539M buybacks in Q3 (2.3M shares); management remains opportunistic on repurchases; M&A pipeline remains strong (tilted to Recycling & Waste) .
Estimates Context
- Q3 2025 vs S&P Global consensus: adjusted EPS $1.90 vs ~$1.78* (beat ~$0.12*); revenue $4.212B vs ~$4.251B* (miss ~$0.039B*); EBITDA (GAAP) $1.267B vs ~$1.351B* (miss ~$0.024B*), though adjusted EBITDA was $1.383B .
- Prior quarters: Q2 2025 adjusted EPS $1.77 vs ~$1.76*; revenue $4.235B vs ~$4.265B*; EBITDA $1.361B vs ~$1.342B*; Q1 2025 adjusted EPS $1.58 vs ~$1.53*; revenue $4.009B vs ~$4.049B*; EBITDA $1.268B vs ~$1.239B* .
Note: Asterisks denote S&P Global consensus/estimate values. Values retrieved from S&P Global.
KPIs
KPI trends
Other Q3 KPIs
Earnings Materials Cross-Checks
- Revenue by line of business, pricing/yield/volume, cost breakdowns, and non‑GAAP reconciliations were consistent between the 8‑K and press release exhibits .
- Labor disruption presentation: revenue credits ($16M) embedded in reported revenue; $56M total impact added back for adjusted EBITDA; disclosed consistently across PR and call .
Key Takeaways for Investors
- Durable pricing power continues to outpace costs, supporting margin expansion even with softer volumes and lower commodity prices; this remains central to the mid‑single‑digit growth algorithm .
- EPS outperformance and margin strength offset a small revenue shortfall; the mix skew (Recycling & Waste up, Environmental Solutions down) explains consensus variances* .
- 2025 revenue now guided to the low end of the prior range; adjusted EPS/EBITDA and FCF guidance maintained—implying confidence in cost discipline and pricing execution .
- Event-driven landfill tailwinds in 2025 (~$100M revenue; ~30 bps margin) will not repeat in 2026; build expectations accordingly as comps normalize .
- ES segment appears to be stabilizing exiting Q3; pipeline is improving but recovery is likely gradual and sensitive to manufacturing/emergency response activity .
- Sustainability and network investments (RNG, polymers, EV fleet) are scaling and should contribute incrementally to growth and returns over time .
- Capital deployment remains active and balanced (acquisitions + opportunistic buybacks), with ~$1.9B repurchase authorization remaining at 9/30 .
Note: Asterisks denote S&P Global consensus/estimate values. Values retrieved from S&P Global.