SC
SOUTHERN COPPER CORP/ (SCCO)·Q1 2025 Earnings Summary
Executive Summary
- Q1 2025 delivered broad-based strength: net sales rose 20.1% YoY to $3.12B, adjusted EBITDA increased 23.1% YoY to $1.75B, and net income climbed 28.5% YoY to $945.9M; net income margin expanded 200 bps to 30.3% .
- Consensus beat: revenue, EPS, and EBITDA exceeded S&P Global estimates; revenue $3.12B vs $2.95B*, EPS $1.19 vs $1.10*, EBITDA $1.75B vs $1.67B*; management attributed outperformance to higher volumes (Cu +3.6%, Zn +42.4%, Ag +14.1%, Mo +9.9%) and better prices .
- Cost tailwinds: operating cash cost, net of by-products, fell to $0.77/lb (from $1.07 in 1Q24 and $0.96 in 4Q24), supported by by‑product credits and lower operating costs; management guided 2025 cash costs to $0.75–$0.80/lb .
- Guidance and capital: 2025 copper production target raised to ~968kt (vs prior ~967kt), moly lifted to ~27.4kt (vs prior ~26.2kt), zinc nudged to ~170kt (vs prior ~171.7kt); 2025 capex forecast ~$1.5B with step-ups to $2.3B in 2026 and $2.7B in 2027–2028 .
- Potential catalysts: copper price resilience, continued ramp at Buenavista zinc, dividend policy ($0.70 cash + 0.0099 stock/share), and progress at Tía María; watch COMEX-LME arbitrage and U.S.–China trade policy risk (no current copper tariffs on MX/PE) .
What Went Well and What Went Wrong
What Went Well
- Strong top-line and margin expansion: sales +20.1% YoY to $3.12B, adjusted EBITDA +23.1% to $1.75B, EBITDA margin up 140 bps to 55.9% .
- Cost execution: cash cost net of by-products dropped to $0.77/lb, driven by lower operating costs and 22.2% growth in by-product credits, primarily zinc, silver, and moly .
- Management confidence: “This quarter, SCC’s net earnings totaled $946 million…driven by higher sales and lower unit costs…cash cost decreased from $1.07 to $0.77 per copper pound (-28%)” — Chairman Germán Larrea .
What Went Wrong
- Refining/smelting softness: smelted copper fell 13% YoY and refined/rod declined 2.5% YoY in the quarter; quarter-over-quarter, total mined silver sales decreased 4.2% .
- Zinc refined output down 11% YoY; mined zinc fell 8.7% QoQ (IMMSA mines -15.7%) despite YoY surge from Buenavista concentrator .
- Macro/policy uncertainty: management flagged risks from potential U.S.–China trade friction and COMEX-LME arbitrage dynamics; while no tariffs currently apply to MX/PE copper, the arbitrage peaked at 17% in late March .
Financial Results
Q1 2025 vs S&P Global Consensus (quarterly)
Values retrieved from S&P Global*. Note: S&P’s “actual” Primary EPS shows 1.1567; SCCO’s press release reports $1.19 (GAAP basic/diluted). We anchor estimate comparisons on S&P Global while presenting company‑reported EPS .
Segment/By-product and Production KPIs
Additional Financial Statements (Q1 2025)
Guidance Changes
Earnings Call Themes & Trends
Management Commentary
- “Sales increased 20%, registering growth in sales volumes for copper (+4%), zinc (+42%), silver (+14%) and molybdenum (+10%).…cash cost decreased from $1.07 to $0.77 per copper pound (-28%)” — Germán Larrea, Chairman .
- “We estimate that the deficit at year-end will stand at about 300,000 metric tons.…we believe an intense commercial war between the U.S. and China will affect economic growth worldwide” — Raul Jacob .
- “Buenavista zinc concentrator…is certainly operating at full speed” — Raul Jacob .
- “We expect to produce 968,200 tons of copper this year, 2025.…This is 2,400 tons increase when compared to our plan of 965,000 tons” — Raul Jacob .
Q&A Highlights
- Cash costs trajectory: management expects 2025 operating cash cost net of by-products in the $0.75–$0.80/lb range, contingent on by-product prices and operating discipline .
- Capex phasing: 2025 ~$1.5B; 2026 ~$2.3B; 2027 ~$2.7B; 2028 ~$2.7B; Tía María-specific capex ~$<200M (2025), ~$980M (2026), ~$460M (2027) .
- Product mix and TC/RC flexibility: despite favorable TC/RC for concentrates, SCCO emphasized competitiveness of smelting chain and commitments to refined copper deliveries; by-product capture (precious metals, sulfuric acid) supports value .
- Trade/tariffs: no current U.S. tariffs on MX/PE copper; company would reassign volumes if tariffs were imposed; views current zero-duty status as positive given U.S. copper shortfall .
- Production path: slight copper volume adjustment possible in 2026; rising with projects thereafter, crossing >1Mt in 2028–2030 .
Estimates Context
- Q1 2025 delivered beats across metrics versus S&P Global consensus: revenue $3,121.9M vs $2,953.9M*, EPS $1.19 vs $1.10*, EBITDA $1,745.6M vs $1,665.8M*; beats supported by volume lifts and price strength across copper and by-products .
- Prior quarter Q4 2024: revenue $2,784.3M vs consensus $2,865.6M* (miss), EPS $1.01 vs $0.99* (in-line/slight beat), EBITDA $1,506.7M vs $1,553.6M* (slight miss)* .
- Model implications: with cash cost guidance at $0.75–$0.80/lb and raised copper/moly production targets, near-term EBITDA/EPS forecasts may bias upward absent adverse price/policy shocks* .
Values retrieved from S&P Global*.
Key Takeaways for Investors
- Broad beat driven by volumes and pricing, with margins expanding; reinforces SCCO’s low-cost, diversified by-product advantage .
- Cash cost execution remains the core differentiator; management’s $0.75–$0.80/lb 2025 guide suggests resilient profitability even under policy noise .
- Buenavista zinc is a meaningful earnings lever; continued high throughput anchors by-product credits and lowers net copper costs .
- Project pipeline is progressing: Tía María early works at 61% and supportive local environment; multi-year capex cadence set; financing timing will be market-dependent .
- Watch trade policy headlines and COMEX-LME dynamics; no current tariffs on MX/PE copper, but arbitrage and tariff risk can affect commercial terms and customer behavior .
- Dividend attractiveness persists ($0.70 cash + stock dividend); payout supported by strong operating cash flow and balance sheet liquidity .
- Near-term trading: focus on copper price trajectory and by-product markets (silver, zinc, moly); medium-term thesis: volume growth plus disciplined costs and project execution underpin earnings durability .