SC
SOUTHERN COPPER CORP/ (SCCO)·Q3 2025 Earnings Summary
Executive Summary
- Record quarter: net sales $3.38B (+15.2% y/y), adjusted EBITDA $1.98B (+17.3% y/y), and net income $1.11B (+23.5% y/y), driven by higher metal prices and strong by-product volumes; net income margin expanded to 32.8% .
- Solid beat vs Wall Street: revenue $3.38B vs $3.21B consensus (+~5%); EPS $1.35 vs $1.25 consensus, supported by a collapse in operating cash cost to $0.42/lb (net of by-products) as zinc, silver and moly volumes/prices surged . Consensus from S&P Global estimates.*
- Dividend raised: cash dividend increased to $0.90 (from $0.80 in Q2) plus 0.0085 stock dividend; payable Nov 28, 2025 (record Nov 12) .
- Strategic progress: Peru’s Ministry of Energy and Mines authorized commencement of exploitation activities for Tía María; ramp expected through 2027, with financing likely via debt as rates fall .
- Setup for 2026-2027: Company reiterated 2025 copper production ~960kt and indicated 2026 forecast ~911kt (under review), with 2026 capex ~$2.0B including ~$866M for Tía María; medium-term growth levered to Tía María, El Pilar, and El Arco .
What Went Well and What Went Wrong
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What Went Well
- New company records in net sales, adjusted EBITDA, and net income; management credited improved prices across all products and by-product strength: “cash cost of $0.42/lb… one of the industry’s lowest” .
- By-product volumes and prices materially improved cost structure: zinc mined +46.3% y/y; silver mined +16.4%; moly mined +8.3%; by-product credit drove the $0.42/lb net cash cost in Q3 .
- Peru project momentum: Tía María received authorization to begin exploitation; early works progressing; management expects ramp in 2027 .
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What Went Wrong
- Copper production softness: mined copper 234,892 tonnes in Q3, down 6.9% q/q and total production -6.4% y/y, with lower grades in Peru and Mexico and Buenavista concentrator fully dedicated to zinc/silver instead of copper .
- Smelting/refining throughput down y/y: smelted -16.9%, refined/rod -10.3% in Q3; some maintenance at Ilo impacted throughput and sulfuric acid by-product credits .
- Cost line items mixed beneath the surface: while net cash cost plunged, purchased concentrates, workers’ participation, and services were cited as areas of cost increase; cash cost before by-product credits rose to $2.23/lb .
Financial Results
Headline vs Prior Periods and vs Estimates
Notes: Estimates from S&P Global; see Estimates Context for details.
Production and Sales Mix (selected KPIs)
Cash Flow and Capex
Guidance Changes
Earnings Call Themes & Trends
Management Commentary
- Chairman German Larrea: “We are very pleased with our third-quarter results, where our performance delivered new Company records for net sales, adjusted EBITDA and net income… The combination of higher production volumes and better copper and by-product prices enabled us to achieve a cash cost of $0.42 per pound of copper in 3Q25, one of the industry’s lowest.”
- CFO Raul Jacob on cost and market: “cash cost of $0.42 per pound… one of the industry's lowest,” and a copper market deficit of “almost 400,000 tonnes” with inventories covering ~8 days of demand .
- On Tía María: exploitation authorization obtained; ramp through 2027; financing likely via debt given lowering rates .
- On 2026 outlook: initial copper forecast ~911kt; 2026 capex ~$2B including ~$866M for Tía María .
Q&A Highlights
- Costs: Q4 cash cost before by-product credits guided to ~$2.15–$2.20/lb (down from ~$2.23/lb in Q3), with partial production recovery in Peru expected .
- Mix/strategy: Buenavista concentrator dedicated to maximizing zinc/silver in 2025 given ore grades, reducing copper output vs 2024; silver production target raised to 23Moz (+10% y/y) .
- 2026 planning: Copper ~911kt (under review); capex ~$2.0B with ~$866M for Tía María; potential financing via debt markets .
- Growth pipeline: Tía María ramp in 2027; El Pilar expected 2028; El Arco into 2029; actions contemplated to mitigate long-term ore grade decay (e.g., potential Cuajone concentrator line, $600–$700M for ~40kt, not yet board-approved) .
- Dividends/hedging: Stock dividend continues to supplement cash payouts; no current hedging plans (past used zero-cost collar) .
Estimates Context
- Q3 2025 actuals vs S&P Global consensus: revenue $3,377.3M vs $3,209.7M*; EPS $1.35 vs $1.2462* — both beats, aided by by-product uplift and price strength .
- Street models likely raise by-product contribution, lower net cash cost trajectory, and modestly temper copper volumes near term given grade headwinds; 2026 capex uplift and 2027 ramp for Tía María to be incorporated .
- Asterisk indicates values retrieved from S&P Global.*
Key Takeaways for Investors
- Quality beat with record revenue/EBITDA/NI and a marked cost-down to $0.42/lb net, primarily from by-product strength — a potent positive for FY25 FCF conversion .
- The dividend story is strengthening: cash dividend raised to $0.90, reinforcing returns while preserving capacity for a ~$2B capex year in 2026 .
- Near-term copper volumes remain pressured by grades and Buenavista mix, but 2027+ trajectory improves with Tía María; early execution milestones (permit) reduce project risk .
- 2026 looks like an investment year (capex ~$2B) — expect transient FCF compression before Tía María contributions; financing likely via debt at improving rate backdrops .
- Macro tailwinds intact: management sees a copper deficit (~400kt) and lean inventories (~8 days), supporting constructive price assumptions amid limited tariff impact to date .
- Watchlist: Q4 cash cost progression (pre-credit $/lb), Peru production recovery, Buenavista mix, final 2026 production outlook in January, and Tía María execution cadence .
References:
- Q3 2025 8-K and press release: financials, costs, production, dividend, Tía María permit
- Q3 2025 Earnings call transcript: market deficit/inventories, cash cost trajectory, 2025/2026 volume/capex, project pipeline, dividends/hedging
- Prior quarters (Q2/Q1 2025) for trend: sales/EBITDA, cash cost, dividend baseline, by-product ramp, ESG recognitions
*Values retrieved from S&P Global.