SC
SOUTHERN COPPER CORP/ (SCCO)·Q4 2024 Earnings Summary
Executive Summary
- Q4 2024 net sales were $2.78B, up 21.3% YoY ($2.30B in Q4 2023) but down 5.0% QoQ ($2.93B in Q3 2024); net income was $0.79B with a 28.5% margin, and adjusted EBITDA was $1.51B with a 54.1% margin .
- Operating cash cost net of by-product credits rose to $0.96/lb from $0.76/lb in Q3, reflecting lower by‑product credits QoQ, though FY 2024 net cash cost improved to $0.89/lb YoY .
- Board authorized a quarterly cash dividend of $0.70/share and a stock dividend of 0.0073 shares per share (payable Feb 27, 2025), and Minera Mexico issued $1.0B 7-year notes at 5.625% (due 2032) to support capex and liquidity .
- 2025 guidance: copper ~967k tons (slight reduction vs prior), zinc ~171.7k tons (raised), silver ~23.0M oz (raised), molybdenum ~26.2k tons (maintained); a potential narrative catalyst is execution on Tía María construction and Buenavista Zinc ramp-through .
What Went Well and What Went Wrong
What Went Well
- Record 2024 net sales of $11.43B (+15.5% YoY) driven by higher volumes in copper, zinc, silver and favorable metal prices; net income grew 39.2% to $3.38B with adjusted EBITDA +27.4% to $6.41B .
- By-product momentum: Q4 zinc sales +59.4% YoY and silver sales +21.6% YoY; Buenavista Zinc full ramp supported mined zinc +154.9% YoY in Q4 .
- Management tone confident: “We are pleased with 2024 results… strong sales growth… strict cost control measures,” and outlined 2025 production plans and advancing major projects (Tía María, Los Chancas, Michiquillay, El Arco) .
What Went Wrong
- QoQ softness: revenue fell from $2.93B (Q3) to $2.78B (Q4); adjusted EBITDA margin compressed to 54.1% from 57.5% QoQ, and EPS slipped to $1.01 from $1.15 .
- Operating cash cost net rose QoQ to $0.96/lb (from $0.76/lb), implying less by‑product offset vs Q3 despite favorable YoY trends .
- Operational headwinds: Toquepala processing decreased due to biannual preventive maintenance and molybdenum production declined 2.6% YoY in Q4, partially offset elsewhere .
Financial Results
Segment/product sales volumes (tons and 000s oz):
Key KPIs and cost drivers:
Guidance Changes
Earnings Call Themes & Trends
Management Commentary
- “We are pleased with 2024 results, with net sales hitting a record of $11,433 million… strong sales growth was accompanied by strict cost control measures, yielding net income of $3,377 million for 2024” — Chairman Germán Larrea .
- 2025 production outlook: “We expect to maintain… producing 967,000 tons [copper]… 171,700 tons of zinc (+32%), 23 million ounces of silver (+10%) and 26,200 tons of molybdenum (-10%)” .
- Capital and projects: Minera Mexico plans >$600M 2025 capex focused on modernization and water/tailings; Tía María budget updated to ~$1,802M with construction commencing and detailed local job creation plans .
Q&A Highlights
- Q4 2024 earnings call transcript was not available in the document tool; Q&A highlights cannot be synthesized at this time. We will update when the transcript is accessible .
Estimates Context
- Wall Street consensus (S&P Global) for Q4 2024 EPS and revenue was unavailable due to data access limits at the time of request; therefore, we cannot provide vs-consensus comparisons. Values would normally be retrieved from S&P Global.
Key Takeaways for Investors
- Momentum intact into year-end: Q4 delivered strong YoY growth (sales +21%, EBITDA +43%) despite QoQ normalization; product mix (zinc, silver) and price backdrop supported results .
- Watch cost dynamics: Net cash cost rose QoQ to $0.96/lb; near-term stock narrative may hinge on by‑product price/volume credits stabilizing and operational normalization post maintenance at Toquepala .
- 2025 production guide reset: Copper slightly trimmed (967k), zinc and silver raised — constructive for by‑product credits and margin resilience; monitor execution vs these targets for revisions risk or upside .
- Capital structure/liquidity: $1.0B 7-year issuance at 5.625% strengthens funding for Mexican capex and corporate purposes; dividend policy maintained with a modestly higher stock component, balancing growth funding with returns .
- Project pipeline catalysts: Tía María construction start and Buenavista Zinc throughput are key medium-term drivers; permitting, social acceptance, and infrastructure (rail/road, water) execution are risk factors to track .
- ESG/tailings investments and S&P CSA recognition improve the non-financial profile, potentially broadening investor appeal and de-risking operations .
- Near-term trading: With QoQ margin compression and higher net cash cost, the tape may react to updates on by‑product pricing and operational cadence; medium-term thesis leans on volume growth, cost discipline, and project execution .