TI
TITAN INTERNATIONAL INC (TWI)·Q1 2025 Earnings Summary
Executive Summary
- Q1 2025 revenue of $490.7M and adjusted EBITDA of $30.8M came in at the high end of management’s Q4-issued guidance ranges, with revenue above Wall Street consensus while EPS came in below the S&P Global “Primary EPS” consensus . Revenue Consensus Mean: $464.2M*; Primary EPS Consensus Mean: $0.055 vs actual $0.01* .
- Headwinds persisted in Ag and EMC as OEM destocking and weaker demand pressured margins year over year (gross margin 14.0% vs 16.0% in Q1’24), partly offset by strong Consumer (aftermarket-led) profitability .
- Tariff exposure is limited (CFO: “less than 10% of revenues have a net negative exposure”), and management expects minimal Q2 impact given strategic inventory and sourcing; Q2 2025 guidance: sales $450–$500M and adjusted EBITDA $25–$35M, implying sequential stability .
- Balance sheet and cash: net debt rose to $411.0M (from $369.5M at YE’24) as working capital built with the ~$107M sequential sales step-up; free cash flow was -$53.6M in Q1, with management guiding to positive FCF in 2H 2025 .
- Strategic catalysts: expansion of the Goodyear licensing agreement (to light construction/industrial, ATV, lawn & garden, golf) and ongoing LSW penetration initiatives are intended to accelerate growth into mid-size farm and consumer adjacencies .
What Went Well and What Went Wrong
What Went Well
- Tariff positioning and domestic capacity: “less than 10% of our total revenues have a net negative exposure” to current retaliatory China tariffs; guidance assumes “minimal impact,” supported by domestic steel sourcing and diversified rubber sourcing (primarily West Africa) .
- Aftermarket-led resilience and margin outperformance: Consumer gross margin 19.6% (aftermarket >65% of segment sales) vs Ag 12.4% and EMC 10.4%; overall gross margin improved sequentially from 10.7% in Q4 to 14.0% in Q1 as volumes recovered .
- Strategic growth levers: Expanded Goodyear licensing (new segments) and LSW penetration into mid-size farms, with management citing independent data indicating sub-1-year LSW ROI for midsize farms .
What Went Wrong
- Ag and EMC softness persisted: Ag net sales fell 17.5% YoY with margin compression (12.4% vs 16.9%), and EMC net sales decreased 13.3% YoY (margin 10.4% vs 13.9%), due to OEM destocking and weaker demand in North America/Europe, plus FX headwinds .
- Gross margin down YoY: 14.0% vs 16.0% a year ago, driven by lower fixed-cost leverage on reduced volumes .
- Elevated tax rate and cash usage: Effective tax rate ~99.5%; operating cash flow -$38.6M and FCF -$53.6M in Q1 as receivables rose with sequential sales growth; net debt increased to $411.0M .
Financial Results
P&L and Cash Metrics (oldest → newest)
Actual vs S&P Global Consensus – Q1 2025
Values marked with * are from S&P Global.
Segment Breakdown – Q1 2025 vs Q1 2024
KPIs and Balance Sheet
Guidance Changes
Management also indicated tariff impact is expected to be minimal in Q2 given inventory and sourcing actions .
Earnings Call Themes & Trends
Management Commentary
- “Our revenues of $491 million and Adjusted EBITDA of $31 million were both at the higher end of our guidance range.” — Paul Reitz, CEO .
- “Less than 10% of our total revenues have a net negative exposure to the current retaliatory China tariffs…we expect tariffs will have minimal impact on the quarter.” — David Martin, CFO .
- “Consumer continued to be our most profitable segment as the higher-margin aftermarket business accounted for more than 65% of the sales in the segment.” — David Martin, CFO .
- “We are excited to expand our [Goodyear] rights into new segments…light construction/industrial, ATV, lawn and garden, and golf tires…reaffirming our commitment to the farm tires segment.” — Paul Reitz, CEO .
- “We got some really strong independent data…LSW…amplifies the ROI…to a payback of well under a year for a midsized farm.” — Paul Reitz, CEO .
Q&A Highlights
- Tariff exposure and sourcing: Rubber primarily sourced from West Africa; steel is primarily domestic; OEM contracts include 3–6 month pass-through mechanisms—management expects minimal 2025 tariff impact .
- Visibility: Still below pre-2024 norms but improving; Titan expects better visibility as inventory normalization completes and notes Titan typically leads OEM production cycles for wheels/tires .
- Brazil and regional demand: Brazil remains strong across OE and aftermarket; Europe softer; U.S. received “drop-in” OEM orders in Q1 .
- Aftermarket mix and margins: Consumer aftermarket >65% of segment sales driving margin leadership; aftermarket strategy is central to “one-stop shop” positioning .
- Goodyear licensing expansion: Expected to accelerate sales in Carlstar legacy categories with brand lift and broadened distribution .
Estimates Context
- Q1 2025 revenue beat S&P Global consensus ($490.7M actual vs $464.2M consensus*), while “Primary EPS” missed ($0.01 actual vs $0.055 consensus*) and EBITDA was above consensus ($29–31M actual vs $27.5M consensus*) .
- Q2 2025 guidance (sales $450–$500M; adjusted EBITDA $25–$35M) suggests relative stability QoQ; Street models may need to reflect aftermarket margin mix and minimal tariff impact assumptions .
Values marked with * are from S&P Global.
Key Takeaways for Investors
- Q1 delivered top-line and adjusted EBITDA at the high end of guidance with a revenue beat versus consensus; EPS below consensus reflects mix, lower fixed-cost leverage and an elevated tax rate .
- Aftermarket strength remains the buffer in a soft OEM environment; Consumer’s 19.6% gross margin led segments, and overall gross margin expanded sequentially to 14.0% .
- Tariffs appear manageable near term (<10% of revenue at net negative exposure) with domestic steel and diversified rubber sourcing; guidance embeds minimal tariff impact .
- Working capital investment drove negative FCF in Q1; management targets positive FCF in 2H 2025 as volumes stabilize and receivables normalize .
- Brazil-led Ag recovery and Goodyear brand expansion into new segments, plus LSW penetration into mid-size farms, offer multi-quarter top-line catalysts .
- Q2 guidance implies steady performance; watch for OEM inventory normalization, Brazil demand durability, and Consumer aftermarket mix to sustain margin resilience .
- Balance sheet leverage increased to 3.8x TTM adjusted EBITDA; management prioritizes debt paydown and disciplined capex in 2025 .