NYSE:NRP Natural Resource Partners Q3 2025 Earnings Report $115.44 -2.44 (-2.07%) Closing price 05/6/2026 03:59 PM EasternExtended Trading$115.04 -0.40 (-0.35%) As of 05/6/2026 04:10 PM Eastern Extended trading is trading that happens on electronic markets outside of regular trading hours. This is a fair market value extended hours price provided by Massive. Learn more. ProfileEarnings HistoryForecast Natural Resource Partners EPS ResultsActual EPS$2.28Consensus EPS N/ABeat/MissN/AOne Year Ago EPSN/ANatural Resource Partners Revenue ResultsActual Revenue$49.93 millionExpected RevenueN/ABeat/MissN/AYoY Revenue GrowthN/ANatural Resource Partners Announcement DetailsQuarterQ3 2025Date11/4/2025TimeBefore Market OpensConference Call DateTuesday, November 4, 2025Conference Call Time9:00AM ETConference Call ResourcesConference Call AudioConference Call TranscriptPress Release (8-K)Quarterly Report (10-Q)Earnings HistoryCompany ProfilePowered by Natural Resource Partners Q3 2025 Earnings Call TranscriptProvided by QuartrNovember 4, 2025 ShareLink copied to clipboard.Key Takeaways Positive Sentiment: Strong cash generation and rapid deleveraging: NRP reported $42M of free cash flow in Q3 and $190M LTM, has retired nearly $130M of debt over the past 12 months (leaving ~$70M outstanding) and expects to be positioned to increase distributions once delevered. Negative Sentiment: All three core commodity markets are weak: metallurgical and thermal coal face soft demand and low prices while soda ash is in a "generational bear market," with no near-term catalysts identified to materially improve pricing. Negative Sentiment: Soda ash distributions suspended: Shishajam (a low‑cost producer) paid no distribution this quarter and NRP does not expect distributions to resume for the foreseeable future as cash is being retained for safety and system integrity investments. Negative Sentiment: Carbon‑sequestration leases have been dropped: Oxy and Exxon surrendered leases on NRP’s acreage (leaving none of the 3.5M acres currently leased), underscoring unresolved industry economics, high costs, and regulatory uncertainty for CO2 sequestration revenue. Positive Sentiment: Disciplined capital‑allocation policy and buyback framework: management seeks a "fortress balance sheet" (no permanent debt + $30M cash) before allocating to higher distributions, opportunistic unit repurchases or acquisitions, signaling prudent long‑term stewardship. AI Generated. May Contain Errors.Conference Call Audio Live Call not available Earnings Conference CallNatural Resource Partners Q3 202500:00 / 00:00Speed:1x1.25x1.5x2xTranscript SectionsPresentationParticipantsPresentationSkip to Participants Operator00:00:00Thank you for standing by. My name is Tina, and I will be your conference operator today. At this time, I would like to welcome everyone to the Natural Resource Partners LP. third-quarter 2025 earnings call. All lines have been placed on mute to prevent any background noise. After the speaker's remarks, there will be a question-and-answer session. To ask a question, simply press star one on your telephone keypad. To withdraw your question, press star one again. Thank you. It is now my pleasure to turn the call over to Tiffany Sammis, Investor Relations. Please go ahead. Tiffany SammisHead of Investor Relations at Natural Resource Partners LP00:00:36Thank you. Good morning and welcome to the Natural Resource Partners third-quarter 2025 conference call. Today's call is being webcast, and a replay will be available on our website. Joining me today are Craig Nunez, President and Chief Operating Officer; Chris Zolas, Chief Financial Officer; and Kevin Craig, Executive Vice President. Some of our comments today may include forward-looking statements reflecting NRP's views about future events. These matters involve risks and uncertainties that could cause our actual results to materially differ from our forward-looking statements. These risks are discussed in NRP's Form 10-K and other Securities and Exchange Commission filings. We undertake no obligation to revise or update publicly any forward-looking statements for any reason. Our comments today also include non-GAAP financial measures. Additional details and reconciliations to the most directly comparable GAAP measures are included in our third-quarter press release, which can be found on our website. Tiffany SammisHead of Investor Relations at Natural Resource Partners LP00:01:39I would like to remind everyone that we do not intend to discuss the operations or outlook for any particular core or detailed market fundamentals. Now, I would like to turn the call over to Craig Nunez, our President and Chief Operating Officer. Craig NunezPresident and COO at Natural Resource Partners LP00:01:54Thanks, Tiffany. Good morning, everyone. NRP generated $42 million of free cash flow in the third quarter of 2025 and $190 million of free cash flow over the last 12 months. We continue to generate substantial free cash flow despite significant headwinds for all three of our key commodities: metallurgical coal, thermal coal, and soda ash. Metallurgical coal markets are challenged by slowing global growth and soft steel demand. Thermal coal markets are struggling with muted demand caused by mild weather, cheap natural gas, slowing global growth, and renewable energy adoption. While the prospects for a more accommodating regulatory environment and increased electricity demand from data centers have increased market optimism for thermal coal, we have not yet seen any material support for prices or demand. Craig NunezPresident and COO at Natural Resource Partners LP00:02:47While we acknowledge that these factors offer the potential for a more bullish long-term outlook, we will continue to manage the partnership in accordance with the thesis that North American thermal coal remains in long-term secular decline until we see evidence to the contrary. As we've seen previously, we believe— as we said previously— we believe most coal operators are struggling to make money, with most producing at razor-thin margins and a growing number operating at a loss. We are seeing this play out in the announced results of publicly traded companies and recent bankruptcies of several smaller producers. While we have not identified a catalyst to turn the market around, we continue to believe that the vast majority of our lessees are in better financial shape than in previous downturns. Craig NunezPresident and COO at Natural Resource Partners LP00:03:35We believe these factors, combined with our relatively robust free cash flow generating capability, solid and improving capital structure, and conservative management philosophy, position us well for navigating a very difficult coal market. The soda ash market remains oversupplied due to capacity additions and slowing global growth. International prices are below cash production costs for most producers. While we were early to share publicly our concerns regarding the potential for the supply-demand imbalances now plaguing the market, the depth and potential duration of the current downturn is more significant than we initially expected. We are in a generational bear market for soda ash, and there will be more pain to bear before the situation improves. If there is a silver lining to the cloud hanging over the soda ash market, it is that this dynamic is unsustainable in the long term. Craig NunezPresident and COO at Natural Resource Partners LP00:04:31We expect producers will rationalize supply at some point, but we don't know when or how that will occur. Rebalancing supply and demand will likely take several years before prices return to levels enjoyed historically. As one of the world's lowest-cost producers, ÅžiÅŸecam Wyoming, continues to navigate this downturn well. In addition to aggressively managing costs and inventories, ÅžiÅŸecam is maintaining its focus on safety and system integrity, two areas that are sometimes overlooked during periods of challenging financial results. Our soda ash investment is a long-term asset with durable competitive advantages that will produce an essential global commodity for many years in the future. We are quite pleased that our managing partner is committed to maintaining the long-term integrity of our shared asset even when near-term financial performance is down. Craig NunezPresident and COO at Natural Resource Partners LP00:05:24We did not receive a distribution from ÅžiÅŸecam this quarter after receiving $8 million in distributions during the first half of the year. While we expect ÅžiÅŸecam Wyoming, to remain profitable through the downturn, we do not expect it to resume distributions for the foreseeable future, with cash retained used for investments in safety and system integrity. The carbon-neutral industry continues to struggle. Oxy notified us during the quarter that it was dropping its subsurface CO2 sequestration lease on 65,000 acres of pore space we own in Polk County, Texas. You'll recall that Exxon dropped its CO2 sequestration lease on 75,000 acres we own in Baldwin County, Alabama, last year. As of now, none of our 3.5 million acres of CO2 sequestration pore space is under lease. You've heard me describe these sequestration rights as out-of-the-money call options on greatness. Craig NunezPresident and COO at Natural Resource Partners LP00:06:22They cost us nothing to hold, they never expire, and we benefit if the market for CO2 sequestration goes up. I do not believe our leases were dropped due to any problems associated with our specific acreage. On the contrary, I think the locations leased to Oxy and Exxon are some of the highest-quality CO2 pore space in the Gulf Coast. The entire CO2 sequestration industry remains burdened by high capital and operating costs, insufficient and inadequate revenue streams, and the lack of a consistent regulatory framework. These factors have created formidable economic barriers that operators are either unable or unwilling to overcome. Our call options on sequestration pore space will remain out of the money until and unless these industry challenges are resolved. In conclusion, coal and soda ash prices are down, and we do not see near-term catalysts for market improvement. Craig NunezPresident and COO at Natural Resource Partners LP00:07:18Our coal lessees are operating at or near their cost of production, and our soda ash investment is experiencing the lowest international sales prices in decades. Despite this, NRP continues to generate robust free cash flow and make progress toward our goal of retiring all outstanding debt. Over the past 12 months, we have retired nearly $130 million of debt, with only $70 million of debt remaining as of the end of the quarter. We continue to believe that we will be in a position to increase unit holder distributions in August. However, I caution that the longer we slog through the depths of bear markets for all three of our key commodities, the greater the likelihood that some event occurs that pushes that timing back. Craig NunezPresident and COO at Natural Resource Partners LP00:08:00Rest assured, however, that we will continue to manage the partnership with a conservative mindset in order to protect your investment and be best prepared for negative events that may arise. With that, I'll turn it over to Chris to cover the financials. Chris ZolasCFO at Natural Resource Partners LP00:08:15Thank you, Craig. In the third quarter of 2025, NRP generated $31 million of net income, $41 million of operating cash flow, and $42 million of free cash flow. Of these consolidated amounts, our mineral rights segment generated $41 million of net income, $44 million of operating cash flow, and $45 million of free cash flow. When compared to the prior year third quarter, our mineral rights segment net income remained flat, while operating and free cash flow each decreased $9 million. Decreases were primarily due to weaker metallurgical coal markets resulting in lower sales prices. Regarding our third quarter 2025 met thermal coal royalty mix, metallurgical coal made up approximately 70% of our coal royalty revenues and 50% of our coal royalty sales volumes. Chris ZolasCFO at Natural Resource Partners LP00:09:11For our soda ash segment, net income decreased by $11 million compared to the prior year third quarter, while operating and free cash flow each decreased by $6 million. These decreases were primarily due to lower international sales prices driven by weakened glass demand from the construction and automobile markets, combined with new natural soda ash supply from China. We did not receive a distribution from ÅžiÅŸecam Wyoming, in the third quarter of 2025. We do not expect distributions from ÅžiÅŸecam Wyoming, to resume until soda ash demand rebounds or there is a more significant supply response to this weakened market, most likely from higher-cost synthetic production. Chris ZolasCFO at Natural Resource Partners LP00:09:55Moving to our corporate and financing segment, Q3 2025 net income improved $3 million, and operating cash flow and free cash flow each improved $2 million as compared to the prior year period due to significantly less debt outstanding, resulting in lower interest costs and less cash paid for interest. We used the free cash flow generated from our business segments to repay $32 million of debt during the third quarter, over $70 million through the first nine months of 2025, and we remain on track to accomplish our delevering goals next year. Regarding our quarterly distributions, in August of 2025, we paid the second-quarter distribution of $0.75 per common unit, and today we announced the third quarter 2025 distribution of $0.75 per common unit that will be paid later this month. With that, I'll turn the call back over to our operator for questions. Operator00:10:56As a reminder to ask a question, simply press star one on your telephone keypad. Again, that is star one to ask a question. We'll pause for just a moment to compile the Q&A roster. Our first question comes from the line of Dan Adler. Please go ahead. Operator00:11:19Hi, this is Dan Adler. Thank you for all you're doing for shareholders. My question revolves around leasing for lithium mining in the Smackover region, and if you could provide any information on acreage that has been leased or potential for revenue from that leasing. Thank you. Craig NunezPresident and COO at Natural Resource Partners LP00:11:44Thank you for your call, Dan, and for your question. Yes, we are active in leasing acreage in the Smackover formation for lithium production to multiple lessees. We don't comment on terms of leases and that type of thing. I will say that the activity in the area has been varied from robust to lukewarm at various periods over the last several years. Yes, we're active in the Smackover in southern Arkansas and in northeast Texas. Craig NunezPresident and COO at Natural Resource Partners LP00:12:17Thank you. Craig NunezPresident and COO at Natural Resource Partners LP00:12:21You bet. Operator00:12:24Our next question comes from the line of David Spier with Nitor Capital. Please go ahead. David SpierAnalyst at Nitor Capital Management00:12:32Hi, good morning. David SpierAnalyst at Nitor Capital Management00:12:34morning. Just first a bit of a housekeeping question. Just given the passive nature of the partnership, just the operating and maintenance expense, what goes into those expenses, and is there any ability, given the environment, to reduce that expense line? Chris ZolasCFO at Natural Resource Partners LP00:12:52Sure. Salaries and compensation is a big part of that. We also have a variety of other general corporate costs, insurance, legal, accounting. So there's a variety of general corporate type of costs that flow in there. David SpierAnalyst at Nitor Capital Management00:13:13Those aren't in general and administrative expenses. I'm talking about the operating and maintenance expense line. Chris ZolasCFO at Natural Resource Partners LP00:13:20Sure. We also have those same type of expenses in the operating expense for the mineral rights segment. There are also things such as property taxes, which is a big one, and royalty expenses as well. We have some royalty costs as well that go in there. Craig NunezPresident and COO at Natural Resource Partners LP00:13:39We have a zero-based budgeting approach so that every year the goal is to make the total cost as low as possible rather than simply look at increases of costs from year to year. I won't say that we don't sharpen our pencil whenever times are lean because we do, but the reality is we sharpen our pencil all the time. And we have long-term cost management goals that we follow. David SpierAnalyst at Nitor Capital Management00:14:05Got it. And then just a general question regarding the company's mineral rights. Are the majority of the company's mineral rights specific to certain minerals, or are they general subsurface rights where royalty opportunities exist on anything that comes out of the ground? Just some better insight there would be helpful. Craig NunezPresident and COO at Natural Resource Partners LP00:14:24It is generally for specific minerals. David SpierAnalyst at Nitor Capital Management00:14:29Understood. So with that, are there any opportunities given the growing demand or interest in that gas? Are there any additional production opportunities that might be arising that the partnership didn't previously thought existed over the past year? Chris ZolasCFO at Natural Resource Partners LP00:14:48I'm not sure I understand your question. You referred. David SpierAnalyst at Nitor Capital Management00:14:52Maybe some higher costs. There were some higher cost natural gas plays that the company has mineral rights on that in the past few years didn't seem like a possibility for production where now these plays are now in the money and there's increased interest of producers. Chris ZolasCFO at Natural Resource Partners LP00:15:06In other words, call options moving in the money is what you're describing. David SpierAnalyst at Nitor Capital Management00:15:10Yes. Yes, exactly. Chris ZolasCFO at Natural Resource Partners LP00:15:12The vast majority of our oil and gas mineral rights are in the Haynesville, in north central and northwest Louisiana. That's a pretty active basin right now. So I would say drilling has picked up a bit in the Haynesville. To the extent that it does, we benefit from that. I will say that those numbers, those production amounts, and those revenues that we can receive from oil and gas minerals, they're not as material to the partnership. David SpierAnalyst at Nitor Capital Management00:15:50Got it. Then just regarding capital allocation. Looking at the cash on hand and the debt outstanding, it seems like one, maybe two quarters away from being in a net cash position. Is that the right way to look at it? Chris ZolasCFO at Natural Resource Partners LP00:16:11You're looking at it correctly. As we've said, we believe that we will be in a position where we will have the vast majority of our remaining debt paid down and be able to increase distributions in the third quarter next year. That's the plan and that's the forecast. The issue comes in with, as we continue in this difficult market, are there going to be things that will happen that will change that? We don't know that there will be, but we're just warning everybody that there could be. David SpierAnalyst at Nitor Capital Management00:16:47Got it. Okay. Understood. I appreciate it. Chris ZolasCFO at Natural Resource Partners LP00:16:49You bet. Thanks for your questions. Operator00:16:54Our next question comes from the line of Kenny Ackerman. Please go ahead. Operator00:16:59Hi. Kenny Ackerman. Question. Again regarding capital allocation. I mean, you guys retired the warrants or retired substantial amounts of debt, almost all of it, as was just discussed. What kind of would be the criteria to start unit repurchases? Or I mean, what are the thoughts surrounding that? I know this isn't the first time this has been asked, but just considering you're getting closer and closer to a net cash position. I mean, is there anything that would inspire you guys to repurchase your units, or is there anything prohibiting? I know there's one large owner of the partnership. Just didn't know if unit repurchases were even possible. Chris ZolasCFO at Natural Resource Partners LP00:17:43Let's think of it. Instead of thinking about being in a net cash position, let's think about how we at the company think about our balance sheet and what signals we look for to being able to deploy cash in some way other than just paying down debt. We're looking to establish what we define as an NRP fortress balance sheet. And to us, that means two things. It means, number one, no permanent debt in the capital structure. And permanent debt, we define as debt that we do not have the ability or intent to repay prior to maturity with internally generated cash. And then, in addition to no permanent debt, we want to have $30 million of cash on the balance sheet. And that also means, at the same time, that we'll have our revolving credit facility in place. Chris ZolasCFO at Natural Resource Partners LP00:18:34Once we're in that position, we feel that we have what we believe is a fortress balance sheet, and then we can feel free to allocate capital as we see best. And what are our priorities for allocating capital? Number one, unit holder distributions. Number two, unit repurchases and material discounts to our estimates of intrinsic value. And number three, if they come along, opportunistic acquisitions where we can acquire assets that are within our circle of competence at what we consider to be bargain prices. And there are no impediments to us being able to buy back units other than can we acquire them for a price that we think is a sufficient enough discount to our estimates of intrinsic value to want to do it. Chris ZolasCFO at Natural Resource Partners LP00:19:24Got it. No, makes total sense. Just one follow-up. I mean, can you give any color around what you consider intrinsic value? I mean, just what. I mean, broad question, but just what would the company consider intrinsic value just to get a decent sense of what would kind of qualify for unit repurchases and what wouldn't? Chris ZolasCFO at Natural Resource Partners LP00:19:46No, we're not going to guide on that. Sorry about that. I would encourage you to go back and read our unit holder letters that are published each spring with the annual report with the Form 10-K, especially this most recent one. Each one of them talks about how we think in terms of intrinsic value and the process we use to value the company. Intrinsic value per unit is a very important component of all of our management decisions that we make. We've explained in writing how we go about doing that. We just don't tell you exactly what our assumptions are and what the numbers are that we think are in place. Chris ZolasCFO at Natural Resource Partners LP00:20:31Fair enough. Thank you for the answers. Chris ZolasCFO at Natural Resource Partners LP00:20:34Sure thing. Operator00:20:38Our next question comes from the line of Neil Patel with Sawgrass Beach. Please go ahead. Neil PatelResearch Analyst at Sawgrass Beach00:20:45Thank you. Hey, everyone. Congrats on the progress, especially with the debt paydown to $70 million. It's been quite the journey over the last 10 years. Thanks for the comments on thermal coal. I had a question on that. It seems that every day we're hearing more about data center CapEx being at just very extreme levels. I understand you're not seeing that demand come through to your thermal coal assets yet. If that does next year, is there infrastructure and capacity in place for the producers on your thermal coal properties to scale up, or would that require a lot of additional CapEx on their side? Thank you. Chris ZolasCFO at Natural Resource Partners LP00:21:24Good question. I don't know that we completely know the answer to your question because, as you know, our operators are our operators. We don't operate, and they don't necessarily share everything with us. I can give you my educated guess on it, my best judgment. I do believe that if the increased power demand from data centers that is forecasted to result from all of the CapEx that's now planned over the next five, 10 years, I do believe there will have to be material amounts of capital invested in the thermal coal infrastructure, both to bring new production online and to process it and transport it. I don't know what those dollars are, and I don't know to the extent that that capital would involve mines that are on NRP or on other acreage elsewhere in North America. Does that help? Neil PatelResearch Analyst at Sawgrass Beach00:22:21Yep. Absolutely. Thank you. Chris ZolasCFO at Natural Resource Partners LP00:22:23Thank you. Operator00:22:27With no further questions in queue, I will turn the call back over to Craig Nunez for closing remarks. Craig NunezPresident and COO at Natural Resource Partners LP00:22:34Thank you, operator. Thank you, everyone, for joining our call today. Thank you for your questions. As I look over the list of participants here, the vast majority of you have been with us for quite a while. So thank you for your support over the years. We look forward to talking to you next quarter. Take care. Operator00:22:59Thank you again for joining us today. This does conclude today's presentation. You may now disconnect.Read moreParticipantsExecutivesCraig NunezPresident and COOTiffany SammisHead of Investor RelationsChris ZolasCFOAnalystsDavid SpierAnalyst at Nitor Capital ManagementAnalyst 1Analyst 2Neil PatelResearch Analyst at Sawgrass BeachPowered by Earnings DocumentsEarnings Release(8-K)Quarterly Report(10-Q) Natural Resource Partners Earnings HeadlinesNatural Resource Partners L.P. Common Units (NRP) Q1 2026 Earnings Call TranscriptMay 6 at 5:01 PM | seekingalpha.comNatural Resource Partners L.P. Reports First Quarter 2026 Results and Declares First Quarter 2026 Distribution of $0.75 per Common UnitMay 6 at 6:54 AM | globenewswire.comYour book is insideThe "Sucker's Bet" Most New Options Traders Fall For Most people who try options lose money the same way. They don't know the rules. They don't know what to avoid. And they hand their account to Wall Street on a silver platter. Normally $29.97. Free today. | Profits Run (Ad)Is Natural Resource Partners L.P. (NRP) A Good Stock To Buy Now?April 26, 2026 | insidermonkey.comNatural Resource Partners L.P. Schedules First Quarter 2026 Financial Results Conference CallApril 22, 2026 | quiverquant.comQNatural Resource Partners L.P. Schedules First Quarter 2026 Earnings Conference CallApril 22, 2026 | globenewswire.comSee More Natural Resource Partners Headlines Get Earnings Announcements in your inboxWant to stay updated on the latest earnings announcements and upcoming reports for companies like Natural Resource Partners? Sign up for Earnings360's daily newsletter to receive timely earnings updates on Natural Resource Partners and other key companies, straight to your email. Email Address About Natural Resource PartnersNatural Resource Partners (NYSE:NRP) (NYSE: NRP) is a master limited partnership that acquires and manages royalty and other mineral interests in coal and other natural resources across North America and Australia. The partnership was formed in 2010 as a spin-out from a major U.S. coal producer and is headquartered in Fairmont, West Virginia. Its core business model centers on owning gross proceeds interests, gross royalty proceeds interests and fee minerals, which provide the right to receive a portion of revenues from mining and mineral production without operating the mines directly. NRP’s U.S. portfolio spans the central Appalachian Basin, northern West Virginia, southwest Virginia, Colorado’s North Fork Valley, and northwest New Mexico and Arizona. These assets encompass both thermal and metallurgical coal deposits as well as fee mineral estates that cover precious and base metals. In Australia, the partnership holds an equity interest in a thermal coal development project in Queensland. By structuring its holdings around royalties and flow-through interests, NRP can benefit from multiple revenue streams tied to commodity prices and production levels while avoiding the capital expenditures and operating risks associated with direct mining operations. Throughout its history, Natural Resource Partners has focused on growing its royalty footprint through strategic acquisitions of mineral interests sold by private and public mining companies. The board and management team leverage decades of experience in mineral leasing, asset evaluation and capital markets to identify and secure high-quality interests. This approach aims to deliver stable cash flows over the long term, making NRP an option for investors seeking exposure to coal and mineral royalties without direct operational involvement in resource extraction.View Natural Resource Partners ProfileRead more More Earnings Resources from MarketBeat Earnings Tools Today's Earnings Tomorrow's Earnings Next Week's Earnings Upcoming Earnings Calls Earnings Newsletter Earnings Call Transcripts Earnings Beats & Misses Corporate Guidance Earnings Screener Latest Articles Boarding Passes Now Being Issued for the Ultimate eVTOL ArbitrageDigitalOcean’s AI Surge: How Far Can This Rally Go?Years in the Making, AMD’s Upside Movement Has Just BegunCapital One’s Big Bet Faces Rising Credit RiskWestern Digital: The Storage Behemoth Skyrocketing on AI DemandOld Money, New Tech: Western Union's Crypto RebootHow Williams Companies Is Cashing in on the AI Power Boom Upcoming Earnings Coinbase Global (5/7/2026)Airbnb (5/7/2026)Datadog (5/7/2026)Ferrovial (5/7/2026)Gilead Sciences (5/7/2026)Microchip Technology (5/7/2026)MercadoLibre (5/7/2026)Monster Beverage (5/7/2026)Canadian Natural Resources (5/7/2026)W.W. 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PresentationSkip to Participants Operator00:00:00Thank you for standing by. My name is Tina, and I will be your conference operator today. At this time, I would like to welcome everyone to the Natural Resource Partners LP. third-quarter 2025 earnings call. All lines have been placed on mute to prevent any background noise. After the speaker's remarks, there will be a question-and-answer session. To ask a question, simply press star one on your telephone keypad. To withdraw your question, press star one again. Thank you. It is now my pleasure to turn the call over to Tiffany Sammis, Investor Relations. Please go ahead. Tiffany SammisHead of Investor Relations at Natural Resource Partners LP00:00:36Thank you. Good morning and welcome to the Natural Resource Partners third-quarter 2025 conference call. Today's call is being webcast, and a replay will be available on our website. Joining me today are Craig Nunez, President and Chief Operating Officer; Chris Zolas, Chief Financial Officer; and Kevin Craig, Executive Vice President. Some of our comments today may include forward-looking statements reflecting NRP's views about future events. These matters involve risks and uncertainties that could cause our actual results to materially differ from our forward-looking statements. These risks are discussed in NRP's Form 10-K and other Securities and Exchange Commission filings. We undertake no obligation to revise or update publicly any forward-looking statements for any reason. Our comments today also include non-GAAP financial measures. Additional details and reconciliations to the most directly comparable GAAP measures are included in our third-quarter press release, which can be found on our website. Tiffany SammisHead of Investor Relations at Natural Resource Partners LP00:01:39I would like to remind everyone that we do not intend to discuss the operations or outlook for any particular core or detailed market fundamentals. Now, I would like to turn the call over to Craig Nunez, our President and Chief Operating Officer. Craig NunezPresident and COO at Natural Resource Partners LP00:01:54Thanks, Tiffany. Good morning, everyone. NRP generated $42 million of free cash flow in the third quarter of 2025 and $190 million of free cash flow over the last 12 months. We continue to generate substantial free cash flow despite significant headwinds for all three of our key commodities: metallurgical coal, thermal coal, and soda ash. Metallurgical coal markets are challenged by slowing global growth and soft steel demand. Thermal coal markets are struggling with muted demand caused by mild weather, cheap natural gas, slowing global growth, and renewable energy adoption. While the prospects for a more accommodating regulatory environment and increased electricity demand from data centers have increased market optimism for thermal coal, we have not yet seen any material support for prices or demand. Craig NunezPresident and COO at Natural Resource Partners LP00:02:47While we acknowledge that these factors offer the potential for a more bullish long-term outlook, we will continue to manage the partnership in accordance with the thesis that North American thermal coal remains in long-term secular decline until we see evidence to the contrary. As we've seen previously, we believe— as we said previously— we believe most coal operators are struggling to make money, with most producing at razor-thin margins and a growing number operating at a loss. We are seeing this play out in the announced results of publicly traded companies and recent bankruptcies of several smaller producers. While we have not identified a catalyst to turn the market around, we continue to believe that the vast majority of our lessees are in better financial shape than in previous downturns. Craig NunezPresident and COO at Natural Resource Partners LP00:03:35We believe these factors, combined with our relatively robust free cash flow generating capability, solid and improving capital structure, and conservative management philosophy, position us well for navigating a very difficult coal market. The soda ash market remains oversupplied due to capacity additions and slowing global growth. International prices are below cash production costs for most producers. While we were early to share publicly our concerns regarding the potential for the supply-demand imbalances now plaguing the market, the depth and potential duration of the current downturn is more significant than we initially expected. We are in a generational bear market for soda ash, and there will be more pain to bear before the situation improves. If there is a silver lining to the cloud hanging over the soda ash market, it is that this dynamic is unsustainable in the long term. Craig NunezPresident and COO at Natural Resource Partners LP00:04:31We expect producers will rationalize supply at some point, but we don't know when or how that will occur. Rebalancing supply and demand will likely take several years before prices return to levels enjoyed historically. As one of the world's lowest-cost producers, Şişecam Wyoming, continues to navigate this downturn well. In addition to aggressively managing costs and inventories, Şişecam is maintaining its focus on safety and system integrity, two areas that are sometimes overlooked during periods of challenging financial results. Our soda ash investment is a long-term asset with durable competitive advantages that will produce an essential global commodity for many years in the future. We are quite pleased that our managing partner is committed to maintaining the long-term integrity of our shared asset even when near-term financial performance is down. Craig NunezPresident and COO at Natural Resource Partners LP00:05:24We did not receive a distribution from Şişecam this quarter after receiving $8 million in distributions during the first half of the year. While we expect Şişecam Wyoming, to remain profitable through the downturn, we do not expect it to resume distributions for the foreseeable future, with cash retained used for investments in safety and system integrity. The carbon-neutral industry continues to struggle. Oxy notified us during the quarter that it was dropping its subsurface CO2 sequestration lease on 65,000 acres of pore space we own in Polk County, Texas. You'll recall that Exxon dropped its CO2 sequestration lease on 75,000 acres we own in Baldwin County, Alabama, last year. As of now, none of our 3.5 million acres of CO2 sequestration pore space is under lease. You've heard me describe these sequestration rights as out-of-the-money call options on greatness. Craig NunezPresident and COO at Natural Resource Partners LP00:06:22They cost us nothing to hold, they never expire, and we benefit if the market for CO2 sequestration goes up. I do not believe our leases were dropped due to any problems associated with our specific acreage. On the contrary, I think the locations leased to Oxy and Exxon are some of the highest-quality CO2 pore space in the Gulf Coast. The entire CO2 sequestration industry remains burdened by high capital and operating costs, insufficient and inadequate revenue streams, and the lack of a consistent regulatory framework. These factors have created formidable economic barriers that operators are either unable or unwilling to overcome. Our call options on sequestration pore space will remain out of the money until and unless these industry challenges are resolved. In conclusion, coal and soda ash prices are down, and we do not see near-term catalysts for market improvement. Craig NunezPresident and COO at Natural Resource Partners LP00:07:18Our coal lessees are operating at or near their cost of production, and our soda ash investment is experiencing the lowest international sales prices in decades. Despite this, NRP continues to generate robust free cash flow and make progress toward our goal of retiring all outstanding debt. Over the past 12 months, we have retired nearly $130 million of debt, with only $70 million of debt remaining as of the end of the quarter. We continue to believe that we will be in a position to increase unit holder distributions in August. However, I caution that the longer we slog through the depths of bear markets for all three of our key commodities, the greater the likelihood that some event occurs that pushes that timing back. Craig NunezPresident and COO at Natural Resource Partners LP00:08:00Rest assured, however, that we will continue to manage the partnership with a conservative mindset in order to protect your investment and be best prepared for negative events that may arise. With that, I'll turn it over to Chris to cover the financials. Chris ZolasCFO at Natural Resource Partners LP00:08:15Thank you, Craig. In the third quarter of 2025, NRP generated $31 million of net income, $41 million of operating cash flow, and $42 million of free cash flow. Of these consolidated amounts, our mineral rights segment generated $41 million of net income, $44 million of operating cash flow, and $45 million of free cash flow. When compared to the prior year third quarter, our mineral rights segment net income remained flat, while operating and free cash flow each decreased $9 million. Decreases were primarily due to weaker metallurgical coal markets resulting in lower sales prices. Regarding our third quarter 2025 met thermal coal royalty mix, metallurgical coal made up approximately 70% of our coal royalty revenues and 50% of our coal royalty sales volumes. Chris ZolasCFO at Natural Resource Partners LP00:09:11For our soda ash segment, net income decreased by $11 million compared to the prior year third quarter, while operating and free cash flow each decreased by $6 million. These decreases were primarily due to lower international sales prices driven by weakened glass demand from the construction and automobile markets, combined with new natural soda ash supply from China. We did not receive a distribution from Şişecam Wyoming, in the third quarter of 2025. We do not expect distributions from Şişecam Wyoming, to resume until soda ash demand rebounds or there is a more significant supply response to this weakened market, most likely from higher-cost synthetic production. Chris ZolasCFO at Natural Resource Partners LP00:09:55Moving to our corporate and financing segment, Q3 2025 net income improved $3 million, and operating cash flow and free cash flow each improved $2 million as compared to the prior year period due to significantly less debt outstanding, resulting in lower interest costs and less cash paid for interest. We used the free cash flow generated from our business segments to repay $32 million of debt during the third quarter, over $70 million through the first nine months of 2025, and we remain on track to accomplish our delevering goals next year. Regarding our quarterly distributions, in August of 2025, we paid the second-quarter distribution of $0.75 per common unit, and today we announced the third quarter 2025 distribution of $0.75 per common unit that will be paid later this month. With that, I'll turn the call back over to our operator for questions. Operator00:10:56As a reminder to ask a question, simply press star one on your telephone keypad. Again, that is star one to ask a question. We'll pause for just a moment to compile the Q&A roster. Our first question comes from the line of Dan Adler. Please go ahead. Operator00:11:19Hi, this is Dan Adler. Thank you for all you're doing for shareholders. My question revolves around leasing for lithium mining in the Smackover region, and if you could provide any information on acreage that has been leased or potential for revenue from that leasing. Thank you. Craig NunezPresident and COO at Natural Resource Partners LP00:11:44Thank you for your call, Dan, and for your question. Yes, we are active in leasing acreage in the Smackover formation for lithium production to multiple lessees. We don't comment on terms of leases and that type of thing. I will say that the activity in the area has been varied from robust to lukewarm at various periods over the last several years. Yes, we're active in the Smackover in southern Arkansas and in northeast Texas. Craig NunezPresident and COO at Natural Resource Partners LP00:12:17Thank you. Craig NunezPresident and COO at Natural Resource Partners LP00:12:21You bet. Operator00:12:24Our next question comes from the line of David Spier with Nitor Capital. Please go ahead. David SpierAnalyst at Nitor Capital Management00:12:32Hi, good morning. David SpierAnalyst at Nitor Capital Management00:12:34morning. Just first a bit of a housekeeping question. Just given the passive nature of the partnership, just the operating and maintenance expense, what goes into those expenses, and is there any ability, given the environment, to reduce that expense line? Chris ZolasCFO at Natural Resource Partners LP00:12:52Sure. Salaries and compensation is a big part of that. We also have a variety of other general corporate costs, insurance, legal, accounting. So there's a variety of general corporate type of costs that flow in there. David SpierAnalyst at Nitor Capital Management00:13:13Those aren't in general and administrative expenses. I'm talking about the operating and maintenance expense line. Chris ZolasCFO at Natural Resource Partners LP00:13:20Sure. We also have those same type of expenses in the operating expense for the mineral rights segment. There are also things such as property taxes, which is a big one, and royalty expenses as well. We have some royalty costs as well that go in there. Craig NunezPresident and COO at Natural Resource Partners LP00:13:39We have a zero-based budgeting approach so that every year the goal is to make the total cost as low as possible rather than simply look at increases of costs from year to year. I won't say that we don't sharpen our pencil whenever times are lean because we do, but the reality is we sharpen our pencil all the time. And we have long-term cost management goals that we follow. David SpierAnalyst at Nitor Capital Management00:14:05Got it. And then just a general question regarding the company's mineral rights. Are the majority of the company's mineral rights specific to certain minerals, or are they general subsurface rights where royalty opportunities exist on anything that comes out of the ground? Just some better insight there would be helpful. Craig NunezPresident and COO at Natural Resource Partners LP00:14:24It is generally for specific minerals. David SpierAnalyst at Nitor Capital Management00:14:29Understood. So with that, are there any opportunities given the growing demand or interest in that gas? Are there any additional production opportunities that might be arising that the partnership didn't previously thought existed over the past year? Chris ZolasCFO at Natural Resource Partners LP00:14:48I'm not sure I understand your question. You referred. David SpierAnalyst at Nitor Capital Management00:14:52Maybe some higher costs. There were some higher cost natural gas plays that the company has mineral rights on that in the past few years didn't seem like a possibility for production where now these plays are now in the money and there's increased interest of producers. Chris ZolasCFO at Natural Resource Partners LP00:15:06In other words, call options moving in the money is what you're describing. David SpierAnalyst at Nitor Capital Management00:15:10Yes. Yes, exactly. Chris ZolasCFO at Natural Resource Partners LP00:15:12The vast majority of our oil and gas mineral rights are in the Haynesville, in north central and northwest Louisiana. That's a pretty active basin right now. So I would say drilling has picked up a bit in the Haynesville. To the extent that it does, we benefit from that. I will say that those numbers, those production amounts, and those revenues that we can receive from oil and gas minerals, they're not as material to the partnership. David SpierAnalyst at Nitor Capital Management00:15:50Got it. Then just regarding capital allocation. Looking at the cash on hand and the debt outstanding, it seems like one, maybe two quarters away from being in a net cash position. Is that the right way to look at it? Chris ZolasCFO at Natural Resource Partners LP00:16:11You're looking at it correctly. As we've said, we believe that we will be in a position where we will have the vast majority of our remaining debt paid down and be able to increase distributions in the third quarter next year. That's the plan and that's the forecast. The issue comes in with, as we continue in this difficult market, are there going to be things that will happen that will change that? We don't know that there will be, but we're just warning everybody that there could be. David SpierAnalyst at Nitor Capital Management00:16:47Got it. Okay. Understood. I appreciate it. Chris ZolasCFO at Natural Resource Partners LP00:16:49You bet. Thanks for your questions. Operator00:16:54Our next question comes from the line of Kenny Ackerman. Please go ahead. Operator00:16:59Hi. Kenny Ackerman. Question. Again regarding capital allocation. I mean, you guys retired the warrants or retired substantial amounts of debt, almost all of it, as was just discussed. What kind of would be the criteria to start unit repurchases? Or I mean, what are the thoughts surrounding that? I know this isn't the first time this has been asked, but just considering you're getting closer and closer to a net cash position. I mean, is there anything that would inspire you guys to repurchase your units, or is there anything prohibiting? I know there's one large owner of the partnership. Just didn't know if unit repurchases were even possible. Chris ZolasCFO at Natural Resource Partners LP00:17:43Let's think of it. Instead of thinking about being in a net cash position, let's think about how we at the company think about our balance sheet and what signals we look for to being able to deploy cash in some way other than just paying down debt. We're looking to establish what we define as an NRP fortress balance sheet. And to us, that means two things. It means, number one, no permanent debt in the capital structure. And permanent debt, we define as debt that we do not have the ability or intent to repay prior to maturity with internally generated cash. And then, in addition to no permanent debt, we want to have $30 million of cash on the balance sheet. And that also means, at the same time, that we'll have our revolving credit facility in place. Chris ZolasCFO at Natural Resource Partners LP00:18:34Once we're in that position, we feel that we have what we believe is a fortress balance sheet, and then we can feel free to allocate capital as we see best. And what are our priorities for allocating capital? Number one, unit holder distributions. Number two, unit repurchases and material discounts to our estimates of intrinsic value. And number three, if they come along, opportunistic acquisitions where we can acquire assets that are within our circle of competence at what we consider to be bargain prices. And there are no impediments to us being able to buy back units other than can we acquire them for a price that we think is a sufficient enough discount to our estimates of intrinsic value to want to do it. Chris ZolasCFO at Natural Resource Partners LP00:19:24Got it. No, makes total sense. Just one follow-up. I mean, can you give any color around what you consider intrinsic value? I mean, just what. I mean, broad question, but just what would the company consider intrinsic value just to get a decent sense of what would kind of qualify for unit repurchases and what wouldn't? Chris ZolasCFO at Natural Resource Partners LP00:19:46No, we're not going to guide on that. Sorry about that. I would encourage you to go back and read our unit holder letters that are published each spring with the annual report with the Form 10-K, especially this most recent one. Each one of them talks about how we think in terms of intrinsic value and the process we use to value the company. Intrinsic value per unit is a very important component of all of our management decisions that we make. We've explained in writing how we go about doing that. We just don't tell you exactly what our assumptions are and what the numbers are that we think are in place. Chris ZolasCFO at Natural Resource Partners LP00:20:31Fair enough. Thank you for the answers. Chris ZolasCFO at Natural Resource Partners LP00:20:34Sure thing. Operator00:20:38Our next question comes from the line of Neil Patel with Sawgrass Beach. Please go ahead. Neil PatelResearch Analyst at Sawgrass Beach00:20:45Thank you. Hey, everyone. Congrats on the progress, especially with the debt paydown to $70 million. It's been quite the journey over the last 10 years. Thanks for the comments on thermal coal. I had a question on that. It seems that every day we're hearing more about data center CapEx being at just very extreme levels. I understand you're not seeing that demand come through to your thermal coal assets yet. If that does next year, is there infrastructure and capacity in place for the producers on your thermal coal properties to scale up, or would that require a lot of additional CapEx on their side? Thank you. Chris ZolasCFO at Natural Resource Partners LP00:21:24Good question. I don't know that we completely know the answer to your question because, as you know, our operators are our operators. We don't operate, and they don't necessarily share everything with us. I can give you my educated guess on it, my best judgment. I do believe that if the increased power demand from data centers that is forecasted to result from all of the CapEx that's now planned over the next five, 10 years, I do believe there will have to be material amounts of capital invested in the thermal coal infrastructure, both to bring new production online and to process it and transport it. I don't know what those dollars are, and I don't know to the extent that that capital would involve mines that are on NRP or on other acreage elsewhere in North America. Does that help? Neil PatelResearch Analyst at Sawgrass Beach00:22:21Yep. Absolutely. Thank you. Chris ZolasCFO at Natural Resource Partners LP00:22:23Thank you. Operator00:22:27With no further questions in queue, I will turn the call back over to Craig Nunez for closing remarks. Craig NunezPresident and COO at Natural Resource Partners LP00:22:34Thank you, operator. Thank you, everyone, for joining our call today. Thank you for your questions. As I look over the list of participants here, the vast majority of you have been with us for quite a while. So thank you for your support over the years. We look forward to talking to you next quarter. Take care. Operator00:22:59Thank you again for joining us today. This does conclude today's presentation. You may now disconnect.Read moreParticipantsExecutivesCraig NunezPresident and COOTiffany SammisHead of Investor RelationsChris ZolasCFOAnalystsDavid SpierAnalyst at Nitor Capital ManagementAnalyst 1Analyst 2Neil PatelResearch Analyst at Sawgrass BeachPowered by