NYSE:ECVT Ecovyst Q1 2025 Earnings Report $7.06 -0.16 (-2.15%) Closing price 05/21/2025 03:59 PM EasternExtended Trading$7.06 -0.01 (-0.14%) As of 05/21/2025 04:20 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 Polygon.io. Learn more. Earnings HistoryForecast Ecovyst EPS ResultsActual EPS$0.01Consensus EPS -$0.03Beat/MissBeat by +$0.04One Year Ago EPS$0.04Ecovyst Revenue ResultsActual Revenue$162.20 millionExpected Revenue$168.43 millionBeat/MissMissed by -$6.23 millionYoY Revenue Growth+1.10%Ecovyst Announcement DetailsQuarterQ1 2025Date5/1/2025TimeBefore Market OpensConference Call DateThursday, May 1, 2025Conference Call Time11:00AM ETUpcoming EarningsEcovyst's Q2 2025 earnings is scheduled for Thursday, August 7, 2025, with a conference call scheduled on Thursday, July 31, 2025 at 11:00 AM ET. Check back for transcripts, audio, and key financial metrics as they become available.Conference Call ResourcesConference Call AudioConference Call TranscriptSlide DeckPress Release (8-K)Quarterly Report (10-Q)Earnings HistoryCompany ProfileSlide DeckFull Screen Slide DeckPowered by Ecovyst Q1 2025 Earnings Call TranscriptProvided by QuartrMay 1, 2025 ShareLink copied to clipboard.PresentationSkip to Participants Operator00:00:00Good morning. My name is Madison, and I will be your conference operator today. Welcome to the ECOVIST First Quarter twenty twenty five Earnings Call and Webcast. Operator00:00:09Please note, today's call is being recorded and should run approximately one hour. Currently, all participants have been placed in a listen only mode to prevent any background noise. After the speakers' remarks, there will be a question and answer period. I would now like to hand the conference over to Gene Shiels, Director of Investor Relations. Please go ahead. Gene ShielsDirector of Investor Relation at Ecovyst00:00:46Thank you, operator. Good morning, and welcome to Ecovist's first quarter twenty twenty five earnings call. With me on the call this morning are Kurt Bidding, EcoVist's Chief Executive Officer and Mike Fian, EcoVist's Chief Financial Officer. Following our prepared remarks, we'll take your questions. Please note that some of the information shared today is forward looking information, including information about the company's financial and operating performance, strategies, our anticipated end use demand trends and our 2025 quarterly and full year financial outlook. Gene ShielsDirector of Investor Relation at Ecovyst00:01:22This information is subject to risks and uncertainties that could cause the actual results and implementation of the company's plans to vary materially. Any forward looking information shared today speaks only as of this date. These risks are discussed in our filings with the SEC. Reconciliations of non GAAP financial measures mentioned in today's call with their corresponding GAAP measures can be found in this morning's earnings release and in presentation materials posted in the Investors section of our website at ecovist.com. I'll now turn the call over to Kurt. Gene ShielsDirector of Investor Relation at Ecovyst00:01:57Thank you, Gene, Kurt BittingCEO & Director at Ecovyst00:01:59and good morning. Our results for the first quarter came in ahead of our expectations and provided a solid start to the year, reflecting the continued resilience of our core and industrial businesses. At the top line, Ecoservices sales were up modestly and in line with our expectations given the heavy turnaround activity that we previewed during the fourth quarter call. Sales were lower as anticipated for regen and virgin sulfuric acid volume associated with turnarounds at our sites as well as customer facilities. For advanced silicas, sales were in line with the prior year, driven by higher niche custom catalysts, while sales of advanced silicas used in the production of polyethylene were lower as customers pulled orders into the fourth quarter of twenty twenty four. Kurt BittingCEO & Director at Ecovyst00:02:47Sales in the Zeolyst joint venture exceeded our expectations on favorable hydrocracking and specialty catalyst timing. Adjusted EBITDA for the Kurt BittingCEO & Director at Ecovyst00:03:09While lower than year ago quarter, this was largely due to the anticipated implications of turnaround activity for ECO Services. As we move into the second quarter and with the majority of turnaround activity and costs behind us, we expect higher volume with favorable contractual pricing within ECO Services driven by sequential growth in regeneration volume expected as we move into the summer driving season. As Mike will highlight in a moment, with historical stability of Eco Services and our other businesses, we continue to expect strong cash generation this year, which would provide for optionality as we look to invest in growth initiatives and consider other capital allocation priorities. While the first quarter adjusted free cash flow reflected factors including lower dividends from the Xeolus joint venture due to timing and planned higher CapEx associated with our ongoing Kansas City expansion, we expect stronger cash generation over the balance of the year. This is consistent with our performance over the prior two years where we have generated over $150,000,000 in adjusted free cash flow in what we believe are some of the most challenging environments for the chemical producers in recent memory. Kurt BittingCEO & Director at Ecovyst00:04:27Specifically, with regard allocation, we believe that our current valuation and share price represents a significant disconnect from the intrinsic value of our business. ECOVIS has demonstrated the ability to generate cash through all types of cycles. We believe this track record of cash generation and the recent extension of our credit facilities enables ECOVIS to maintain a flexible and opportunistic posture in regards to capital allocation. Given this, we believe that opportunistic share repurchases provide a path for value creation for our shareholders. Our current share repurchase authorization has two thirty million dollars remaining. Kurt BittingCEO & Director at Ecovyst00:05:09Over the course of the second quarter, we expect to allocate up to $30,000,000 of the remaining share repurchase authorization to opportunistically repurchase shares with the potential for further opportunistic repurchases in the third and fourth quarters. ECOVIS' strong historical cash generation has enabled us to maintain a flexible and returns focused approach to capital allocation. Our current focus on share repurchases is driven by confidence in our ability to fund our growth investments and a strong conviction that our current valuation is not indicative of the quality, profitability or historical resilience of our business, nor is it reflective of our future growth prospects. I also want to emphasize that our expectation to opportunistically repurchase shares has no relationship to or connection with the timing of or anticipated outcome of the ongoing strategic review of our Advanced Materials and Catalysts segment and that any repurchase activity will be conducted in a manner consistent with the rules set forth by the SEC. Leverage reduction remains a high priority for ECOVIS, but we believe that any concerns about our headline leverage are mitigated by the realities of our capital structure and cash generation outlook. Kurt BittingCEO & Director at Ecovyst00:06:31Last year, we refinanced our term loan credit facility, extending the maturity to 02/1931 and reducing the interest rate. And earlier this year, we also took advantage of favorable lending conditions to again reduce the interest rate. The bottom line is that we believe the cash generation capability of our business supports our current debt structure and leverage profile while providing significant flexibility to fund growth projects and other capital allocation priorities. As we turn to Slide five, I want to provide our current assessment of direct tariff implications for ECOVIST. Our Ecoservices segment accounts for approximately 75 of our total sales. Kurt BittingCEO & Director at Ecovyst00:07:17With less than 5% representing sales to Mexico and Canada, the business is U. S.-centric as well as service oriented. The service is not currently subject to tariffs. Moreover, sulfur and sulfuric acid are also currently exempt from tariffs under the USMCA. As such, we see no direct tariff impact of any significance for ECO Services. Kurt BittingCEO & Director at Ecovyst00:07:41For our Advanced Materials and Catalysts segment, we believe that we will have minimal exposure related to the incremental direct tariffs estimating an impact on a full year adjusted EBITDA in the range of 2,000,000 to $3,000,000 As a global business, Advanced Materials and Catalysts has raw materials and finished products which move around the globe. However, the vast majority of our raw materials consumed at our Kansas City site are either sourced within The U. S. Or are currently subject to special tariff exemptions. In addition, our sales to customers based in China are mainly supplied from The U. Kurt BittingCEO & Director at Ecovyst00:08:17K. And Korea with no expected incremental U. S. Tariffs. We are actively working to mitigate any incremental tariff exposure, including passing through tariff costs where contracts allow. Kurt BittingCEO & Director at Ecovyst00:08:30As we turn to Slide seven, I'll provide an update on our near term demand outlook. Overall, our outlook has not changed materially from the view we shared in late February. For Eco Services, we see high refinery utilization and stable gasoline demand continuing to support our regeneration services business. As a reminder, our regeneration services support our refining customers' production of alkylid, a critical gasoline blending component. The economics of alkylid production and the importance of our regeneration services are affected by overall refining margins. Kurt BittingCEO & Director at Ecovyst00:09:04In fact, the value of alkylate to our refining customers becomes even more important when refining margins are under pressure. We continue to expect higher sales of virgin sulfuric acid in the second half of this year due to increased mining demand. We see the mining sector showing strong demand for sulfuric acid, driven by high global copper demand and supportive copper prices. We also anticipate higher lead acid battery demand with customers' expansion slated to come online in the second half of the year. For virgin sulfuric acid sales into the nylon end use, our customers have not signaled any significant change in near term demand outlook. Kurt BittingCEO & Director at Ecovyst00:09:45However, we remain mindful of the potential for softer demand across our industrial end use exposures. For our Chem 32 catalyst activation business, utilization remains high. We continue to see strong demand, which supports the ongoing capacity expansion at our Orange, Texas site. Turning to Advanced Silicas. We entered the year with an expectation that our polyethylene catalyst sales would continue to outpace global demand growth. Kurt BittingCEO & Director at Ecovyst00:10:13We believe we remain well positioned with significant exposure to The U. S. And Middle East, where producers remain cost competitive with favorable feedstock and energy costs. However, the ongoing ambiguity regarding tariffs and their effects on cost structures is causing short term uncertainty. We are closely monitoring how trade negotiations will influence global polyethylene flows, utilization rates and catalyst sales. Kurt BittingCEO & Director at Ecovyst00:10:40We believe that prolonged tariff uncertainty could result in loader utilization rates and ultimately lower catalyst demand from our customers. We do continue to expect that long term growth in polyethylene demand will continue to translate into demand for our catalyst materials. This is supported by the ongoing capacity expansion in Kansas City, which will serve customer capacity additions coming online in 2026 around the world. Aligned with our emerging growth markets, we continue observing substantial engagement with technology leaders in biocatalysis applications. Many of these biocatalysis initiatives are presently in the pilot and scale up stages, which is promising and provides confidence that our new launches will be successful. Kurt BittingCEO & Director at Ecovyst00:11:24As with any new business activities, the timing of the sales is difficult to exactly predict. Within the Zeolyst joint venture, we still project sales of catalysts used in the production of sustainable fuels to be flat to slightly up this year. For sales of catalysts into emission control applications, we expect 2025 sales to be moderately down. We continue to project an increase in both hydrocracking catalyst sales and sales of specialty catalysts this year. We had favorable hydrocracking sales in the first quarter, and we have a strong order book for the balance of the year. Kurt BittingCEO & Director at Ecovyst00:11:57In fact, we now see potential upside in hydrocracking catalyst sales this year, which we believe can offset any softer sales in advanced silicas. I'll now turn the call over to Mike, who will review our first quarter results in more detail. Mike FeehanCFO at Ecovyst00:12:13Thank you, Kurt. Good morning. Our stronger than anticipated first quarter results were largely driven by the favorable sales timing within the Zeolyst joint venture that Kurt referenced. Mike FeehanCFO at Ecovyst00:12:25While adjusted EBITDA for Eco Services came in toward the lower end of our guidance range, we saw a favorable customer driven shift in sales timing into the first quarter for hydrocracking and specialty catalyst, helping drive more favorable results in the quarter compared to our initial guidance. Total sales for the first quarter, including our proportionate 50% share of sales from the Zielus joint venture, were $200,000,000 up nearly 9% with sales of Eco Services and Advanced Silicas each up 1% and sales for the Zielus joint venture up 60%. Adjusted EBITDA for the first quarter was $39,000,000 led by the higher volume in the Zielis joint venture, largely offset by lower earnings in Eco Services related to the higher planned turnaround costs and lower sales volume associated with turnaround activity. Turning to Slide 10, I'll highlight the major components of the change in adjusted EBITDA for the first quarter. Sulfur costs increased approximately $7,000,000 quarter over quarter, which were passed through in price, resulting in no material impact to adjusted EBITDA. Mike FeehanCFO at Ecovyst00:13:41The $2,000,000 unfavorable net price impact when combining price and variable cost was primarily driven by the timing and contractual pass through of certain costs, including energy and other index costs within ECO Services. Volume and mix were favorable driven by the higher sales volume in the Zielis joint venture, partially offset by lower volume in ECO Services as a result of the turnaround activity at our sites and our customers' facilities. The remaining other component primarily represents increased manufacturing costs in Eco Services associated with planned turnaround costs, less favorable absorption of fixed costs associated with inventory timing and general inflation. I'll now turn to segment highlights in the first quarter, starting with Eco Services. Sales of $143,000,000 were up 1% compared to the first quarter of twenty twenty four. Mike FeehanCFO at Ecovyst00:14:43Included in the period over period change in sales was approximately $7,000,000 of higher pricing associated with the pass through of higher sulfur costs as well as favorable contractual pricing services. This was partially offset by the pass through of lower energy and other index costs. These price factors were largely offset by lower sales volume related to the higher turnaround activity during the quarter at our sites as well as our customers' facilities. Adjusted EBITDA was $29,000,000 compared to $42,000,000 in the year ago quarter. The lower adjusted EBITDA reflects approximately $8,000,000 associated with higher manufacturing costs associated with planned turnarounds, the timing of fixed cost absorption and general inflation, approximately $3,000,000 of lower sales volume and approximately $2,000,000 of unfavorable net pricing on the timing and contractual pass through of certain costs. Mike FeehanCFO at Ecovyst00:15:48Within our Advanced Materials and Catalysts segment, sales for Advanced Silicas were $19,000,000 with higher sales of niche custom catalysts, largely offset by lower sales of advanced silicas used in the production of polyethylene as customers pulled orders into the fourth quarter of twenty twenty four. Our proportionate 50% share from of sales from the Zeolyst joint venture were up $14,000,000 with higher sales of hydrocracking and specialty catalysts more than offsetting lower sales of materials used in emission control applications and the timing of sales into customized catalyst applications. First quarter sales from the Xelis joint venture were higher than previously anticipated due to customer driven sales timing. As our overall full year expectations for Advanced Materials and Catalyst have not changed, we have rebalanced our view of sales timing for the remainder of the year, and I'll provide more detail on our expectations by quarter in a few minutes. First quarter adjusted EBITDA was $17,000,000 up $6,000,000 primarily due to the higher sales volume within the Zielus joint venture. Mike FeehanCFO at Ecovyst00:17:07Switching over to cash and leverage on the next slide. On a full year basis, we still expect to generate adjusted free cash flow of 60,000,000 to $80,000,000 However, due to the expected timing of dividends from the Zielis joint venture and the higher planned capital expenditures, including the ongoing capacity expansion in Kansas City, our adjusted free cash flow was a use of $13,000,000 for the first quarter. We ended the first quarter with $127,000,000 of cash and our total liquidity was $2.00 $1,000,000 including availability under our recently amended and extended ABL facility. We ended the quarter with a net debt ratio of 3.2 times, up slightly from the year end driven by lower adjusted EBITDA on a trailing twelve month basis. Previously noted, we expect to close the acquisition of the Cornerstone sulfuric acid assets in the second quarter, funding the $35,000,000 acquisition through cash on hand. Mike FeehanCFO at Ecovyst00:18:14As Kirk discussed, in light of our current share price and associated valuation, we firmly believe that opportunistic share repurchases are a prudent and value enhancing use of capital. And while taking a more opportunistic approach to share repurchases will likely defer near term achievement of our target leverage ratio of two to 2.5 times, we would anticipate ending 2025 with the leverage ratio consistent with the end of the prior year of around three times. In addition, we continue to be extremely comfortable with our current capital structure and leverage profile given the resilient nature of our businesses, our projected cash generation and the fact that we refinanced our term loan last year, reducing the interest rate and extending the maturity to 02/1931 and then further reducing the interest rate by another 25 basis points through a repricing of the term loan earlier this year. I will now shift to a discussion of our outlook for the remainder of 2025. Our first quarter results provided a strong start to the year compared to our original expectations. Mike FeehanCFO at Ecovyst00:19:28While the fundamentals of our business remain strong and we expect our core businesses to remain stable, given the volatile macroeconomic environment, we are cautious about the potential for weaker demand in industrial end uses and for near term softness in utilization rates for polyethylene producers. In terms of full year guidance, we now expect our sales to be higher by $30,000,000 in a range of $785,000,000 to $845,000,000 driven by an increase in the estimated pass through effect related to higher expected sulfur costs for 2025. Excluding the higher estimated pass through effect of higher sulfur costs on sales, our outlook for ECO services remains unchanged. For Advanced Silicas, we continue to expect sales growth over 2024 levels. While we previously guided to higher sales of polyethylene catalyst to outpace global demand growth, we remain cautious on the potential secondary effects of tariffs and the macroeconomic conditions on polyethylene. Mike FeehanCFO at Ecovyst00:20:42With the Zeelist joint venture, although first quarter sales were higher than originally anticipated due to a positive shift in sales timing, our full year view has not changed, and we are maintaining our previously communicated guidance ranges. However, we have observed further positivity in the sales of hydrocracking catalyst, potentially providing additional upside to our current forecast and offsetting any softer sales in advanced silicas. Our original guidance range for 2025 incorporated what we believe to be an appropriate level of conservatism. Taking into consideration the effect of increased tariffs, we are maintaining our prior guidance for adjusted EBITDA, expecting it to be in the range of $238,000,000 to $258,000,000 for the year. I'll note that our full year guidance does not include any contribution from the pending acquisition of the Cornerstone sulfuric acid assets. Mike FeehanCFO at Ecovyst00:21:45Assuming a second quarter close, while the acquisition is expected to provide incremental sales and contribution margin for the balance of the year, we anticipate incurring additional costs for integration and upgrading the facility, including a potential turnaround and additional capital expenditures. As such, we do not expect the earnings from this acquisition to be meaningful in 2025. We do expect incremental adjusted EBITDA contribution of the acquired assets will be more material beginning in 2026. I'll now turn to specific guidance for the second quarter. We expect second quarter adjusted EBITDA for ECO Services to fall in the range of $47,000,000 to $53,000,000 The sequential increase from the first quarter reflects higher projected sales volume associated with lower turnaround activity and seasonally stronger demand for regeneration services as we move into the summer driving season. Mike FeehanCFO at Ecovyst00:22:48For Advanced Materials and Catalysts, given the positive shift in sales timing that benefited our first quarter results, with some sales pulled forward from the second quarter into the first quarter, we now expect second quarter adjusted EBITDA to be in the range of between 6,000,000 to $10,000,000 Assuming unallocated corporate expense of approximately $8,000,000 for the second quarter, we expect consolidated adjusted EBITDA to be in the range of $45,000,000 to $55,000,000 Slide 15 provides detailed commentary on the directional guidance for the third and fourth quarters. I'll highlight a few key points. As discussed on our year end call, we anticipate our earnings to be more heavily weighted towards the second half of the year. We expect the third quarter of twenty twenty five to represent the peak quarter for both Eco Services and Advanced Materials and Catalysts, led by strong year over year volume growth for regeneration services and favorable contractual pricing in Eco Services and higher expected sales of hydrocracking catalyst and sales of materials used in sustainable fuel production in Advanced Materials and Catalyst compared to the third quarter of twenty twenty four. Looking at the fourth quarter, in Eco Services, we expect regeneration services and virgin sulfuric acid volume to be in line with the fourth quarter of twenty twenty four, but with stronger pricing for both, driven by contractual price increases and higher demand in certain end uses. Mike FeehanCFO at Ecovyst00:24:28For Advanced Materials and Catalysts, we expect stronger sales in Advanced Silicas, primarily for niche custom catalysts, including biocatalysis applications, but expect lower sales within the Zeolyst joint venture, reflective of order timing. In addition, included in our earnings In in presentation, we have provided a schedule reflecting planned turnarounds by quarter through 2026. Turnarounds for individual units are often performed every eighteen months that can vary depending upon Mike FeehanCFO at Ecovyst00:25:01several factors, including coordinating the timing with our customers' planned turnarounds. And while the scope and cost can vary for each, this schedule reflects our current estimate of the number of units requiring turnarounds by quarter. I'll now turn the call back to Kurt for some closing remarks. Kurt BittingCEO & Director at Ecovyst00:25:21Thank you, Mike. The challenging environment our industry faced in 2024 has continued into 2025, with perhaps more near term uncertainty presented by the recent escalation of tariffs. Kurt BittingCEO & Director at Ecovyst00:25:33However, we believe ECOVIS remains well positioned to deliver in the current environment. Although we see potential for near term softness in industrial demand related to the secondary impacts from the tariffs, the longer term demand fundamentals for the majority of end uses we serve remains intact. For Ecoservices, we continue to project growth in 2025, driven by the aforementioned high refinery utilization and favorable demand in mining. For our Advanced Materials and Catalysts segment, we have a solid start to the year with strong sales of hydrocracking and specialty catalyst. Regarding the current tariffs, we anticipate $2,000,000 to $3,000,000 in direct EBITDA impacts. Kurt BittingCEO & Director at Ecovyst00:26:14Additionally, our sales of advanced silicas may face near term softer demand fundamentals resulting from slower macroeconomic conditions and customer timing. However, we currently observe the potential for upside in hydro cracking catalyst sales, which we believe will balance our full year expectations for this segment. Overall, we currently believe both segments are positioned to deliver on their financial objectives for the year. As a result, we are maintaining our prior guidance range for full year 2025 adjusted EBITDA. In our fourth quarter earnings call, I stated that in 2025, we would maintain our focus on capturing growth opportunities and on delivering value for our shareholders. Kurt BittingCEO & Director at Ecovyst00:26:58I believe we are demonstrating progress on these commitments. Last month, we announced an agreement to acquire the sulfuric acid assets of Cornerstone Chemical Company. We believe the acquisition will significantly enhance Ecoservices' Gulf Coast network and provide a significant addition to our existing capacity on an extremely attractive cost basis that will enable us to serve our customers' future growth needs for both virgin sulfuric acid and for regeneration services. We expect the acquisition to close this quarter, and we look forward to welcoming the Cornerstone team to ECOVIST. In terms of creating value for our shareholders, the strategic review of our Advanced Materials and Catalysts segment is underway, and we still expect the process to run through midyear. Kurt BittingCEO & Director at Ecovyst00:27:45As we indicated in late February, we will share more when the process is complete or when we determine that further disclosure is required beneficial. Lastly, we believe ECOVIS remains well positioned for growth. We are a leading provider across the varied end uses we serve. We have resilient businesses with attractive margins, strong cash generation and clear strategic direction. Given our ongoing commitment to enhancing shareholder value and in light of our current valuation, we believe opportunistic share repurchases will result in value creation for our shareholders. Kurt BittingCEO & Director at Ecovyst00:28:23At this time, I will ask the operator to open the line for questions. Operator00:28:28Thank And we will take our first question from John McNulty with BMO Capital Markets. Please go ahead. John McNultyMD - Chemicals Analyst at BMO Capital Markets00:28:49Yes, good morning. Thanks for John McNultyMD - Chemicals Analyst at BMO Capital Markets00:28:50taking my question. And first off, really hugely helpful on the color around the quarters and on the turnarounds too. So I definitely appreciate the help there. On polyethylene catalyst front, I guess maybe two questions on that. Have you already started to see a slowdown tied to the tariffs and kind of some of the macro confusion at this point? John McNultyMD - Chemicals Analyst at BMO Capital Markets00:29:15Or is that just something you're potentially worrying about? And I guess the other question on polyethylene, I know you've got this 2026 facility coming up. Have you seen or heard any delays from those potential customers that you've locked platform just given kind of what's going on in the global macro? Kurt BittingCEO & Director at Ecovyst00:29:39Hey, John. Good morning. Thank you. Thanks for the question and thanks for the comments. So really on polyethylene, we haven't seen anything to date in terms of any cracks or anything regarding the tariffs or the overall knock on effects on the macro. Kurt BittingCEO & Director at Ecovyst00:29:57It's just something that we keep our eye on. Obviously, it tends to it's more globally traded than our other products when you talk about sulfuric acid or some of the other things that we're into. And no, we have not heard of or seen any delays in terms of our the customers that are expanding and putting in new production, which is leading to our capacity expansion in Kansas City. John McNultyMD - Chemicals Analyst at BMO Capital Markets00:30:26Okay. Got it. And then just thinking about the tariffs, I mean, sounds like you don't really have much exposure, at least direct exposure at this point. When you think about the end markets that you serve, look, we don't know exactly where the tariffs are going to go, but if The U. S. John McNultyMD - Chemicals Analyst at BMO Capital Markets00:30:41Kind of keeps this somewhat isolationist view or approach, do you see opportunities for increased volume from your U. S. Customer base? Or in the end, does it kind of net out to neutral? I guess how are you thinking about that? Kurt BittingCEO & Director at Ecovyst00:30:58Yes. Well, I mean if you look at Eco versus a whole 75% of the sales consolidated sales are really in the Eco Services business, which is really leans into U. S. Manufacturing. So I would say from a general direction, we benefit from U. Kurt BittingCEO & Director at Ecovyst00:31:18S. Manufacturing being positive. But if you look at the individual segments, regeneration, refining, we look looks to be strong. Mining is really being driven at this point from just the overall trends towards AI and electrification, data centers, which is really pushing for metals and materials. Then you look at other areas where we play into industrial spaces for things like nylon, is for auto or wire coating and so forth. Kurt BittingCEO & Director at Ecovyst00:31:50So generally, I think we would benefit. And then in terms of the AMAC side, I mean, we also produce a lot in The U. S, which we benefit from. But we also have global production, right, where we service some of the other markets, which allows us to largely avoid the large impacts of tariffs. John McNultyMD - Chemicals Analyst at BMO Capital Markets00:32:11Got it. Thanks very much for the color. Operator00:32:14And your next question comes from the line of Patrick Cunningham with Citi. Please go ahead. Patrick CunninghamAnalyst at Citigroup00:32:20Hi, good morning. Can you help us understand the structural price environment for sulfuric in the first quarter here and maybe expectations for virgin pricing going forward? Prices seem to be moving up pretty rapidly here. Is there any of that sort of structural price movement embedded in the guide beyond pass through for the balance of the year? Kurt BittingCEO & Director at Ecovyst00:32:41Yes. Thank you, Patrick, the question. So when you look at overall sulfuric prices and so forth, lot of that's being driven by the increase in sulfur prices that was witnessed in first quarter. And I think we had talked about it previously on the call, there was obviously a tremendous amount of U. S. Kurt BittingCEO & Director at Ecovyst00:33:02Refining turnaround work that took place in the first quarter, which led to a lot of the sulfur price increases. We saw a knock on sulfur and another sulfur increase here in the second quarter. So as you know, our business, we pass through those sulfur prices across to our customers on a quarterly basis. So we don't largely get impacted by any sulfur increases. We do see overall U. Kurt BittingCEO & Director at Ecovyst00:33:30S. Demand for sulfuric acid is again looks pretty firm, especially in terms of things like mining. But the Eco Services business is largely contracted 90 plus percent. So our pricing and so forth is largely mechanical and based on indices and sulfur pass throughs. But around the increments, there certainly is opportunity as the market looks healthy going into the rest of the year. Patrick CunninghamAnalyst at Citigroup00:33:58Appreciate that. Very helpful. And then I appreciate the commentary on the Cornerstone acquisition and as it relates to '25, but any sort of expectations on the potential EBITDA contribution for '26? And after you work through integration turnaround, how does sort of adding another asset to the network maybe help, whether it's absorbing volume impact or getting additional fixed cost efficiencies? Just trying to understand that a bit better. Kurt BittingCEO & Director at Ecovyst00:34:25Yes, sure. I mean, we're not going to guide to the specifics on the EBITDA. And again, we expect to close on it here in the second quarter. What I've told people and I've told the people internally is this is a situation where it's one plus one equals three, right, in terms of our sulfuric acid network, where it's going to give us the ability to fill the gaps in when we typically may have to pass on volume opportunities or control our volumes as we store up inventory when we take our own turnarounds, adding another facility to our network, certainly in the Gulf Coast. So you're talking roughly a 15% bump in our Gulf Coast sulfuric acid capacity, which is our largest and biggest market clearly. Kurt BittingCEO & Director at Ecovyst00:35:14It just gives us the ability to fill those gaps in a lot more and service our customers, service Cornerstone's customers more reliably, but also take advantage of being able to take advantage of otherwise. Patrick CunninghamAnalyst at Citigroup00:35:28Understood. Thank you so much. Operator00:35:32And your next question comes from the line of Alexey Yefremov with KeyBanc Capital Markets. Please go ahead. Analyst00:35:39Thanks. Good morning, everyone. This is Ryan on for Alexey. Congrats on a nice quarter and I echo the same comments that John had earlier. Really appreciate the commentary kind of on second half by quarter. Analyst00:35:51It's very helpful. I guess just first question, I guess to dig in on the '25 guidance just a little bit, right? It's still pretty second half weighted. So wanted to understand, are some of these orders locked in? Just given like the uncertainty that's going on in the market, I want to get a better understanding for what's kind of giving you guys confidence at this stage. Mike FeehanCFO at Ecovyst00:36:13Yes. Hey, Ryan, thanks for the question. Yes, I think so from a 2025 guidance, we did talk about this on the previous call that we expect it to be back end loaded. And a lot of the reasons that we talked about before was more of a cost structure perspective versus more of a volume risk. There was more cost at the Eco Services for the turnaround activities for which 80% of that will be done in the first half. Mike FeehanCFO at Ecovyst00:36:39The AM and C business is more timing related, right? So again, we're not worried from a volume standpoint. We do see, as Curt mentioned, risk because of the knock on effect of tariffs and the macroeconomic environment that we are in. But a lot of our end markets are still very strong and don't have the same level of risk that others do. We also see that within our AM and C business, there's some positivity coming out of the hydrocracking catalyst side. Mike FeehanCFO at Ecovyst00:37:12We see strong pricing, as Kurt mentioned, in the Eco Services side to help guide us through the rest of the year. So while it is back end loaded, we do feel very comfortable, not because there's any as much volume risk as that it's more less cost pricing contracts going up and having Mike FeehanCFO at Ecovyst00:37:31the timing aspects that we talked about before within the AM and C business. Patrick CunninghamAnalyst at Citigroup00:37:37Very helpful. Thank you. And just going back to the Cornerstone acquisition. I understand you guys aren't going to talk about just kind of what the underlying EBITDA of the business is. Patrick CunninghamAnalyst at Citigroup00:37:46But how are you guys thinking about the synergy potential of just merging this asset kind of with your existing asset base in the Gulf Coast? And how quickly do you think you guys could start delivering on those synergies? Thanks. Kurt BittingCEO & Director at Ecovyst00:37:58Yes. Thanks for the question. So the synergies as we see with Cornerstone is there's obviously a tremendous amount of networking synergies as it's I tell people we've got barges that pass that facility every single day of the year. So it gives us another supply point and it allows us to access again opportunities that we would either Cornerstone or EcoVist wouldn't be able to take advantage of just because it just gives us more collective capacity to service our general Gulf Coast network. And there's also going to be a lot of, I would call, maybe horizontal synergies between the plants. Kurt BittingCEO & Director at Ecovyst00:38:38We obviously have been making sulfuric acid, I think, since 1890, have a lot of experience in that. So we'll be able to bring a lot of manufacturing expertise, operational excellence expertise to that site that was quite frankly run as a standalone sulfuric acid site. So it's going to be joining a family of a lot of sulfuric acid experience. So we do expect to capture networking and those kind of horizontal industrial synergies pretty quickly. Operator00:39:12Thank you. And your next question comes from the line of Laurence Alexander with Jefferies. Please go ahead. Daniel RizzoAnalyst at Jefferies00:39:18Hey, this is Dan Rizzo on for Laurence. And I'm sorry if I missed this, but just to kind of add to what you just talked about. Are there revenue synergies there as well? Is there mean cross selling, is that something that's really not part of it? Kurt BittingCEO & Director at Ecovyst00:39:31No, I think we look at it we don't really rent for revenue synergies, take it as marketing and networking synergies, right? So we operate a lot of our plants service multiple customers, those share customers and so forth. And because we have a lot of very large customers. So plugging that in, we'll be able to help service each other's customers. Obviously, we have a our commercial team markets the most sulfuric acid in The United States and the most regeneration services in North America. Kurt BittingCEO & Director at Ecovyst00:40:05So we'll be taking that on as well. So I would say there'd be some marketing synergies in addition to those networking synergies. Daniel RizzoAnalyst at Jefferies00:40:13And are there other this is a one off, are there other opportunities potentially, obviously potentially for kind of increasing your network in that region or just elsewhere? Kurt BittingCEO & Director at Ecovyst00:40:23Certainly. We're always looking our sulfuric acid, we run at very high utilization rates. The industry runs at pretty high utilization rates. So we're always looking to increase our capacity, whether that's through organic debottlenecking and expansions or inorganic opportunities as well. Daniel RizzoAnalyst at Jefferies00:40:46Thank you. Operator00:40:50Thank you. And your next question comes from Hamed Khorsand with BWS Financial. Please go ahead. Hamed KhorsandPrincipal at Beating Wall Street(BWS)00:40:58Hi, good morning. So about hydrocracking and what you're seeing there, you saw some downturn for a good year or so. How is this more natural or is this inventory restocking? Do you have any clarity there? Kurt BittingCEO & Director at Ecovyst00:41:14Thanks for the question, Hamed. This is really we've had I would say there's two things. It's not there's no real destocking in this segment. It's based on refining turnaround activity. So we've seen some of those refinery turnarounds are now coming to a cycle where they're going to be conducting turnarounds. Kurt BittingCEO & Director at Ecovyst00:41:35Additionally, we've won, I would say, additional business with our mock product. We've been able to capture new refineries. There's been a nice uptake of that product as it's been rolled out in the last few years. And as these turnarounds hit new refineries hit new cycles, new turnaround cycles, we've got more uptake on the mock. So it's a combination of the timing of those turnarounds as well as good uptake of our new mock product. Hamed KhorsandPrincipal at Beating Wall Street(BWS)00:42:04Great. And then could you just comment on the Eco Services, the contractual pricing? Is that how set is that given the market dynamics? Kurt BittingCEO & Director at Ecovyst00:42:17Sure. I mean, well, about 90%, I'd say, really our regeneration contracts are 100% really under contract and those rotate with just market indices and the labor indices and pass throughs and those sorts of things. We do obviously have contracts that roll off every given year and there's some of that happening this year, which is giving us an uplift in regeneration prices and that's booked. The virgin sulfuric acid roughly 90% is under contract. And so those contracts will run the span of the year, giving us the ability to pass through sulfur and so forth. Kurt BittingCEO & Director at Ecovyst00:42:57And we do maintain, I would say, about 10% of our business. It's on thirty day pricing for things like distribution or spot business where we have the ability to move the price much, much quicker based on whatever the market is doing. Hamed KhorsandPrincipal at Beating Wall Street(BWS)00:43:15Okay. Thank you. Operator00:43:22Thank you. And we have no further questions in queue at this time. This does conclude the EcoVist first quarter twenty twenty five earnings call and webcast. Thank you for your participation and you may disconnect at any time.Read moreParticipantsExecutivesGene ShielsDirector of Investor RelationKurt BittingCEO & DirectorMike FeehanCFOAnalystsJohn McNultyMD - Chemicals Analyst at BMO Capital MarketsPatrick CunninghamAnalyst at CitigroupAnalystDaniel RizzoAnalyst at JefferiesHamed KhorsandPrincipal at Beating Wall Street(BWS)Powered by Key Takeaways Q1 Results Beat Expectations—First-quarter sales rose modestly and adjusted EBITDA outperformed guidance thanks to strong Zeolyst JV timing, offsetting EcoServices turnaround impacts. EcoServices Turnarounds Easing—Heavy plant and customer turnarounds in Q1 reduced regeneration and virgin sulfuric acid volumes, but Q2 volumes are expected to rebound with favorable contractual pricing as the summer driving season ramps up. Strong Cash Flow Enables Share Repurchases—With projected adjusted free cash flow of $60 million to $80 million in 2025, Ecovist plans up to $30 million of opportunistic share buybacks while funding growth initiatives and maintaining leverage around 3x. Tariff Exposure Is Minimal—EcoServices has less than 5% Canada/Mexico exposure and sulfuric acid is USMCA-exempt, while Advanced Materials and Catalysts expects only a $2 million to $3 million EBITDA headwind, mitigated by contract pass-throughs and tariff exemptions. Favorable End-Use Demand—High refinery utilization supports regeneration services, mining and battery sectors drive virgin acid demand, and sales of custom silicas and hydrocracking catalysts remain robust despite short-term polyethylene tariff uncertainty. A.I. generated. May contain errors.Conference Call Audio Live Call not available Earnings Conference CallEcovyst Q1 202500:00 / 00:00Speed:1x1.25x1.5x2xTranscript SectionsPresentationParticipants Earnings DocumentsSlide DeckPress Release(8-K)Quarterly report(10-Q) Ecovyst Earnings HeadlinesEcovyst Completes Acquisition of Sulfuric Acid Production AssetsMay 12, 2025 | msn.comEcovyst Inc.: Ecovyst Completes Acquisition of Waggaman, Louisiana, Sulfuric Acid Assets from Cornerstone ChemicalMay 10, 2025 | finanznachrichten.deWashington Is Broke—and Eyeing Your Savings NextWashington is running out of money…And guess where they'll look next? When governments go broke, they take from the people. It's happened before, and it's happening again. The Department of Justice just admitted that cash isn't legally YOUR property.May 22, 2025 | Priority Gold (Ad)Ecovyst expands with Louisiana asset acquisitionMay 8, 2025 | investing.comEcovyst Completes Acquisition of Waggaman, Louisiana, Sulfuric Acid Assets from Cornerstone ChemicalMay 6, 2025 | gurufocus.comEcovyst Completes Acquisition of Waggaman, Louisiana, Sulfuric Acid Assets from Cornerstone ChemicalMay 6, 2025 | prnewswire.comSee More Ecovyst Headlines Get Earnings Announcements in your inboxWant to stay updated on the latest earnings announcements and upcoming reports for companies like Ecovyst? Sign up for Earnings360's daily newsletter to receive timely earnings updates on Ecovyst and other key companies, straight to your email. Email Address About EcovystEcovyst (NYSE:ECVT) offers specialty catalysts and services in the United States and internationally. The company operates in two segments, Ecoservices and Advanced Materials & Catalysts. The Ecoservices segment provides sulfuric acid recycling services and end-to-end logistics for production of alkylate for refineries; and virgin sulfuric acid for mining, water treatment, and industrial applications. The Advanced Materials & Catalysts segment offers advanced materials and specialty catalyst products and process solutions to producers and licensors of polyethylene and advanced silicas. This segment also supplies specialty zeolites and zeolite-based catalysts to customers for refining of oil primarily hydrocracking catalyst and dewaxing, sustainable fuels, and emission control systems for both on-road and non-road diesel engines. The company was formerly known as PQ Group Holdings Inc. and changed its name to Ecovyst Inc. in August 2021. 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PresentationSkip to Participants Operator00:00:00Good morning. My name is Madison, and I will be your conference operator today. Welcome to the ECOVIST First Quarter twenty twenty five Earnings Call and Webcast. Operator00:00:09Please note, today's call is being recorded and should run approximately one hour. Currently, all participants have been placed in a listen only mode to prevent any background noise. After the speakers' remarks, there will be a question and answer period. I would now like to hand the conference over to Gene Shiels, Director of Investor Relations. Please go ahead. Gene ShielsDirector of Investor Relation at Ecovyst00:00:46Thank you, operator. Good morning, and welcome to Ecovist's first quarter twenty twenty five earnings call. With me on the call this morning are Kurt Bidding, EcoVist's Chief Executive Officer and Mike Fian, EcoVist's Chief Financial Officer. Following our prepared remarks, we'll take your questions. Please note that some of the information shared today is forward looking information, including information about the company's financial and operating performance, strategies, our anticipated end use demand trends and our 2025 quarterly and full year financial outlook. Gene ShielsDirector of Investor Relation at Ecovyst00:01:22This information is subject to risks and uncertainties that could cause the actual results and implementation of the company's plans to vary materially. Any forward looking information shared today speaks only as of this date. These risks are discussed in our filings with the SEC. Reconciliations of non GAAP financial measures mentioned in today's call with their corresponding GAAP measures can be found in this morning's earnings release and in presentation materials posted in the Investors section of our website at ecovist.com. I'll now turn the call over to Kurt. Gene ShielsDirector of Investor Relation at Ecovyst00:01:57Thank you, Gene, Kurt BittingCEO & Director at Ecovyst00:01:59and good morning. Our results for the first quarter came in ahead of our expectations and provided a solid start to the year, reflecting the continued resilience of our core and industrial businesses. At the top line, Ecoservices sales were up modestly and in line with our expectations given the heavy turnaround activity that we previewed during the fourth quarter call. Sales were lower as anticipated for regen and virgin sulfuric acid volume associated with turnarounds at our sites as well as customer facilities. For advanced silicas, sales were in line with the prior year, driven by higher niche custom catalysts, while sales of advanced silicas used in the production of polyethylene were lower as customers pulled orders into the fourth quarter of twenty twenty four. Kurt BittingCEO & Director at Ecovyst00:02:47Sales in the Zeolyst joint venture exceeded our expectations on favorable hydrocracking and specialty catalyst timing. Adjusted EBITDA for the Kurt BittingCEO & Director at Ecovyst00:03:09While lower than year ago quarter, this was largely due to the anticipated implications of turnaround activity for ECO Services. As we move into the second quarter and with the majority of turnaround activity and costs behind us, we expect higher volume with favorable contractual pricing within ECO Services driven by sequential growth in regeneration volume expected as we move into the summer driving season. As Mike will highlight in a moment, with historical stability of Eco Services and our other businesses, we continue to expect strong cash generation this year, which would provide for optionality as we look to invest in growth initiatives and consider other capital allocation priorities. While the first quarter adjusted free cash flow reflected factors including lower dividends from the Xeolus joint venture due to timing and planned higher CapEx associated with our ongoing Kansas City expansion, we expect stronger cash generation over the balance of the year. This is consistent with our performance over the prior two years where we have generated over $150,000,000 in adjusted free cash flow in what we believe are some of the most challenging environments for the chemical producers in recent memory. Kurt BittingCEO & Director at Ecovyst00:04:27Specifically, with regard allocation, we believe that our current valuation and share price represents a significant disconnect from the intrinsic value of our business. ECOVIS has demonstrated the ability to generate cash through all types of cycles. We believe this track record of cash generation and the recent extension of our credit facilities enables ECOVIS to maintain a flexible and opportunistic posture in regards to capital allocation. Given this, we believe that opportunistic share repurchases provide a path for value creation for our shareholders. Our current share repurchase authorization has two thirty million dollars remaining. Kurt BittingCEO & Director at Ecovyst00:05:09Over the course of the second quarter, we expect to allocate up to $30,000,000 of the remaining share repurchase authorization to opportunistically repurchase shares with the potential for further opportunistic repurchases in the third and fourth quarters. ECOVIS' strong historical cash generation has enabled us to maintain a flexible and returns focused approach to capital allocation. Our current focus on share repurchases is driven by confidence in our ability to fund our growth investments and a strong conviction that our current valuation is not indicative of the quality, profitability or historical resilience of our business, nor is it reflective of our future growth prospects. I also want to emphasize that our expectation to opportunistically repurchase shares has no relationship to or connection with the timing of or anticipated outcome of the ongoing strategic review of our Advanced Materials and Catalysts segment and that any repurchase activity will be conducted in a manner consistent with the rules set forth by the SEC. Leverage reduction remains a high priority for ECOVIS, but we believe that any concerns about our headline leverage are mitigated by the realities of our capital structure and cash generation outlook. Kurt BittingCEO & Director at Ecovyst00:06:31Last year, we refinanced our term loan credit facility, extending the maturity to 02/1931 and reducing the interest rate. And earlier this year, we also took advantage of favorable lending conditions to again reduce the interest rate. The bottom line is that we believe the cash generation capability of our business supports our current debt structure and leverage profile while providing significant flexibility to fund growth projects and other capital allocation priorities. As we turn to Slide five, I want to provide our current assessment of direct tariff implications for ECOVIST. Our Ecoservices segment accounts for approximately 75 of our total sales. Kurt BittingCEO & Director at Ecovyst00:07:17With less than 5% representing sales to Mexico and Canada, the business is U. S.-centric as well as service oriented. The service is not currently subject to tariffs. Moreover, sulfur and sulfuric acid are also currently exempt from tariffs under the USMCA. As such, we see no direct tariff impact of any significance for ECO Services. Kurt BittingCEO & Director at Ecovyst00:07:41For our Advanced Materials and Catalysts segment, we believe that we will have minimal exposure related to the incremental direct tariffs estimating an impact on a full year adjusted EBITDA in the range of 2,000,000 to $3,000,000 As a global business, Advanced Materials and Catalysts has raw materials and finished products which move around the globe. However, the vast majority of our raw materials consumed at our Kansas City site are either sourced within The U. S. Or are currently subject to special tariff exemptions. In addition, our sales to customers based in China are mainly supplied from The U. Kurt BittingCEO & Director at Ecovyst00:08:17K. And Korea with no expected incremental U. S. Tariffs. We are actively working to mitigate any incremental tariff exposure, including passing through tariff costs where contracts allow. Kurt BittingCEO & Director at Ecovyst00:08:30As we turn to Slide seven, I'll provide an update on our near term demand outlook. Overall, our outlook has not changed materially from the view we shared in late February. For Eco Services, we see high refinery utilization and stable gasoline demand continuing to support our regeneration services business. As a reminder, our regeneration services support our refining customers' production of alkylid, a critical gasoline blending component. The economics of alkylid production and the importance of our regeneration services are affected by overall refining margins. Kurt BittingCEO & Director at Ecovyst00:09:04In fact, the value of alkylate to our refining customers becomes even more important when refining margins are under pressure. We continue to expect higher sales of virgin sulfuric acid in the second half of this year due to increased mining demand. We see the mining sector showing strong demand for sulfuric acid, driven by high global copper demand and supportive copper prices. We also anticipate higher lead acid battery demand with customers' expansion slated to come online in the second half of the year. For virgin sulfuric acid sales into the nylon end use, our customers have not signaled any significant change in near term demand outlook. Kurt BittingCEO & Director at Ecovyst00:09:45However, we remain mindful of the potential for softer demand across our industrial end use exposures. For our Chem 32 catalyst activation business, utilization remains high. We continue to see strong demand, which supports the ongoing capacity expansion at our Orange, Texas site. Turning to Advanced Silicas. We entered the year with an expectation that our polyethylene catalyst sales would continue to outpace global demand growth. Kurt BittingCEO & Director at Ecovyst00:10:13We believe we remain well positioned with significant exposure to The U. S. And Middle East, where producers remain cost competitive with favorable feedstock and energy costs. However, the ongoing ambiguity regarding tariffs and their effects on cost structures is causing short term uncertainty. We are closely monitoring how trade negotiations will influence global polyethylene flows, utilization rates and catalyst sales. Kurt BittingCEO & Director at Ecovyst00:10:40We believe that prolonged tariff uncertainty could result in loader utilization rates and ultimately lower catalyst demand from our customers. We do continue to expect that long term growth in polyethylene demand will continue to translate into demand for our catalyst materials. This is supported by the ongoing capacity expansion in Kansas City, which will serve customer capacity additions coming online in 2026 around the world. Aligned with our emerging growth markets, we continue observing substantial engagement with technology leaders in biocatalysis applications. Many of these biocatalysis initiatives are presently in the pilot and scale up stages, which is promising and provides confidence that our new launches will be successful. Kurt BittingCEO & Director at Ecovyst00:11:24As with any new business activities, the timing of the sales is difficult to exactly predict. Within the Zeolyst joint venture, we still project sales of catalysts used in the production of sustainable fuels to be flat to slightly up this year. For sales of catalysts into emission control applications, we expect 2025 sales to be moderately down. We continue to project an increase in both hydrocracking catalyst sales and sales of specialty catalysts this year. We had favorable hydrocracking sales in the first quarter, and we have a strong order book for the balance of the year. Kurt BittingCEO & Director at Ecovyst00:11:57In fact, we now see potential upside in hydrocracking catalyst sales this year, which we believe can offset any softer sales in advanced silicas. I'll now turn the call over to Mike, who will review our first quarter results in more detail. Mike FeehanCFO at Ecovyst00:12:13Thank you, Kurt. Good morning. Our stronger than anticipated first quarter results were largely driven by the favorable sales timing within the Zeolyst joint venture that Kurt referenced. Mike FeehanCFO at Ecovyst00:12:25While adjusted EBITDA for Eco Services came in toward the lower end of our guidance range, we saw a favorable customer driven shift in sales timing into the first quarter for hydrocracking and specialty catalyst, helping drive more favorable results in the quarter compared to our initial guidance. Total sales for the first quarter, including our proportionate 50% share of sales from the Zielus joint venture, were $200,000,000 up nearly 9% with sales of Eco Services and Advanced Silicas each up 1% and sales for the Zielus joint venture up 60%. Adjusted EBITDA for the first quarter was $39,000,000 led by the higher volume in the Zielis joint venture, largely offset by lower earnings in Eco Services related to the higher planned turnaround costs and lower sales volume associated with turnaround activity. Turning to Slide 10, I'll highlight the major components of the change in adjusted EBITDA for the first quarter. Sulfur costs increased approximately $7,000,000 quarter over quarter, which were passed through in price, resulting in no material impact to adjusted EBITDA. Mike FeehanCFO at Ecovyst00:13:41The $2,000,000 unfavorable net price impact when combining price and variable cost was primarily driven by the timing and contractual pass through of certain costs, including energy and other index costs within ECO Services. Volume and mix were favorable driven by the higher sales volume in the Zielis joint venture, partially offset by lower volume in ECO Services as a result of the turnaround activity at our sites and our customers' facilities. The remaining other component primarily represents increased manufacturing costs in Eco Services associated with planned turnaround costs, less favorable absorption of fixed costs associated with inventory timing and general inflation. I'll now turn to segment highlights in the first quarter, starting with Eco Services. Sales of $143,000,000 were up 1% compared to the first quarter of twenty twenty four. Mike FeehanCFO at Ecovyst00:14:43Included in the period over period change in sales was approximately $7,000,000 of higher pricing associated with the pass through of higher sulfur costs as well as favorable contractual pricing services. This was partially offset by the pass through of lower energy and other index costs. These price factors were largely offset by lower sales volume related to the higher turnaround activity during the quarter at our sites as well as our customers' facilities. Adjusted EBITDA was $29,000,000 compared to $42,000,000 in the year ago quarter. The lower adjusted EBITDA reflects approximately $8,000,000 associated with higher manufacturing costs associated with planned turnarounds, the timing of fixed cost absorption and general inflation, approximately $3,000,000 of lower sales volume and approximately $2,000,000 of unfavorable net pricing on the timing and contractual pass through of certain costs. Mike FeehanCFO at Ecovyst00:15:48Within our Advanced Materials and Catalysts segment, sales for Advanced Silicas were $19,000,000 with higher sales of niche custom catalysts, largely offset by lower sales of advanced silicas used in the production of polyethylene as customers pulled orders into the fourth quarter of twenty twenty four. Our proportionate 50% share from of sales from the Zeolyst joint venture were up $14,000,000 with higher sales of hydrocracking and specialty catalysts more than offsetting lower sales of materials used in emission control applications and the timing of sales into customized catalyst applications. First quarter sales from the Xelis joint venture were higher than previously anticipated due to customer driven sales timing. As our overall full year expectations for Advanced Materials and Catalyst have not changed, we have rebalanced our view of sales timing for the remainder of the year, and I'll provide more detail on our expectations by quarter in a few minutes. First quarter adjusted EBITDA was $17,000,000 up $6,000,000 primarily due to the higher sales volume within the Zielus joint venture. Mike FeehanCFO at Ecovyst00:17:07Switching over to cash and leverage on the next slide. On a full year basis, we still expect to generate adjusted free cash flow of 60,000,000 to $80,000,000 However, due to the expected timing of dividends from the Zielis joint venture and the higher planned capital expenditures, including the ongoing capacity expansion in Kansas City, our adjusted free cash flow was a use of $13,000,000 for the first quarter. We ended the first quarter with $127,000,000 of cash and our total liquidity was $2.00 $1,000,000 including availability under our recently amended and extended ABL facility. We ended the quarter with a net debt ratio of 3.2 times, up slightly from the year end driven by lower adjusted EBITDA on a trailing twelve month basis. Previously noted, we expect to close the acquisition of the Cornerstone sulfuric acid assets in the second quarter, funding the $35,000,000 acquisition through cash on hand. Mike FeehanCFO at Ecovyst00:18:14As Kirk discussed, in light of our current share price and associated valuation, we firmly believe that opportunistic share repurchases are a prudent and value enhancing use of capital. And while taking a more opportunistic approach to share repurchases will likely defer near term achievement of our target leverage ratio of two to 2.5 times, we would anticipate ending 2025 with the leverage ratio consistent with the end of the prior year of around three times. In addition, we continue to be extremely comfortable with our current capital structure and leverage profile given the resilient nature of our businesses, our projected cash generation and the fact that we refinanced our term loan last year, reducing the interest rate and extending the maturity to 02/1931 and then further reducing the interest rate by another 25 basis points through a repricing of the term loan earlier this year. I will now shift to a discussion of our outlook for the remainder of 2025. Our first quarter results provided a strong start to the year compared to our original expectations. Mike FeehanCFO at Ecovyst00:19:28While the fundamentals of our business remain strong and we expect our core businesses to remain stable, given the volatile macroeconomic environment, we are cautious about the potential for weaker demand in industrial end uses and for near term softness in utilization rates for polyethylene producers. In terms of full year guidance, we now expect our sales to be higher by $30,000,000 in a range of $785,000,000 to $845,000,000 driven by an increase in the estimated pass through effect related to higher expected sulfur costs for 2025. Excluding the higher estimated pass through effect of higher sulfur costs on sales, our outlook for ECO services remains unchanged. For Advanced Silicas, we continue to expect sales growth over 2024 levels. While we previously guided to higher sales of polyethylene catalyst to outpace global demand growth, we remain cautious on the potential secondary effects of tariffs and the macroeconomic conditions on polyethylene. Mike FeehanCFO at Ecovyst00:20:42With the Zeelist joint venture, although first quarter sales were higher than originally anticipated due to a positive shift in sales timing, our full year view has not changed, and we are maintaining our previously communicated guidance ranges. However, we have observed further positivity in the sales of hydrocracking catalyst, potentially providing additional upside to our current forecast and offsetting any softer sales in advanced silicas. Our original guidance range for 2025 incorporated what we believe to be an appropriate level of conservatism. Taking into consideration the effect of increased tariffs, we are maintaining our prior guidance for adjusted EBITDA, expecting it to be in the range of $238,000,000 to $258,000,000 for the year. I'll note that our full year guidance does not include any contribution from the pending acquisition of the Cornerstone sulfuric acid assets. Mike FeehanCFO at Ecovyst00:21:45Assuming a second quarter close, while the acquisition is expected to provide incremental sales and contribution margin for the balance of the year, we anticipate incurring additional costs for integration and upgrading the facility, including a potential turnaround and additional capital expenditures. As such, we do not expect the earnings from this acquisition to be meaningful in 2025. We do expect incremental adjusted EBITDA contribution of the acquired assets will be more material beginning in 2026. I'll now turn to specific guidance for the second quarter. We expect second quarter adjusted EBITDA for ECO Services to fall in the range of $47,000,000 to $53,000,000 The sequential increase from the first quarter reflects higher projected sales volume associated with lower turnaround activity and seasonally stronger demand for regeneration services as we move into the summer driving season. Mike FeehanCFO at Ecovyst00:22:48For Advanced Materials and Catalysts, given the positive shift in sales timing that benefited our first quarter results, with some sales pulled forward from the second quarter into the first quarter, we now expect second quarter adjusted EBITDA to be in the range of between 6,000,000 to $10,000,000 Assuming unallocated corporate expense of approximately $8,000,000 for the second quarter, we expect consolidated adjusted EBITDA to be in the range of $45,000,000 to $55,000,000 Slide 15 provides detailed commentary on the directional guidance for the third and fourth quarters. I'll highlight a few key points. As discussed on our year end call, we anticipate our earnings to be more heavily weighted towards the second half of the year. We expect the third quarter of twenty twenty five to represent the peak quarter for both Eco Services and Advanced Materials and Catalysts, led by strong year over year volume growth for regeneration services and favorable contractual pricing in Eco Services and higher expected sales of hydrocracking catalyst and sales of materials used in sustainable fuel production in Advanced Materials and Catalyst compared to the third quarter of twenty twenty four. Looking at the fourth quarter, in Eco Services, we expect regeneration services and virgin sulfuric acid volume to be in line with the fourth quarter of twenty twenty four, but with stronger pricing for both, driven by contractual price increases and higher demand in certain end uses. Mike FeehanCFO at Ecovyst00:24:28For Advanced Materials and Catalysts, we expect stronger sales in Advanced Silicas, primarily for niche custom catalysts, including biocatalysis applications, but expect lower sales within the Zeolyst joint venture, reflective of order timing. In addition, included in our earnings In in presentation, we have provided a schedule reflecting planned turnarounds by quarter through 2026. Turnarounds for individual units are often performed every eighteen months that can vary depending upon Mike FeehanCFO at Ecovyst00:25:01several factors, including coordinating the timing with our customers' planned turnarounds. And while the scope and cost can vary for each, this schedule reflects our current estimate of the number of units requiring turnarounds by quarter. I'll now turn the call back to Kurt for some closing remarks. Kurt BittingCEO & Director at Ecovyst00:25:21Thank you, Mike. The challenging environment our industry faced in 2024 has continued into 2025, with perhaps more near term uncertainty presented by the recent escalation of tariffs. Kurt BittingCEO & Director at Ecovyst00:25:33However, we believe ECOVIS remains well positioned to deliver in the current environment. Although we see potential for near term softness in industrial demand related to the secondary impacts from the tariffs, the longer term demand fundamentals for the majority of end uses we serve remains intact. For Ecoservices, we continue to project growth in 2025, driven by the aforementioned high refinery utilization and favorable demand in mining. For our Advanced Materials and Catalysts segment, we have a solid start to the year with strong sales of hydrocracking and specialty catalyst. Regarding the current tariffs, we anticipate $2,000,000 to $3,000,000 in direct EBITDA impacts. Kurt BittingCEO & Director at Ecovyst00:26:14Additionally, our sales of advanced silicas may face near term softer demand fundamentals resulting from slower macroeconomic conditions and customer timing. However, we currently observe the potential for upside in hydro cracking catalyst sales, which we believe will balance our full year expectations for this segment. Overall, we currently believe both segments are positioned to deliver on their financial objectives for the year. As a result, we are maintaining our prior guidance range for full year 2025 adjusted EBITDA. In our fourth quarter earnings call, I stated that in 2025, we would maintain our focus on capturing growth opportunities and on delivering value for our shareholders. Kurt BittingCEO & Director at Ecovyst00:26:58I believe we are demonstrating progress on these commitments. Last month, we announced an agreement to acquire the sulfuric acid assets of Cornerstone Chemical Company. We believe the acquisition will significantly enhance Ecoservices' Gulf Coast network and provide a significant addition to our existing capacity on an extremely attractive cost basis that will enable us to serve our customers' future growth needs for both virgin sulfuric acid and for regeneration services. We expect the acquisition to close this quarter, and we look forward to welcoming the Cornerstone team to ECOVIST. In terms of creating value for our shareholders, the strategic review of our Advanced Materials and Catalysts segment is underway, and we still expect the process to run through midyear. Kurt BittingCEO & Director at Ecovyst00:27:45As we indicated in late February, we will share more when the process is complete or when we determine that further disclosure is required beneficial. Lastly, we believe ECOVIS remains well positioned for growth. We are a leading provider across the varied end uses we serve. We have resilient businesses with attractive margins, strong cash generation and clear strategic direction. Given our ongoing commitment to enhancing shareholder value and in light of our current valuation, we believe opportunistic share repurchases will result in value creation for our shareholders. Kurt BittingCEO & Director at Ecovyst00:28:23At this time, I will ask the operator to open the line for questions. Operator00:28:28Thank And we will take our first question from John McNulty with BMO Capital Markets. Please go ahead. John McNultyMD - Chemicals Analyst at BMO Capital Markets00:28:49Yes, good morning. Thanks for John McNultyMD - Chemicals Analyst at BMO Capital Markets00:28:50taking my question. And first off, really hugely helpful on the color around the quarters and on the turnarounds too. So I definitely appreciate the help there. On polyethylene catalyst front, I guess maybe two questions on that. Have you already started to see a slowdown tied to the tariffs and kind of some of the macro confusion at this point? John McNultyMD - Chemicals Analyst at BMO Capital Markets00:29:15Or is that just something you're potentially worrying about? And I guess the other question on polyethylene, I know you've got this 2026 facility coming up. Have you seen or heard any delays from those potential customers that you've locked platform just given kind of what's going on in the global macro? Kurt BittingCEO & Director at Ecovyst00:29:39Hey, John. Good morning. Thank you. Thanks for the question and thanks for the comments. So really on polyethylene, we haven't seen anything to date in terms of any cracks or anything regarding the tariffs or the overall knock on effects on the macro. Kurt BittingCEO & Director at Ecovyst00:29:57It's just something that we keep our eye on. Obviously, it tends to it's more globally traded than our other products when you talk about sulfuric acid or some of the other things that we're into. And no, we have not heard of or seen any delays in terms of our the customers that are expanding and putting in new production, which is leading to our capacity expansion in Kansas City. John McNultyMD - Chemicals Analyst at BMO Capital Markets00:30:26Okay. Got it. And then just thinking about the tariffs, I mean, sounds like you don't really have much exposure, at least direct exposure at this point. When you think about the end markets that you serve, look, we don't know exactly where the tariffs are going to go, but if The U. S. John McNultyMD - Chemicals Analyst at BMO Capital Markets00:30:41Kind of keeps this somewhat isolationist view or approach, do you see opportunities for increased volume from your U. S. Customer base? Or in the end, does it kind of net out to neutral? I guess how are you thinking about that? Kurt BittingCEO & Director at Ecovyst00:30:58Yes. Well, I mean if you look at Eco versus a whole 75% of the sales consolidated sales are really in the Eco Services business, which is really leans into U. S. Manufacturing. So I would say from a general direction, we benefit from U. Kurt BittingCEO & Director at Ecovyst00:31:18S. Manufacturing being positive. But if you look at the individual segments, regeneration, refining, we look looks to be strong. Mining is really being driven at this point from just the overall trends towards AI and electrification, data centers, which is really pushing for metals and materials. Then you look at other areas where we play into industrial spaces for things like nylon, is for auto or wire coating and so forth. Kurt BittingCEO & Director at Ecovyst00:31:50So generally, I think we would benefit. And then in terms of the AMAC side, I mean, we also produce a lot in The U. S, which we benefit from. But we also have global production, right, where we service some of the other markets, which allows us to largely avoid the large impacts of tariffs. John McNultyMD - Chemicals Analyst at BMO Capital Markets00:32:11Got it. Thanks very much for the color. Operator00:32:14And your next question comes from the line of Patrick Cunningham with Citi. Please go ahead. Patrick CunninghamAnalyst at Citigroup00:32:20Hi, good morning. Can you help us understand the structural price environment for sulfuric in the first quarter here and maybe expectations for virgin pricing going forward? Prices seem to be moving up pretty rapidly here. Is there any of that sort of structural price movement embedded in the guide beyond pass through for the balance of the year? Kurt BittingCEO & Director at Ecovyst00:32:41Yes. Thank you, Patrick, the question. So when you look at overall sulfuric prices and so forth, lot of that's being driven by the increase in sulfur prices that was witnessed in first quarter. And I think we had talked about it previously on the call, there was obviously a tremendous amount of U. S. Kurt BittingCEO & Director at Ecovyst00:33:02Refining turnaround work that took place in the first quarter, which led to a lot of the sulfur price increases. We saw a knock on sulfur and another sulfur increase here in the second quarter. So as you know, our business, we pass through those sulfur prices across to our customers on a quarterly basis. So we don't largely get impacted by any sulfur increases. We do see overall U. Kurt BittingCEO & Director at Ecovyst00:33:30S. Demand for sulfuric acid is again looks pretty firm, especially in terms of things like mining. But the Eco Services business is largely contracted 90 plus percent. So our pricing and so forth is largely mechanical and based on indices and sulfur pass throughs. But around the increments, there certainly is opportunity as the market looks healthy going into the rest of the year. Patrick CunninghamAnalyst at Citigroup00:33:58Appreciate that. Very helpful. And then I appreciate the commentary on the Cornerstone acquisition and as it relates to '25, but any sort of expectations on the potential EBITDA contribution for '26? And after you work through integration turnaround, how does sort of adding another asset to the network maybe help, whether it's absorbing volume impact or getting additional fixed cost efficiencies? Just trying to understand that a bit better. Kurt BittingCEO & Director at Ecovyst00:34:25Yes, sure. I mean, we're not going to guide to the specifics on the EBITDA. And again, we expect to close on it here in the second quarter. What I've told people and I've told the people internally is this is a situation where it's one plus one equals three, right, in terms of our sulfuric acid network, where it's going to give us the ability to fill the gaps in when we typically may have to pass on volume opportunities or control our volumes as we store up inventory when we take our own turnarounds, adding another facility to our network, certainly in the Gulf Coast. So you're talking roughly a 15% bump in our Gulf Coast sulfuric acid capacity, which is our largest and biggest market clearly. Kurt BittingCEO & Director at Ecovyst00:35:14It just gives us the ability to fill those gaps in a lot more and service our customers, service Cornerstone's customers more reliably, but also take advantage of being able to take advantage of otherwise. Patrick CunninghamAnalyst at Citigroup00:35:28Understood. Thank you so much. Operator00:35:32And your next question comes from the line of Alexey Yefremov with KeyBanc Capital Markets. Please go ahead. Analyst00:35:39Thanks. Good morning, everyone. This is Ryan on for Alexey. Congrats on a nice quarter and I echo the same comments that John had earlier. Really appreciate the commentary kind of on second half by quarter. Analyst00:35:51It's very helpful. I guess just first question, I guess to dig in on the '25 guidance just a little bit, right? It's still pretty second half weighted. So wanted to understand, are some of these orders locked in? Just given like the uncertainty that's going on in the market, I want to get a better understanding for what's kind of giving you guys confidence at this stage. Mike FeehanCFO at Ecovyst00:36:13Yes. Hey, Ryan, thanks for the question. Yes, I think so from a 2025 guidance, we did talk about this on the previous call that we expect it to be back end loaded. And a lot of the reasons that we talked about before was more of a cost structure perspective versus more of a volume risk. There was more cost at the Eco Services for the turnaround activities for which 80% of that will be done in the first half. Mike FeehanCFO at Ecovyst00:36:39The AM and C business is more timing related, right? So again, we're not worried from a volume standpoint. We do see, as Curt mentioned, risk because of the knock on effect of tariffs and the macroeconomic environment that we are in. But a lot of our end markets are still very strong and don't have the same level of risk that others do. We also see that within our AM and C business, there's some positivity coming out of the hydrocracking catalyst side. Mike FeehanCFO at Ecovyst00:37:12We see strong pricing, as Kurt mentioned, in the Eco Services side to help guide us through the rest of the year. So while it is back end loaded, we do feel very comfortable, not because there's any as much volume risk as that it's more less cost pricing contracts going up and having Mike FeehanCFO at Ecovyst00:37:31the timing aspects that we talked about before within the AM and C business. Patrick CunninghamAnalyst at Citigroup00:37:37Very helpful. Thank you. And just going back to the Cornerstone acquisition. I understand you guys aren't going to talk about just kind of what the underlying EBITDA of the business is. Patrick CunninghamAnalyst at Citigroup00:37:46But how are you guys thinking about the synergy potential of just merging this asset kind of with your existing asset base in the Gulf Coast? And how quickly do you think you guys could start delivering on those synergies? Thanks. Kurt BittingCEO & Director at Ecovyst00:37:58Yes. Thanks for the question. So the synergies as we see with Cornerstone is there's obviously a tremendous amount of networking synergies as it's I tell people we've got barges that pass that facility every single day of the year. So it gives us another supply point and it allows us to access again opportunities that we would either Cornerstone or EcoVist wouldn't be able to take advantage of just because it just gives us more collective capacity to service our general Gulf Coast network. And there's also going to be a lot of, I would call, maybe horizontal synergies between the plants. Kurt BittingCEO & Director at Ecovyst00:38:38We obviously have been making sulfuric acid, I think, since 1890, have a lot of experience in that. So we'll be able to bring a lot of manufacturing expertise, operational excellence expertise to that site that was quite frankly run as a standalone sulfuric acid site. So it's going to be joining a family of a lot of sulfuric acid experience. So we do expect to capture networking and those kind of horizontal industrial synergies pretty quickly. Operator00:39:12Thank you. And your next question comes from the line of Laurence Alexander with Jefferies. Please go ahead. Daniel RizzoAnalyst at Jefferies00:39:18Hey, this is Dan Rizzo on for Laurence. And I'm sorry if I missed this, but just to kind of add to what you just talked about. Are there revenue synergies there as well? Is there mean cross selling, is that something that's really not part of it? Kurt BittingCEO & Director at Ecovyst00:39:31No, I think we look at it we don't really rent for revenue synergies, take it as marketing and networking synergies, right? So we operate a lot of our plants service multiple customers, those share customers and so forth. And because we have a lot of very large customers. So plugging that in, we'll be able to help service each other's customers. Obviously, we have a our commercial team markets the most sulfuric acid in The United States and the most regeneration services in North America. Kurt BittingCEO & Director at Ecovyst00:40:05So we'll be taking that on as well. So I would say there'd be some marketing synergies in addition to those networking synergies. Daniel RizzoAnalyst at Jefferies00:40:13And are there other this is a one off, are there other opportunities potentially, obviously potentially for kind of increasing your network in that region or just elsewhere? Kurt BittingCEO & Director at Ecovyst00:40:23Certainly. We're always looking our sulfuric acid, we run at very high utilization rates. The industry runs at pretty high utilization rates. So we're always looking to increase our capacity, whether that's through organic debottlenecking and expansions or inorganic opportunities as well. Daniel RizzoAnalyst at Jefferies00:40:46Thank you. Operator00:40:50Thank you. And your next question comes from Hamed Khorsand with BWS Financial. Please go ahead. Hamed KhorsandPrincipal at Beating Wall Street(BWS)00:40:58Hi, good morning. So about hydrocracking and what you're seeing there, you saw some downturn for a good year or so. How is this more natural or is this inventory restocking? Do you have any clarity there? Kurt BittingCEO & Director at Ecovyst00:41:14Thanks for the question, Hamed. This is really we've had I would say there's two things. It's not there's no real destocking in this segment. It's based on refining turnaround activity. So we've seen some of those refinery turnarounds are now coming to a cycle where they're going to be conducting turnarounds. Kurt BittingCEO & Director at Ecovyst00:41:35Additionally, we've won, I would say, additional business with our mock product. We've been able to capture new refineries. There's been a nice uptake of that product as it's been rolled out in the last few years. And as these turnarounds hit new refineries hit new cycles, new turnaround cycles, we've got more uptake on the mock. So it's a combination of the timing of those turnarounds as well as good uptake of our new mock product. Hamed KhorsandPrincipal at Beating Wall Street(BWS)00:42:04Great. And then could you just comment on the Eco Services, the contractual pricing? Is that how set is that given the market dynamics? Kurt BittingCEO & Director at Ecovyst00:42:17Sure. I mean, well, about 90%, I'd say, really our regeneration contracts are 100% really under contract and those rotate with just market indices and the labor indices and pass throughs and those sorts of things. We do obviously have contracts that roll off every given year and there's some of that happening this year, which is giving us an uplift in regeneration prices and that's booked. The virgin sulfuric acid roughly 90% is under contract. And so those contracts will run the span of the year, giving us the ability to pass through sulfur and so forth. Kurt BittingCEO & Director at Ecovyst00:42:57And we do maintain, I would say, about 10% of our business. It's on thirty day pricing for things like distribution or spot business where we have the ability to move the price much, much quicker based on whatever the market is doing. Hamed KhorsandPrincipal at Beating Wall Street(BWS)00:43:15Okay. Thank you. Operator00:43:22Thank you. And we have no further questions in queue at this time. This does conclude the EcoVist first quarter twenty twenty five earnings call and webcast. Thank you for your participation and you may disconnect at any time.Read moreParticipantsExecutivesGene ShielsDirector of Investor RelationKurt BittingCEO & DirectorMike FeehanCFOAnalystsJohn McNultyMD - Chemicals Analyst at BMO Capital MarketsPatrick CunninghamAnalyst at CitigroupAnalystDaniel RizzoAnalyst at JefferiesHamed KhorsandPrincipal at Beating Wall Street(BWS)Powered by