NYSE:SQM Sociedad Quimica y Minera Q4 2025 Earnings Report $92.66 +2.91 (+3.24%) Closing price 03:59 PM EasternExtended Trading$92.00 -0.66 (-0.71%) As of 07:57 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 Sociedad Quimica y Minera EPS ResultsActual EPS$0.64Consensus EPS $0.75Beat/MissMissed by -$0.11One Year Ago EPS$0.42Sociedad Quimica y Minera Revenue ResultsActual Revenue$1.32 billionExpected Revenue$1.24 billionBeat/MissBeat by +$88.80 millionYoY Revenue Growth+23.30%Sociedad Quimica y Minera Announcement DetailsQuarterQ4 2025Date2/28/2026TimeAfter Market ClosesConference Call DateMonday, March 2, 2026Conference Call Time10:00AM ETUpcoming EarningsSociedad Quimica y Minera's Q2 2026 earnings is estimated for Tuesday, May 26, 2026, based on past reporting schedulesConference Call ResourcesConference Call AudioConference Call TranscriptSlide DeckPress Release (6-K)Annual Report (20-F)Annual ReportEarnings HistoryCompany ProfileSlide DeckFull Screen Slide DeckPowered by Sociedad Quimica y Minera Q4 2025 Earnings Call TranscriptProvided by QuartrMarch 2, 2026 ShareLink copied to clipboard.Key Takeaways Positive Sentiment: Signed an association agreement with Codelco to create Nova Andino Litio, securing long‑term lithium access in the Salar de Atacama and formalizing the 33.5k t allocation that underpins joint production and expansion plans. Positive Sentiment: Lithium momentum — record Q4 sales (Nova Andino > 66,000 metric tons), 2025 production ~234k LCE, a 2026 target near 260k LCE, and realized Q4 prices ~$10/kg with management expecting materially stronger pricing in Q1‑2026. Negative Sentiment: Kwinana refinery ramp‑up delayed by odor/emissions issues (solution expected mid‑year), which pushes refined output into 2027 and shifts 2026 sales toward spodumene concentrate — potentially limiting near‑term margin upside. Positive Sentiment: Iodine remains a major profit driver (≈42% of gross margin), with record prices, expected ~3% market growth in 2026, and upcoming capacity improvements (seawater pipeline + projects) targeting > 17,000 t annual capacity. Negative Sentiment: Financial mechanics of the Codelco JV are already affecting reported results — minority interest increased in 4Q and dividends tied to the 33.5k t allocation are expected to be paid around April/May, creating a recurring reduction to SQM's attributable earnings. AI Generated. May Contain Errors.Conference Call Audio Live Call not available Earnings Conference CallSociedad Quimica y Minera Q4 202500:00 / 00:00Speed:1x1.25x1.5x2xTranscript SectionsPresentationParticipantsPresentationSkip to Participants Operator00:00:00Please note this conference is being recorded. Now it's my pleasure to turn the call over to Megan Suter with Investor Relations. Please proceed. Megan SuterDirector of Investor Relations at Sociedad QuÃmica y Minera de Chile00:00:12Good day, thank you for joining SQM's earnings conference call for the Q4 and full year of 2025. Megan SuterDirector of Investor Relations at Sociedad QuÃmica y Minera de Chile00:00:18This call is being recorded and webcast live. Our earnings press release and accompanying results presentation are available on our website, where you can also find the link to the webcast. Today's participants include Mr. Ricardo Ramos, Chief Executive Officer, Mr. Gerardo Illanes, Chief Financial Officer, Mr. Carlos DÃaz, CEO of Nova Andino Litio, Mr. Pablo Altimiras, CEO of the Iodine and Nitrates Division, and Mr. Mark Fones, CEO of the International Lithium Division. Also joining us today are members of the commercial and business intelligence teams. Mr. Felipe Smith, Commercial Vice President of Nova Andino Litio, Mr. Pablo Hernández, Vice President of Strategy and Development of Nova Andino Litio, Mr. Juan Pablo Bellolio, Commercial Vice President of Plant Nutrition and Specialty Products. Megan SuterDirector of Investor Relations at Sociedad QuÃmica y Minera de Chile00:01:19Mr.Alvaro Araya, CFO of the International Lithium Division, Mr. Andreas Fontanas, Commercial Vice President of the International Lithium Division, and Mr. Max Fial, Head of Studies of the International Lithium Division. Megan SuterDirector of Investor Relations at Sociedad QuÃmica y Minera de Chile00:01:35Before we begin, please note that statements made during this call regarding our business outlook, future economic performance, anticipated profitability, revenues, expenses, and other financial items, along with expected cost synergies and product or service line growth, are considered forward-looking statements under U.S. Federal Securities laws. These statements are not historical facts and are subject to risks and uncertainties that could cause actual results to differ materially. We assume no obligation to update these statements except as required by law. For a full discussion of forward-looking statements, please refer to our earnings press release and presentation. With that, I will now turn the call over to Chief Executive Officer, Mr. Ricardo Ramos. Ricardo RamosCEO at Sociedad QuÃmica y Minera de Chile00:02:29Good morning, everyone. Thank you for joining us today. 2025 was an important year for SQM. Ricardo RamosCEO at Sociedad QuÃmica y Minera de Chile00:02:36We finished the year by signing our association agreement with Codelco, creating Nova Andino Litio, which enables long-term lithium production from the Salar de Atacama. At the same time, we delivered solid financial results, strengthened our operational performance across our key businesses, and continued advancing our long-term growth strategy. For the full year 2025, we reported revenues of $44.6 billion, slightly higher than the previous year, with net income of $588 million. These results reflect improved market conditions, strong operational execution, and the resilience of our diversified portfolio. During the Q4, we saw particularly strong performance in lithium and iodine, two of our most strategic businesses. Ricardo RamosCEO at Sociedad QuÃmica y Minera de Chile00:03:29In lithium, we achieved record quarterly sales volumes across both our Chilean and international operations. At Nova Andino Litio, sales volumes exceed 66,000 metric tons in the Q4, more than 50% higher year-over-year, reflecting the expansion efforts we have implemented over the past several years. On the market side, we began to observe an important shift toward the end of the year. As we mentioned in our previous conference call in November, we saw the inflection point in lithium prices, driven by stronger than expected demand from energy storage system, together with some supply disruptions. Ricardo RamosCEO at Sociedad QuÃmica y Minera de Chile00:04:14This contributed to a tighter market environment and improving pricing trends. As a result, our average realized lithium price increased nearly 14% quarter-over-quarter, reaching close to $10 per kilogram in the Q4. Ricardo RamosCEO at Sociedad QuÃmica y Minera de Chile00:04:31Given the demand momentum we have seen in recent months and limited new supply entering the market, we expect the pricing environment in the Q1 to be significantly stronger. Looking ahead, we continue to see strong long-term fundamentals for lithium, driven primarily by electric vehicles and energy storage systems. Operationally, we are currently running at full capacity at Nova Andino Litio while continuing to advance expansion plans in the Salar de Atacama. In our International Lithium Division, the Mount Holland mine and concentrator perform well, and the Kwinana Refinery continues progressing through the ramp-up phase. Ricardo RamosCEO at Sociedad QuÃmica y Minera de Chile00:05:12Early this year, we also celebrated the first shipment of lithium hydroxide from the Kwinana Refinery in Australia, a milestone that highlights the progress of our International Lithium strategy. Moving to Iodine, the business delivered a strong contribution, representing approximately 42% of SQM's total gross margin during the year. Ricardo RamosCEO at Sociedad QuÃmica y Minera de Chile00:05:34By the end of 2025, we observed record iodine prices, supported by tight supply conditions and a strong demand, particularly in the X-ray contrast media market. Looking ahead, we estimate the iodine market could grow by around 3% in 2026, and our sales volumes are expected to remain stable or increase slightly, depending on market conditions. We expect to be able to finish our seawater pipeline project in the Tarapacá region, which will provide additional operational flexibility and should allow us to unlock incremental production capacity. In a special plan, Specialty Plant Nutrition, we saw 3% volume growth during the year, driven by specialty blends and value-added products. Ricardo RamosCEO at Sociedad QuÃmica y Minera de Chile00:06:22For 2026, we expect moderate volume growth of between 2%-4% within a stable pricing environment. Ricardo RamosCEO at Sociedad QuÃmica y Minera de Chile00:06:31Before concluding, I would also like to highlight our continued progress in sustainability. During 2025, SQM strengthened its ESG performance and received important international recognition, including inclusion in the S&P Global Sustainability Yearbook 2026, and strong ratings from Dow Jones Sustainability Index, MSCI, and EcoVadis. To conclude, we're entering 2026 with a strong operational momentum, improving lithium market conditions, and continued strength in Iodine and specialty plant nutrition. Our teams remain focused on delivering reliable supply to our customers, executing our growth projects, and creating long-term value for our shareholders. T Ricardo RamosCEO at Sociedad QuÃmica y Minera de Chile00:07:21hank you for joining us today. Ricardo RamosCEO at Sociedad QuÃmica y Minera de Chile00:07:23I will now turn the call over to the operator for the Q&A session. Thank you. Operator00:07:28Thank you so much. As a reminder to ask a question, press star one one to get in the queue. That is star one one to get in the queue. Operator00:07:40One moment for our first question. Ricardo RamosCEO at Sociedad QuÃmica y Minera de Chile00:07:45Yes. Operator00:07:45It comes from the line of Lucas Ferreira with JPMorgan. Please proceed. Ricardo RamosCEO at Sociedad QuÃmica y Minera de Chile00:07:51There was a smooth road. Lucas FerreiraEquity Research Analyst at JPMorgan Chase & Co.00:07:53Hi, everybody. Hope you can hear me well. Lucas FerreiraEquity Research Analyst at JPMorgan Chase & Co.00:07:56I have two questions regarding lithium. The first one is your expectation of sales in 2026 of an increase of 10% from the Chile operations. If you can briefly discuss the product mix from the production side, if the company would be willing to put a bit more focus on sulfates in 2026, eventually as a way to quickly expand production, if you're fully utilizing your plant in China, if you have been able to toll more capacity there. Pretty much what's the outlook for production mix, and if you can share some production numbers for the JV. Lucas FerreiraEquity Research Analyst at JPMorgan Chase & Co.00:08:42The second question is regarding the cost of production in the Q4, which was up significantly from the last quarter. I would assume that has to do with the lease payments, given the higher average prices. Just wanted to confirm if there is anything else impacting the cost of production. Eventually, these sulfate operations got a bit more expensive. Any color on the cost of production side would be appreciated. Thank you very much. Felipe SmithCommercial Vice President of Lithium at Sociedad QuÃmica y Minera de Chile00:09:17Hello, Lucas. This is Felipe Smith. Regarding the first part of your question, the sales volume 2026. We are targeting a strong sales volume in Q1. We hope to surpass the sales volume of Q1 2025 by more than 15%, which would also be a record for the first calendar quarter. As we have consistently done over the years, our strategy remains unchanged, which is to operate at full capacity and expand it in line with anticipated market growth, ensuring we are always prepared to meet our customers' needs. Felipe SmithCommercial Vice President of Lithium at Sociedad QuÃmica y Minera de Chile00:09:51Aligning with that strategy, we feel confident that we will successfully allocate in the market the additional production that we expect to achieve this year, which is close to 260,000 tons. There is an appetite for lithium units in the market, especially in Asia Pacific. I will give you Felipe SmithCommercial Vice President of Lithium at Sociedad QuÃmica y Minera de Chile00:10:10Carlos will comment about the product mix. Carlos DÃazExecutive Vice President, Lithium at Sociedad QuÃmica y Minera de Chile00:10:14Hi, Lucas. This is Carlos DÃaz, CEO of Nova Andino. With respect to the production, first, during the year 2025, our production went according to the schedule, reaching 234,000 as LCA. Out of 50 of those were produced in China, coming from our lithium surface produced in the Salar de Atacama. For this year, our expectation for production have been increased and we target to produce close to 260,000 as a Lithium Carbonate Equivalent, increasingly even from both our production in Chile and in China. This had been the case during the past year. In 2025, we expect to continue to increase our productivity driven by the efficiency improvement, the use of new technology, at the same time reducing the brine extraction according our sustainability strategy. Carlos DÃazExecutive Vice President, Lithium at Sociedad QuÃmica y Minera de Chile00:11:11This year, we will continue to have full flexibility in terms of lithium carbon and lithium hydroxide, both in Chile and China. I understand you're asking for the machine. We are now operating at full capacity as well. Same as in Chile. Mark FonesCEO of International Lithium Division at Sociedad QuÃmica y Minera de Chile00:11:29Hi, Lucas. This is Mark Fones from SQM Lithium International. In our case, we also expect sales to be increasing in around 10% on an LCE basis. As we have completed the ramp-up of the concentrator, we will continue and expect to be producing at capacity at the concentrator in Mount Holland. Our sales will be heavily directed by our production. In terms of the mix between spodumene concentrate and lithium hydroxide, they will be heavily leaned and skewed into spodumene concentrate as we continue to ramp up the lithium hydroxide plants in Kwinana. Mark FonesCEO of International Lithium Division at Sociedad QuÃmica y Minera de Chile00:12:08Thank you. Operator00:12:13One moment. Gerardo IllanesCFO at Sociedad QuÃmica y Minera de Chile00:12:15Lucas, regarding your question about cost. I think there may be a mistake in those numbers. 'Cause if you look at the total cost per ton of the Lithium and Derivatives division, Q3 versus Q4, it's quite similar. You will see that the average price of lithium in the Q4 was higher, and consequently, within the cost line, we have a higher portion of these payments to Corfo. Bear in mind that within the cost of goods sold, we have the cost of our Nova Andino Litio Division and also the Lithium and Derivatives, that is becoming more relevant in terms of total volumes within the business line. Lucas FerreiraEquity Research Analyst at JPMorgan Chase & Co.00:13:01Thank you very much, guys, for the call. Exactly, that was exactly my question, Gerardo. If there was any effect other than the lease payments in the quarter. Thank you so much. That's very clear. Operator00:13:13Thank you. One moment for our next question. Operator00:13:17It comes from Andrés Castanos Müller with Berenberg. Please proceed. Andres Castanos-MollVice President and Equity Analyst at Berenberg00:13:22Hello. Congratulations on the strong results. Your EPS shows an impact from higher minority interest, but we don't see yet a dividend paid to Codelco in the cash flow statement. Two questions about this. First, can you provide some guidance on how to calculate the minority interest going forward? Andres Castanos-MollVice President and Equity Analyst at Berenberg00:13:40Can you please provide also some guidance on when will we start seeing dividend payments to Codelco, and how these dividends will relate to the minority interest? Thank you. Ricardo RamosCEO at Sociedad QuÃmica y Minera de Chile00:14:00Hello, Andrés. Ricardo Ramos speaking. The detail of the agreement with Codelco is public, and it's a shareholders' agreement how we calculate the dividend to Codelco every year. In very simple terms, you have the net income of Nova Andino. From the portion, most of the Nova Andino net income is related to lithium business. Nowadays, 33.5 thousand metric tons of lithium are allocated to Codelco. The rest allocated to SQM. Using this proportion, we allocate the net income for both companies. That's a simple way to do it. It's just a little bit more complicated. It's public, and you can review in the shareholders' agreement. Ricardo RamosCEO at Sociedad QuÃmica y Minera de Chile00:14:39We have both parties. We expect to pay the dividends during April, I think during April/May, but I think April is gonna be the month. Ricardo RamosCEO at Sociedad QuÃmica y Minera de Chile00:14:47We are going to release every quarter our best estimates and assumptions of the portion of the dividend to Codelco that is going to be paid at the end of the year. Andres Castanos-MollVice President and Equity Analyst at Berenberg00:14:59A follow-up, if I may. The earnings that we see, the minority interest reflects a proportion to the 33.5 kilotons or reflects a proportion of the 50% that Codelco controls? Thank you. Ricardo RamosCEO at Sociedad QuÃmica y Minera de Chile00:15:17In the minority interest, we put the dividend to Codelco. This dividend is related with the 33.5 thousand metric tons of lithium and the net income allocated to these 33.5 thousand metric tons. Andres Castanos-MollVice President and Equity Analyst at Berenberg00:15:30That's clear. Thank you. Operator00:15:33Thank you. Our next question is from Ben Isaacson with Scotiabank. Please proceed. Ben IsaacsonAnalyst at Scotiabank00:15:42Thank you very much. Good morning, everyone. Ben IsaacsonAnalyst at Scotiabank00:15:43I have three questions. I'd like to ask them one by one. The first question is on iodine. You sold much more than I think the Street was expecting in Q4, but you're also looking for stable volume in 2026, especially given that you have the seawater pipeline coming on. I'm just curious, why did you sell more than expected in Q4, but you're gonna be flat on volume in 2026, even though you have the pipeline coming on? Pablo HernándezSVP and Head of Battery Materials at SQM Lithium International00:16:17Hi, Ben. Pablo Altimiras speaking. I could say that the main reason is what we didn't see some capacity from third parties that was expected to come. That's the reason why finally we sell more in Q4. We are seeing good signals in terms of the demand. Actually, demand of last year in iodine growth more than expected. According to our numbers, finally, the demand growth 0.6%, where the expectation was to grow almost 0, so that was a good signal. We have the product to deliver. In the case of this year, we are expanding some capacity. Actually, we are expanding the new projects in Chile are coming. Our first estimation was the first semester. Pablo HernándezSVP and Head of Battery Materials at SQM Lithium International00:17:01Right now, maybe it will happen in the second semester. Pablo HernándezSVP and Head of Battery Materials at SQM Lithium International00:17:05We, that's the reason why finally we pretend to sell much more or less the same amount. Having said that, you know that as an SQM strategy, you're always putting more capacity, and our idea with the new project is to have a capacity to respond if the market needs. Ben IsaacsonAnalyst at Scotiabank00:17:24Thank you. My second question is on Tianqi Lithium. They have filed that they are now an active seller of, I think, maybe 3 million shares or so, and potentially that could grow. Given that you see significantly higher lithium prices, iodine's doing well, potash and the SPN business seems fine, have you been in discussions to potentially buy back some of those shares and keep them out of the market? If you haven't, is that something that you would be willing to consider? Ricardo RamosCEO at Sociedad QuÃmica y Minera de Chile00:17:56We're not under any kind of discussion about this point, first. Second, there's no, from a legal point of view, you cannot buy back shares in Chile. Ben IsaacsonAnalyst at Scotiabank00:18:08Okay. Thank you for that. That's easy. Let me go to my third question. We're starting to see sodium-ion batteries really inflect this year and improve on key metrics like energy density, cost, etc. I was hoping you could talk about what the risks are to lithium demand growth for both EVs and for energy storage from sodium-ion, and how are you managing those risks? Pablo HernándezSVP and Head of Battery Materials at SQM Lithium International00:18:36Hey, Ben. Pablo Hernández speaking here. We have indeed heard a lot of sodium-ion batteries in the market, as you have mentioned. We still strongly believe that lithium is the best placed item to be used in these batteries, in our conversations with the market and understanding of the market. We see a small potential market space for the sodium-ion batteries, but we feel very strongly that lithium will be the dominant technology for the future. Ben IsaacsonAnalyst at Scotiabank00:19:09Great. Thank you very much. Operator00:19:12Thank you. Operator00:19:14Our next question comes from Corinne Blanchard with Deutsche Bank. Please proceed. Corinne BlanchardDirector, Equity Research at Deutsche Bank00:19:20Hey, good morning. Thank you for taking the time for my question. I want to go back on the lithium expectation for the year. You mentioned a pretty strong 1 Q, 15% up year-over-year. Can you talk about the expectation or the cadence, 2 Q through 4 Q? Then maybe if you can share as well what you hear from a Chinese customer, like, trying to get a sentiment on what people are saying there on the market. Thank you. Felipe SmithCommercial Vice President of Lithium at Sociedad QuÃmica y Minera de Chile00:19:56Corinne, Felipe here. As I said before, 15% for the Q1 compared to the Q1 2025. We expect an increasing volume quarter by quarter, ending up with hopefully the largest volume in Q4. Okay? As I said also in the previous question, we are planning to sell more or less in line with increasing production. If we have opportunities to sell a bit more, of course, we will try to take them. Just for your information, we have today about more than 80% of our volume is already contracted, so we are leaving some space for spot sales, trying to maximize our opportunities and margins. Your question about the Chinese customers. Felipe SmithCommercial Vice President of Lithium at Sociedad QuÃmica y Minera de Chile00:21:07As I said also, there is a strong appetite for lithium units, especially in Asia-Pacific, and China is not an exception. On the contrary, we have been getting a lot of inquiries for trying to increase our volumes. We want to have a very diversified customer portfolio, so we manage that carefully. Corinne BlanchardDirector, Equity Research at Deutsche Bank00:21:33Thank you. Maybe another question. Corinne BlanchardDirector, Equity Research at Deutsche Bank00:21:35Can you talk about, like, the pricing expectation? You mentioned having about 80% under contract, so I'm assuming that's looking at the current pricing or, like, what we're seeing in the last three months. Can you just remind us how you look at it for the contract? Corinne BlanchardDirector, Equity Research at Deutsche Bank00:21:51Then just overall, what's your pricing view for the year for the market? Thank you. Felipe SmithCommercial Vice President of Lithium at Sociedad QuÃmica y Minera de Chile00:21:57Yeah. This is the best question, of course, which nobody can answer, but I will try. After reaching the lowest point over the last 4 years in the Q2 of 2025, our average sales price reached around $10 in Q4 2025, aligned with market indices, which is good news. Our realized prices remain, as always, mainly linked to those price indices. Consequently, our sales price in Q1, I can say now that will be substantially higher than Q4 2025. That is one very good news. However, if you ask me to go further beyond that, it's more difficult. I can only say that prices will remain volatile this year. It is very difficult to predict what will happen in the other quarters. Felipe SmithCommercial Vice President of Lithium at Sociedad QuÃmica y Minera de Chile00:22:49What I can say, without my boss being upset with me, is that prices should be closer to current price levels than the levels we saw last year. I hope this is good for you, Corinne. Corinne BlanchardDirector, Equity Research at Deutsche Bank00:23:03Yeah. That's very helpful. Thank you. Operator00:23:07Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Marcio Farid with Goldman Sachs. Please proceed. Marcio FaridAnalyst at Goldman Sachs00:23:14Thank you. Morning, everyone. All up on my side, looking at your presentation, you have Chile capacity increasing to 240,000 tons by 2028, and the earlier presentation points into 2026. Just trying to understand what, what led to that, you know, change. It seems like that you guys are privileging China over Chile capacity. I'm not sure it's because of CapEx, but one is more, more efficient and just trying to understand how should we think about production growth and the mix between Chile and China in the next couple of years would be great. Secondly, on the iodine side, you just mentioned 3% expectations in terms of demand growth, flat pricing. Marcio FaridAnalyst at Goldman Sachs00:23:59Obviously profitability has been quite strong for the last few years, and it's always surprising to see that the supply response has been relatively slow. You suggested that seems like growth that was expected in the later part of last year has failed to materialize as well. Just trying to understand your level of conviction on the iodine market, that we can, you know, continue to see this level of profitability and if there is any risk in terms of supply response to these elevated prices. Thank you. Carlos DÃazExecutive Vice President, Lithium at Sociedad QuÃmica y Minera de Chile00:24:33Hi, Marcio, Carlos DÃaz speaking. Regarding your question of lithium expansion, the 240,000 expansion of our chemical plant in Antofagasta have been delayed into 2028 as a consequence of optimization and efficiency project we have been developing in Salar de Atacama, allowing us to increase the lithium sulfate production. It's important to mention that the total production we have forecast hasn't been affected. Actually, our total production expected for this year is increasing compared to the previous announcement. Finally some optimization of the CapEx and going to produce more every year. Pablo HernándezSVP and Head of Battery Materials at SQM Lithium International00:25:22Hello, Pablo Altimiras speaking. Regarding to your question about iodine, the perspective that we have for this market is quite positive. As we already said, our expectation for this year is that the demand will grow 3%, which is a big jump compared to the growth that we saw last year. Also in the long term, our view about the demand also is positive. That's the reason why we have been investing material resources in expansions. Remember that some years ago, we opened Pampa Orcoma. Right now, we are opening Maria Elena. Also, we are close to finish our project of the seawater pipeline in order to be able to continue grow and to have more capacity and flexibility. Pablo HernándezSVP and Head of Battery Materials at SQM Lithium International00:26:10Our strategy is to be there to deliver the iodine that the market needs. Actually, with the new investment, we pretend to produce more than 15,000 metric tons this year. Also after the seawater pipeline project, we pretend to reach a capacity that we surpass the 17,000 metric tons of iodine per year. Carlos DÃazExecutive Vice President, Lithium at Sociedad QuÃmica y Minera de Chile00:26:30Okay, thank you. Operator00:26:39One moment for our next question. It comes from the line of Cesar Perez-Navarro with BTG Pactual. Please proceed. Cesar Perez-NavarroAnalyst at BTG Pactual00:26:49Yes, good morning, gentlemen, and thank you for taking my questions. The first one, could you please provide an update on the ramp-up trajectory of the Kwinana refinery? If you could provide a volume forecast for Mount Holland throughout 2026. Additionally, if you could detail the current status of the engineering studies and regulatory permits for the proposed expansion of the mine and concentrator. If this expansion would be able to proceed, what capital expenditure range would we be looking at? Cesar Perez-NavarroAnalyst at BTG Pactual00:27:31My second question relates to your exploration activity within Australia and other international jurisdictions. If you could provide an update on that would be extremely helpful. Cesar Perez-NavarroAnalyst at BTG Pactual00:27:45Thank you. Mark FolzAnalyst at SQM Lithium International00:27:50Thank you, Cesar, for your questions. Mark FonesCEO of International Lithium Division at Sociedad QuÃmica y Minera de Chile00:27:51I will try to go one by one over them. This is Mark Folz. Regarding your question on the expansion of the mine and concentrator, remember that the final investment decision that we're supposed to take this year refers only to the mine and concentrator. We expect that to be brought to the boards, respective boards of both Wesfarmers and SQM by mid this year. Its output is still subject, of course, as you well mentioned, to the environmental approvals and the engineering studies. Both have progressed well, so we expect ahead of the decision to have a relevant milestone on the approvals, which is progressing well. The engineering studies has also been progressing well. Mark FonesCEO of International Lithium Division at Sociedad QuÃmica y Minera de Chile00:28:37As you well know, as was usual on our previous of the investment decision, we take our capital investment decisions with above 30% advance in engineering. We expect to have that advanced by mid this year. Relevantly in the concentrator, we expect to have around percent engineering progress. That has been moving well. Regarding your question on CapEx on the expansion, we haven't yet defined a number on the investment CapEx. I can tell you that we have allocated within our 2025 and 2027 CapEx projection, we have allocated around $200 million for the expansion on the concentrator for Mount Holland in 2027. Your next question was on the Kwinana refinery and having production outputs and projections. Mark FonesCEO of International Lithium Division at Sociedad QuÃmica y Minera de Chile00:29:29I can tell you first on the mine and concentrator, as I explained, briefly before, we are already producing at capacity. We expect to have such capacity production within 2026. That should be a range for SQM's 50% of in between 170 and 180,000 tons of spodumene concentrate, 6%. That's our portion along this year. The more tough and difficult question has to do with the projection and guidance on production on Kwinana. As you well know, we've been under ramp-up lately. It's difficult to come up with precise numbers in such scenario. However, I can tell you that the ramp-up has been affected by intermittent odor issues, as has been briefed by our partners, Wesfarmers before. It already been tackled with the studies and engineering development. Mark FonesCEO of International Lithium Division at Sociedad QuÃmica y Minera de Chile00:30:23We expect to have that solution by mid, this year, completed solution. It's important to know there that our emissions have been within approved limits anyway. Because of this, we are now expecting ramp-up to move into 2027. Therefore, as I mentioned before, that volumes of sales will be heavily leaned into spodumene concentrate also this 2026, which provides us the flexibility of selling profitable spodumene concentrate in the meantime. Thank you. Carlos DÃazExecutive Vice President, Lithium at Sociedad QuÃmica y Minera de Chile00:30:56Thank you. Ricardo RamosCEO at Sociedad QuÃmica y Minera de Chile00:30:58Regarding your exploration question, we are focused today in three main areas, so Australia, Namibia, and Canada. Let me go probably a little bit over each one of those briefly. In Australia, we have a four earning agreements or partners, if you may. Those 4 early exploration agreements are distributed across Western Australia and the Northern Territory. Each one of those are in different early stages, if you may. A couple of them are on surface exploration, and a couple of them are already undergoing drilling programs. We expect to have progress and development during this year, 2026. The 2 drilling programs, if you're interested, are planned at Mount Roberts and at the Northern Territory areas where pegmatites are already being identified. Ricardo RamosCEO at Sociedad QuÃmica y Minera de Chile00:31:59Regarding our exploration activities outside Australia, still early days in Namibia, we are conducting our stage 1 drilling program with our partner, Andrada Mining, there. In addition to have confirmed some very good grades at surface, we have also confirmed several bodies of pegmatite, in this case, spodumene, at depth. It's still to be seen how well-spread, how big they are, still early days. We expect to have second stage of exploration during this year as well. Regarding Canada, as you well know, we established SQM Canada for exploration purposes last year, and we are currently exploring our own land in Canada as we speak. Thank you. Carlos DÃazExecutive Vice President, Lithium at Sociedad QuÃmica y Minera de Chile00:32:45All right. Thank you very much, Mark. Operator00:32:49Thank you. Our last question comes from Juraj Domic with LarrainVial. Please proceed. Juraj DomicSenior Analyst, Basic Materials at LarrainVial00:32:58Hello, good morning. Can you hear me okay? Operator00:33:03Hello? Carlos DÃazExecutive Vice President, Lithium at Sociedad QuÃmica y Minera de Chile00:33:04Yes. Go ahead. Juraj DomicSenior Analyst, Basic Materials at LarrainVial00:33:07Perfect. In the press release, you mentioned some certain supply disruptions in the lithium market. Just to confirm if this is related to the news we've been hearing in Zimbabwe, or you have been seeing disruptions in other countries or areas. My second questions is regarding the permit process for Salar Futuro. If you have any timings or schedule when we can have any news from that. Thank you. Felipe SmithCommercial Vice President of Lithium at Sociedad QuÃmica y Minera de Chile00:33:42Hey, Juraj. on the disruptions on the lithium market, I believe, what you're asking is related to when we talked about the supply, and that was mainly related to some lepidolite producers at the second half of last year who had some, government restrictions in China, that actually ended up in some of them, stopping their production. Carlos DÃazExecutive Vice President, Lithium at Sociedad QuÃmica y Minera de Chile00:34:06Carlos DÃaz speaking again. In respect to the Salar Futuro project, we'll continue working on that, and we expect to apply the environmental approval at the middle of this year. Juraj DomicSenior Analyst, Basic Materials at LarrainVial00:34:18Okay, perfect. Thank you very much. Operator00:34:21Thank you so much. This concludes today's conference call and Q&A session. Thank you all for participating. You may now disconnect.Read moreParticipantsAnalystsAndres Castanos-MollVice President and Equity Analyst at BerenbergBen IsaacsonAnalyst at ScotiabankCarlos DÃazExecutive Vice President, Lithium at Sociedad QuÃmica y Minera de ChileCesar Perez-NavarroAnalyst at BTG PactualCorinne BlanchardDirector, Equity Research at Deutsche BankFelipe SmithCommercial Vice President of Lithium at Sociedad QuÃmica y Minera de ChileGerardo IllanesCFO at Sociedad QuÃmica y Minera de ChileJuraj DomicSenior Analyst, Basic Materials at LarrainVialLucas FerreiraEquity Research Analyst at JPMorgan Chase & Co.Marcio FaridAnalyst at Goldman SachsMark FolzAnalyst at SQM Lithium InternationalMark FonesCEO of International Lithium Division at Sociedad QuÃmica y Minera de ChileMegan SuterDirector of Investor Relations at Sociedad QuÃmica y Minera de ChilePablo HernándezSVP and Head of Battery Materials at SQM Lithium InternationalRicardo RamosCEO at Sociedad QuÃmica y Minera de ChilePowered by Earnings DocumentsSlide DeckPress Release(6-K)Annual report(20-F)Annual report Sociedad Quimica y Minera Earnings HeadlinesCan Capacity Expansion Position ALB for the Next Growth Phase?April 30, 2026 | finance.yahoo.comA Look At SQM’s Valuation After Rothschild Redburn’s Cautious Lithium OutlookApril 25, 2026 | finance.yahoo.comThe REAL Reason Trump is Invading IranFor a moment… Forget about Trump’s ties to Israel. Forget about reports of Iran’s nuclear program. Because my research has led me to believe we’re risking World War 3 with Iran for a completely different reason.May 5 at 1:00 AM | Banyan Hill Publishing (Ad)ALB vs. SQM: Which Lithium Stock Should You Bet on Now?April 24, 2026 | finance.yahoo.comAnalysts Conflicted on These Materials Names: Vale SA (VALE) and Sociedad Quimica Y Minera SA (SQM)April 23, 2026 | theglobeandmail.comSociedad Quimica Y Minera De C Share Price (SQM.US)April 22, 2026 | lse.co.ukSee More Sociedad Quimica y Minera Headlines Get Earnings Announcements in your inboxWant to stay updated on the latest earnings announcements and upcoming reports for companies like Sociedad Quimica y Minera? Sign up for Earnings360's daily newsletter to receive timely earnings updates on Sociedad Quimica y Minera and other key companies, straight to your email. Email Address About Sociedad Quimica y MineraSociedad Química y Minera de Chile S.A. (NYSE: SQM) is a leading global producer of specialty chemicals and minerals headquartered in Santiago, Chile. The company focuses on the extraction and processing of key inputs for the agricultural, industrial and high‐tech sectors. Its core business activities include the mining of lithium, potassium and iodine, as well as the manufacture of value‐added products derived from these raw materials. SQM’s product portfolio spans lithium carbonate and lithium hydroxide used in electric vehicle batteries and energy storage systems; potassium chloride and potassium nitrate fertilizers designed for precision agriculture; and iodine and its derivatives for pharmaceutical, food and electronics applications. The company also produces specialty plant nutrients and industrial nitrates, supporting global food production and various manufacturing processes. Founded in 1968 as a state‐owned venture under Chile’s Development Agency (CORFO) and privatized in the early 1980s, SQM operates major production facilities at the Salar de Atacama and other sites in northern Chile. Its products serve customers in North America, Europe, Asia and beyond, supported by regional offices and distribution networks. SQM continues to invest in sustainable practices, research partnerships and expansions to meet growing demand for clean‐energy materials and agricultural inputs.View Sociedad Quimica y Minera 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 Palantir Drops After a Blowout Q1—What Investors Should KnowShopify’s Valuation Crisis Creates Opportunity in 2026onsemi Stock Dips After Earnings: Why the Dip Is BuyableTSLA: 3 Reasons the Stock Could Hit $400 in MayNebius Breaks Out to All-Time Highs—Here's What's Driving It.3 Reasons Analysts Love DexComMonolithic Power Systems: AI Stock Beat, Raised and Upgraded Post-Earnings Upcoming Earnings AppLovin (5/6/2026)ARM (5/6/2026)DoorDash (5/6/2026)Fortinet (5/6/2026)Marriott International (5/6/2026)Warner Bros. 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PresentationSkip to Participants Operator00:00:00Please note this conference is being recorded. Now it's my pleasure to turn the call over to Megan Suter with Investor Relations. Please proceed. Megan SuterDirector of Investor Relations at Sociedad QuÃmica y Minera de Chile00:00:12Good day, thank you for joining SQM's earnings conference call for the Q4 and full year of 2025. Megan SuterDirector of Investor Relations at Sociedad QuÃmica y Minera de Chile00:00:18This call is being recorded and webcast live. Our earnings press release and accompanying results presentation are available on our website, where you can also find the link to the webcast. Today's participants include Mr. Ricardo Ramos, Chief Executive Officer, Mr. Gerardo Illanes, Chief Financial Officer, Mr. Carlos DÃaz, CEO of Nova Andino Litio, Mr. Pablo Altimiras, CEO of the Iodine and Nitrates Division, and Mr. Mark Fones, CEO of the International Lithium Division. Also joining us today are members of the commercial and business intelligence teams. Mr. Felipe Smith, Commercial Vice President of Nova Andino Litio, Mr. Pablo Hernández, Vice President of Strategy and Development of Nova Andino Litio, Mr. Juan Pablo Bellolio, Commercial Vice President of Plant Nutrition and Specialty Products. Megan SuterDirector of Investor Relations at Sociedad QuÃmica y Minera de Chile00:01:19Mr.Alvaro Araya, CFO of the International Lithium Division, Mr. Andreas Fontanas, Commercial Vice President of the International Lithium Division, and Mr. Max Fial, Head of Studies of the International Lithium Division. Megan SuterDirector of Investor Relations at Sociedad QuÃmica y Minera de Chile00:01:35Before we begin, please note that statements made during this call regarding our business outlook, future economic performance, anticipated profitability, revenues, expenses, and other financial items, along with expected cost synergies and product or service line growth, are considered forward-looking statements under U.S. Federal Securities laws. These statements are not historical facts and are subject to risks and uncertainties that could cause actual results to differ materially. We assume no obligation to update these statements except as required by law. For a full discussion of forward-looking statements, please refer to our earnings press release and presentation. With that, I will now turn the call over to Chief Executive Officer, Mr. Ricardo Ramos. Ricardo RamosCEO at Sociedad QuÃmica y Minera de Chile00:02:29Good morning, everyone. Thank you for joining us today. 2025 was an important year for SQM. Ricardo RamosCEO at Sociedad QuÃmica y Minera de Chile00:02:36We finished the year by signing our association agreement with Codelco, creating Nova Andino Litio, which enables long-term lithium production from the Salar de Atacama. At the same time, we delivered solid financial results, strengthened our operational performance across our key businesses, and continued advancing our long-term growth strategy. For the full year 2025, we reported revenues of $44.6 billion, slightly higher than the previous year, with net income of $588 million. These results reflect improved market conditions, strong operational execution, and the resilience of our diversified portfolio. During the Q4, we saw particularly strong performance in lithium and iodine, two of our most strategic businesses. Ricardo RamosCEO at Sociedad QuÃmica y Minera de Chile00:03:29In lithium, we achieved record quarterly sales volumes across both our Chilean and international operations. At Nova Andino Litio, sales volumes exceed 66,000 metric tons in the Q4, more than 50% higher year-over-year, reflecting the expansion efforts we have implemented over the past several years. On the market side, we began to observe an important shift toward the end of the year. As we mentioned in our previous conference call in November, we saw the inflection point in lithium prices, driven by stronger than expected demand from energy storage system, together with some supply disruptions. Ricardo RamosCEO at Sociedad QuÃmica y Minera de Chile00:04:14This contributed to a tighter market environment and improving pricing trends. As a result, our average realized lithium price increased nearly 14% quarter-over-quarter, reaching close to $10 per kilogram in the Q4. Ricardo RamosCEO at Sociedad QuÃmica y Minera de Chile00:04:31Given the demand momentum we have seen in recent months and limited new supply entering the market, we expect the pricing environment in the Q1 to be significantly stronger. Looking ahead, we continue to see strong long-term fundamentals for lithium, driven primarily by electric vehicles and energy storage systems. Operationally, we are currently running at full capacity at Nova Andino Litio while continuing to advance expansion plans in the Salar de Atacama. In our International Lithium Division, the Mount Holland mine and concentrator perform well, and the Kwinana Refinery continues progressing through the ramp-up phase. Ricardo RamosCEO at Sociedad QuÃmica y Minera de Chile00:05:12Early this year, we also celebrated the first shipment of lithium hydroxide from the Kwinana Refinery in Australia, a milestone that highlights the progress of our International Lithium strategy. Moving to Iodine, the business delivered a strong contribution, representing approximately 42% of SQM's total gross margin during the year. Ricardo RamosCEO at Sociedad QuÃmica y Minera de Chile00:05:34By the end of 2025, we observed record iodine prices, supported by tight supply conditions and a strong demand, particularly in the X-ray contrast media market. Looking ahead, we estimate the iodine market could grow by around 3% in 2026, and our sales volumes are expected to remain stable or increase slightly, depending on market conditions. We expect to be able to finish our seawater pipeline project in the Tarapacá region, which will provide additional operational flexibility and should allow us to unlock incremental production capacity. In a special plan, Specialty Plant Nutrition, we saw 3% volume growth during the year, driven by specialty blends and value-added products. Ricardo RamosCEO at Sociedad QuÃmica y Minera de Chile00:06:22For 2026, we expect moderate volume growth of between 2%-4% within a stable pricing environment. Ricardo RamosCEO at Sociedad QuÃmica y Minera de Chile00:06:31Before concluding, I would also like to highlight our continued progress in sustainability. During 2025, SQM strengthened its ESG performance and received important international recognition, including inclusion in the S&P Global Sustainability Yearbook 2026, and strong ratings from Dow Jones Sustainability Index, MSCI, and EcoVadis. To conclude, we're entering 2026 with a strong operational momentum, improving lithium market conditions, and continued strength in Iodine and specialty plant nutrition. Our teams remain focused on delivering reliable supply to our customers, executing our growth projects, and creating long-term value for our shareholders. T Ricardo RamosCEO at Sociedad QuÃmica y Minera de Chile00:07:21hank you for joining us today. Ricardo RamosCEO at Sociedad QuÃmica y Minera de Chile00:07:23I will now turn the call over to the operator for the Q&A session. Thank you. Operator00:07:28Thank you so much. As a reminder to ask a question, press star one one to get in the queue. That is star one one to get in the queue. Operator00:07:40One moment for our first question. Ricardo RamosCEO at Sociedad QuÃmica y Minera de Chile00:07:45Yes. Operator00:07:45It comes from the line of Lucas Ferreira with JPMorgan. Please proceed. Ricardo RamosCEO at Sociedad QuÃmica y Minera de Chile00:07:51There was a smooth road. Lucas FerreiraEquity Research Analyst at JPMorgan Chase & Co.00:07:53Hi, everybody. Hope you can hear me well. Lucas FerreiraEquity Research Analyst at JPMorgan Chase & Co.00:07:56I have two questions regarding lithium. The first one is your expectation of sales in 2026 of an increase of 10% from the Chile operations. If you can briefly discuss the product mix from the production side, if the company would be willing to put a bit more focus on sulfates in 2026, eventually as a way to quickly expand production, if you're fully utilizing your plant in China, if you have been able to toll more capacity there. Pretty much what's the outlook for production mix, and if you can share some production numbers for the JV. Lucas FerreiraEquity Research Analyst at JPMorgan Chase & Co.00:08:42The second question is regarding the cost of production in the Q4, which was up significantly from the last quarter. I would assume that has to do with the lease payments, given the higher average prices. Just wanted to confirm if there is anything else impacting the cost of production. Eventually, these sulfate operations got a bit more expensive. Any color on the cost of production side would be appreciated. Thank you very much. Felipe SmithCommercial Vice President of Lithium at Sociedad QuÃmica y Minera de Chile00:09:17Hello, Lucas. This is Felipe Smith. Regarding the first part of your question, the sales volume 2026. We are targeting a strong sales volume in Q1. We hope to surpass the sales volume of Q1 2025 by more than 15%, which would also be a record for the first calendar quarter. As we have consistently done over the years, our strategy remains unchanged, which is to operate at full capacity and expand it in line with anticipated market growth, ensuring we are always prepared to meet our customers' needs. Felipe SmithCommercial Vice President of Lithium at Sociedad QuÃmica y Minera de Chile00:09:51Aligning with that strategy, we feel confident that we will successfully allocate in the market the additional production that we expect to achieve this year, which is close to 260,000 tons. There is an appetite for lithium units in the market, especially in Asia Pacific. I will give you Felipe SmithCommercial Vice President of Lithium at Sociedad QuÃmica y Minera de Chile00:10:10Carlos will comment about the product mix. Carlos DÃazExecutive Vice President, Lithium at Sociedad QuÃmica y Minera de Chile00:10:14Hi, Lucas. This is Carlos DÃaz, CEO of Nova Andino. With respect to the production, first, during the year 2025, our production went according to the schedule, reaching 234,000 as LCA. Out of 50 of those were produced in China, coming from our lithium surface produced in the Salar de Atacama. For this year, our expectation for production have been increased and we target to produce close to 260,000 as a Lithium Carbonate Equivalent, increasingly even from both our production in Chile and in China. This had been the case during the past year. In 2025, we expect to continue to increase our productivity driven by the efficiency improvement, the use of new technology, at the same time reducing the brine extraction according our sustainability strategy. Carlos DÃazExecutive Vice President, Lithium at Sociedad QuÃmica y Minera de Chile00:11:11This year, we will continue to have full flexibility in terms of lithium carbon and lithium hydroxide, both in Chile and China. I understand you're asking for the machine. We are now operating at full capacity as well. Same as in Chile. Mark FonesCEO of International Lithium Division at Sociedad QuÃmica y Minera de Chile00:11:29Hi, Lucas. This is Mark Fones from SQM Lithium International. In our case, we also expect sales to be increasing in around 10% on an LCE basis. As we have completed the ramp-up of the concentrator, we will continue and expect to be producing at capacity at the concentrator in Mount Holland. Our sales will be heavily directed by our production. In terms of the mix between spodumene concentrate and lithium hydroxide, they will be heavily leaned and skewed into spodumene concentrate as we continue to ramp up the lithium hydroxide plants in Kwinana. Mark FonesCEO of International Lithium Division at Sociedad QuÃmica y Minera de Chile00:12:08Thank you. Operator00:12:13One moment. Gerardo IllanesCFO at Sociedad QuÃmica y Minera de Chile00:12:15Lucas, regarding your question about cost. I think there may be a mistake in those numbers. 'Cause if you look at the total cost per ton of the Lithium and Derivatives division, Q3 versus Q4, it's quite similar. You will see that the average price of lithium in the Q4 was higher, and consequently, within the cost line, we have a higher portion of these payments to Corfo. Bear in mind that within the cost of goods sold, we have the cost of our Nova Andino Litio Division and also the Lithium and Derivatives, that is becoming more relevant in terms of total volumes within the business line. Lucas FerreiraEquity Research Analyst at JPMorgan Chase & Co.00:13:01Thank you very much, guys, for the call. Exactly, that was exactly my question, Gerardo. If there was any effect other than the lease payments in the quarter. Thank you so much. That's very clear. Operator00:13:13Thank you. One moment for our next question. Operator00:13:17It comes from Andrés Castanos Müller with Berenberg. Please proceed. Andres Castanos-MollVice President and Equity Analyst at Berenberg00:13:22Hello. Congratulations on the strong results. Your EPS shows an impact from higher minority interest, but we don't see yet a dividend paid to Codelco in the cash flow statement. Two questions about this. First, can you provide some guidance on how to calculate the minority interest going forward? Andres Castanos-MollVice President and Equity Analyst at Berenberg00:13:40Can you please provide also some guidance on when will we start seeing dividend payments to Codelco, and how these dividends will relate to the minority interest? Thank you. Ricardo RamosCEO at Sociedad QuÃmica y Minera de Chile00:14:00Hello, Andrés. Ricardo Ramos speaking. The detail of the agreement with Codelco is public, and it's a shareholders' agreement how we calculate the dividend to Codelco every year. In very simple terms, you have the net income of Nova Andino. From the portion, most of the Nova Andino net income is related to lithium business. Nowadays, 33.5 thousand metric tons of lithium are allocated to Codelco. The rest allocated to SQM. Using this proportion, we allocate the net income for both companies. That's a simple way to do it. It's just a little bit more complicated. It's public, and you can review in the shareholders' agreement. Ricardo RamosCEO at Sociedad QuÃmica y Minera de Chile00:14:39We have both parties. We expect to pay the dividends during April, I think during April/May, but I think April is gonna be the month. Ricardo RamosCEO at Sociedad QuÃmica y Minera de Chile00:14:47We are going to release every quarter our best estimates and assumptions of the portion of the dividend to Codelco that is going to be paid at the end of the year. Andres Castanos-MollVice President and Equity Analyst at Berenberg00:14:59A follow-up, if I may. The earnings that we see, the minority interest reflects a proportion to the 33.5 kilotons or reflects a proportion of the 50% that Codelco controls? Thank you. Ricardo RamosCEO at Sociedad QuÃmica y Minera de Chile00:15:17In the minority interest, we put the dividend to Codelco. This dividend is related with the 33.5 thousand metric tons of lithium and the net income allocated to these 33.5 thousand metric tons. Andres Castanos-MollVice President and Equity Analyst at Berenberg00:15:30That's clear. Thank you. Operator00:15:33Thank you. Our next question is from Ben Isaacson with Scotiabank. Please proceed. Ben IsaacsonAnalyst at Scotiabank00:15:42Thank you very much. Good morning, everyone. Ben IsaacsonAnalyst at Scotiabank00:15:43I have three questions. I'd like to ask them one by one. The first question is on iodine. You sold much more than I think the Street was expecting in Q4, but you're also looking for stable volume in 2026, especially given that you have the seawater pipeline coming on. I'm just curious, why did you sell more than expected in Q4, but you're gonna be flat on volume in 2026, even though you have the pipeline coming on? Pablo HernándezSVP and Head of Battery Materials at SQM Lithium International00:16:17Hi, Ben. Pablo Altimiras speaking. I could say that the main reason is what we didn't see some capacity from third parties that was expected to come. That's the reason why finally we sell more in Q4. We are seeing good signals in terms of the demand. Actually, demand of last year in iodine growth more than expected. According to our numbers, finally, the demand growth 0.6%, where the expectation was to grow almost 0, so that was a good signal. We have the product to deliver. In the case of this year, we are expanding some capacity. Actually, we are expanding the new projects in Chile are coming. Our first estimation was the first semester. Pablo HernándezSVP and Head of Battery Materials at SQM Lithium International00:17:01Right now, maybe it will happen in the second semester. Pablo HernándezSVP and Head of Battery Materials at SQM Lithium International00:17:05We, that's the reason why finally we pretend to sell much more or less the same amount. Having said that, you know that as an SQM strategy, you're always putting more capacity, and our idea with the new project is to have a capacity to respond if the market needs. Ben IsaacsonAnalyst at Scotiabank00:17:24Thank you. My second question is on Tianqi Lithium. They have filed that they are now an active seller of, I think, maybe 3 million shares or so, and potentially that could grow. Given that you see significantly higher lithium prices, iodine's doing well, potash and the SPN business seems fine, have you been in discussions to potentially buy back some of those shares and keep them out of the market? If you haven't, is that something that you would be willing to consider? Ricardo RamosCEO at Sociedad QuÃmica y Minera de Chile00:17:56We're not under any kind of discussion about this point, first. Second, there's no, from a legal point of view, you cannot buy back shares in Chile. Ben IsaacsonAnalyst at Scotiabank00:18:08Okay. Thank you for that. That's easy. Let me go to my third question. We're starting to see sodium-ion batteries really inflect this year and improve on key metrics like energy density, cost, etc. I was hoping you could talk about what the risks are to lithium demand growth for both EVs and for energy storage from sodium-ion, and how are you managing those risks? Pablo HernándezSVP and Head of Battery Materials at SQM Lithium International00:18:36Hey, Ben. Pablo Hernández speaking here. We have indeed heard a lot of sodium-ion batteries in the market, as you have mentioned. We still strongly believe that lithium is the best placed item to be used in these batteries, in our conversations with the market and understanding of the market. We see a small potential market space for the sodium-ion batteries, but we feel very strongly that lithium will be the dominant technology for the future. Ben IsaacsonAnalyst at Scotiabank00:19:09Great. Thank you very much. Operator00:19:12Thank you. Operator00:19:14Our next question comes from Corinne Blanchard with Deutsche Bank. Please proceed. Corinne BlanchardDirector, Equity Research at Deutsche Bank00:19:20Hey, good morning. Thank you for taking the time for my question. I want to go back on the lithium expectation for the year. You mentioned a pretty strong 1 Q, 15% up year-over-year. Can you talk about the expectation or the cadence, 2 Q through 4 Q? Then maybe if you can share as well what you hear from a Chinese customer, like, trying to get a sentiment on what people are saying there on the market. Thank you. Felipe SmithCommercial Vice President of Lithium at Sociedad QuÃmica y Minera de Chile00:19:56Corinne, Felipe here. As I said before, 15% for the Q1 compared to the Q1 2025. We expect an increasing volume quarter by quarter, ending up with hopefully the largest volume in Q4. Okay? As I said also in the previous question, we are planning to sell more or less in line with increasing production. If we have opportunities to sell a bit more, of course, we will try to take them. Just for your information, we have today about more than 80% of our volume is already contracted, so we are leaving some space for spot sales, trying to maximize our opportunities and margins. Your question about the Chinese customers. Felipe SmithCommercial Vice President of Lithium at Sociedad QuÃmica y Minera de Chile00:21:07As I said also, there is a strong appetite for lithium units, especially in Asia-Pacific, and China is not an exception. On the contrary, we have been getting a lot of inquiries for trying to increase our volumes. We want to have a very diversified customer portfolio, so we manage that carefully. Corinne BlanchardDirector, Equity Research at Deutsche Bank00:21:33Thank you. Maybe another question. Corinne BlanchardDirector, Equity Research at Deutsche Bank00:21:35Can you talk about, like, the pricing expectation? You mentioned having about 80% under contract, so I'm assuming that's looking at the current pricing or, like, what we're seeing in the last three months. Can you just remind us how you look at it for the contract? Corinne BlanchardDirector, Equity Research at Deutsche Bank00:21:51Then just overall, what's your pricing view for the year for the market? Thank you. Felipe SmithCommercial Vice President of Lithium at Sociedad QuÃmica y Minera de Chile00:21:57Yeah. This is the best question, of course, which nobody can answer, but I will try. After reaching the lowest point over the last 4 years in the Q2 of 2025, our average sales price reached around $10 in Q4 2025, aligned with market indices, which is good news. Our realized prices remain, as always, mainly linked to those price indices. Consequently, our sales price in Q1, I can say now that will be substantially higher than Q4 2025. That is one very good news. However, if you ask me to go further beyond that, it's more difficult. I can only say that prices will remain volatile this year. It is very difficult to predict what will happen in the other quarters. Felipe SmithCommercial Vice President of Lithium at Sociedad QuÃmica y Minera de Chile00:22:49What I can say, without my boss being upset with me, is that prices should be closer to current price levels than the levels we saw last year. I hope this is good for you, Corinne. Corinne BlanchardDirector, Equity Research at Deutsche Bank00:23:03Yeah. That's very helpful. Thank you. Operator00:23:07Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Marcio Farid with Goldman Sachs. Please proceed. Marcio FaridAnalyst at Goldman Sachs00:23:14Thank you. Morning, everyone. All up on my side, looking at your presentation, you have Chile capacity increasing to 240,000 tons by 2028, and the earlier presentation points into 2026. Just trying to understand what, what led to that, you know, change. It seems like that you guys are privileging China over Chile capacity. I'm not sure it's because of CapEx, but one is more, more efficient and just trying to understand how should we think about production growth and the mix between Chile and China in the next couple of years would be great. Secondly, on the iodine side, you just mentioned 3% expectations in terms of demand growth, flat pricing. Marcio FaridAnalyst at Goldman Sachs00:23:59Obviously profitability has been quite strong for the last few years, and it's always surprising to see that the supply response has been relatively slow. You suggested that seems like growth that was expected in the later part of last year has failed to materialize as well. Just trying to understand your level of conviction on the iodine market, that we can, you know, continue to see this level of profitability and if there is any risk in terms of supply response to these elevated prices. Thank you. Carlos DÃazExecutive Vice President, Lithium at Sociedad QuÃmica y Minera de Chile00:24:33Hi, Marcio, Carlos DÃaz speaking. Regarding your question of lithium expansion, the 240,000 expansion of our chemical plant in Antofagasta have been delayed into 2028 as a consequence of optimization and efficiency project we have been developing in Salar de Atacama, allowing us to increase the lithium sulfate production. It's important to mention that the total production we have forecast hasn't been affected. Actually, our total production expected for this year is increasing compared to the previous announcement. Finally some optimization of the CapEx and going to produce more every year. Pablo HernándezSVP and Head of Battery Materials at SQM Lithium International00:25:22Hello, Pablo Altimiras speaking. Regarding to your question about iodine, the perspective that we have for this market is quite positive. As we already said, our expectation for this year is that the demand will grow 3%, which is a big jump compared to the growth that we saw last year. Also in the long term, our view about the demand also is positive. That's the reason why we have been investing material resources in expansions. Remember that some years ago, we opened Pampa Orcoma. Right now, we are opening Maria Elena. Also, we are close to finish our project of the seawater pipeline in order to be able to continue grow and to have more capacity and flexibility. Pablo HernándezSVP and Head of Battery Materials at SQM Lithium International00:26:10Our strategy is to be there to deliver the iodine that the market needs. Actually, with the new investment, we pretend to produce more than 15,000 metric tons this year. Also after the seawater pipeline project, we pretend to reach a capacity that we surpass the 17,000 metric tons of iodine per year. Carlos DÃazExecutive Vice President, Lithium at Sociedad QuÃmica y Minera de Chile00:26:30Okay, thank you. Operator00:26:39One moment for our next question. It comes from the line of Cesar Perez-Navarro with BTG Pactual. Please proceed. Cesar Perez-NavarroAnalyst at BTG Pactual00:26:49Yes, good morning, gentlemen, and thank you for taking my questions. The first one, could you please provide an update on the ramp-up trajectory of the Kwinana refinery? If you could provide a volume forecast for Mount Holland throughout 2026. Additionally, if you could detail the current status of the engineering studies and regulatory permits for the proposed expansion of the mine and concentrator. If this expansion would be able to proceed, what capital expenditure range would we be looking at? Cesar Perez-NavarroAnalyst at BTG Pactual00:27:31My second question relates to your exploration activity within Australia and other international jurisdictions. If you could provide an update on that would be extremely helpful. Cesar Perez-NavarroAnalyst at BTG Pactual00:27:45Thank you. Mark FolzAnalyst at SQM Lithium International00:27:50Thank you, Cesar, for your questions. Mark FonesCEO of International Lithium Division at Sociedad QuÃmica y Minera de Chile00:27:51I will try to go one by one over them. This is Mark Folz. Regarding your question on the expansion of the mine and concentrator, remember that the final investment decision that we're supposed to take this year refers only to the mine and concentrator. We expect that to be brought to the boards, respective boards of both Wesfarmers and SQM by mid this year. Its output is still subject, of course, as you well mentioned, to the environmental approvals and the engineering studies. Both have progressed well, so we expect ahead of the decision to have a relevant milestone on the approvals, which is progressing well. The engineering studies has also been progressing well. Mark FonesCEO of International Lithium Division at Sociedad QuÃmica y Minera de Chile00:28:37As you well know, as was usual on our previous of the investment decision, we take our capital investment decisions with above 30% advance in engineering. We expect to have that advanced by mid this year. Relevantly in the concentrator, we expect to have around percent engineering progress. That has been moving well. Regarding your question on CapEx on the expansion, we haven't yet defined a number on the investment CapEx. I can tell you that we have allocated within our 2025 and 2027 CapEx projection, we have allocated around $200 million for the expansion on the concentrator for Mount Holland in 2027. Your next question was on the Kwinana refinery and having production outputs and projections. Mark FonesCEO of International Lithium Division at Sociedad QuÃmica y Minera de Chile00:29:29I can tell you first on the mine and concentrator, as I explained, briefly before, we are already producing at capacity. We expect to have such capacity production within 2026. That should be a range for SQM's 50% of in between 170 and 180,000 tons of spodumene concentrate, 6%. That's our portion along this year. The more tough and difficult question has to do with the projection and guidance on production on Kwinana. As you well know, we've been under ramp-up lately. It's difficult to come up with precise numbers in such scenario. However, I can tell you that the ramp-up has been affected by intermittent odor issues, as has been briefed by our partners, Wesfarmers before. It already been tackled with the studies and engineering development. Mark FonesCEO of International Lithium Division at Sociedad QuÃmica y Minera de Chile00:30:23We expect to have that solution by mid, this year, completed solution. It's important to know there that our emissions have been within approved limits anyway. Because of this, we are now expecting ramp-up to move into 2027. Therefore, as I mentioned before, that volumes of sales will be heavily leaned into spodumene concentrate also this 2026, which provides us the flexibility of selling profitable spodumene concentrate in the meantime. Thank you. Carlos DÃazExecutive Vice President, Lithium at Sociedad QuÃmica y Minera de Chile00:30:56Thank you. Ricardo RamosCEO at Sociedad QuÃmica y Minera de Chile00:30:58Regarding your exploration question, we are focused today in three main areas, so Australia, Namibia, and Canada. Let me go probably a little bit over each one of those briefly. In Australia, we have a four earning agreements or partners, if you may. Those 4 early exploration agreements are distributed across Western Australia and the Northern Territory. Each one of those are in different early stages, if you may. A couple of them are on surface exploration, and a couple of them are already undergoing drilling programs. We expect to have progress and development during this year, 2026. The 2 drilling programs, if you're interested, are planned at Mount Roberts and at the Northern Territory areas where pegmatites are already being identified. Ricardo RamosCEO at Sociedad QuÃmica y Minera de Chile00:31:59Regarding our exploration activities outside Australia, still early days in Namibia, we are conducting our stage 1 drilling program with our partner, Andrada Mining, there. In addition to have confirmed some very good grades at surface, we have also confirmed several bodies of pegmatite, in this case, spodumene, at depth. It's still to be seen how well-spread, how big they are, still early days. We expect to have second stage of exploration during this year as well. Regarding Canada, as you well know, we established SQM Canada for exploration purposes last year, and we are currently exploring our own land in Canada as we speak. Thank you. Carlos DÃazExecutive Vice President, Lithium at Sociedad QuÃmica y Minera de Chile00:32:45All right. Thank you very much, Mark. Operator00:32:49Thank you. Our last question comes from Juraj Domic with LarrainVial. Please proceed. Juraj DomicSenior Analyst, Basic Materials at LarrainVial00:32:58Hello, good morning. Can you hear me okay? Operator00:33:03Hello? Carlos DÃazExecutive Vice President, Lithium at Sociedad QuÃmica y Minera de Chile00:33:04Yes. Go ahead. Juraj DomicSenior Analyst, Basic Materials at LarrainVial00:33:07Perfect. In the press release, you mentioned some certain supply disruptions in the lithium market. Just to confirm if this is related to the news we've been hearing in Zimbabwe, or you have been seeing disruptions in other countries or areas. My second questions is regarding the permit process for Salar Futuro. If you have any timings or schedule when we can have any news from that. Thank you. Felipe SmithCommercial Vice President of Lithium at Sociedad QuÃmica y Minera de Chile00:33:42Hey, Juraj. on the disruptions on the lithium market, I believe, what you're asking is related to when we talked about the supply, and that was mainly related to some lepidolite producers at the second half of last year who had some, government restrictions in China, that actually ended up in some of them, stopping their production. Carlos DÃazExecutive Vice President, Lithium at Sociedad QuÃmica y Minera de Chile00:34:06Carlos DÃaz speaking again. In respect to the Salar Futuro project, we'll continue working on that, and we expect to apply the environmental approval at the middle of this year. Juraj DomicSenior Analyst, Basic Materials at LarrainVial00:34:18Okay, perfect. Thank you very much. Operator00:34:21Thank you so much. This concludes today's conference call and Q&A session. Thank you all for participating. You may now disconnect.Read moreParticipantsAnalystsAndres Castanos-MollVice President and Equity Analyst at BerenbergBen IsaacsonAnalyst at ScotiabankCarlos DÃazExecutive Vice President, Lithium at Sociedad QuÃmica y Minera de ChileCesar Perez-NavarroAnalyst at BTG PactualCorinne BlanchardDirector, Equity Research at Deutsche BankFelipe SmithCommercial Vice President of Lithium at Sociedad QuÃmica y Minera de ChileGerardo IllanesCFO at Sociedad QuÃmica y Minera de ChileJuraj DomicSenior Analyst, Basic Materials at LarrainVialLucas FerreiraEquity Research Analyst at JPMorgan Chase & Co.Marcio FaridAnalyst at Goldman SachsMark FolzAnalyst at SQM Lithium InternationalMark FonesCEO of International Lithium Division at Sociedad QuÃmica y Minera de ChileMegan SuterDirector of Investor Relations at Sociedad QuÃmica y Minera de ChilePablo HernándezSVP and Head of Battery Materials at SQM Lithium InternationalRicardo RamosCEO at Sociedad QuÃmica y Minera de ChilePowered by