Jack Guo
Analyst · BMO Capital Markets
Thank you, Ingrid, and thank you, everyone, for joining the call today. Please turn now to Slide 9, and let's discuss our A&T segment performance. Adjusted EBITDA of $83 million increased 43% compared to the fourth quarter last year. Volume was a tailwind of $31 million due to higher TID shipments. TID shipments were up 41% versus last year. First, as we continue to see increased demand from onshoring in the U.S. And secondly, we also benefited from higher shipments in Valais following recovery from the flood last year. Aerospace shipments were stable in the quarter versus last year as commercial OEMs continue to work through excess aluminum inventory in the supply chain. Demand in space and military aircraft remained generally healthy. Price and mix was a headwind of $28 million due to unfavorable mix in the quarter, partially offset by improved contractual and spot pricing in Aerospace and TID. Costs were a tailwind of $18 million, primarily as a result of lower operating costs. FX and other was also a tailwind of $4 million in the quarter due to the weaker U.S. dollar. For the full year 2025, A&T generated adjusted EBITDA of $339 million, an increase of 16% compared to 2024. The drivers of the full year performance were similar to those in the fourth quarter, except volume was a headwind of $1 million for the full year. Now turn to Slide 10, and let's focus on our PARP segment performance. Adjusted EBITDA of $136 million increased 143% compared to the fourth quarter last year and is a new quarterly record for PARP. Volume was a tailwind of $19 million in the quarter. Packaging shipments increased 15% in the quarter versus last year as demand remained healthy in both North America and Europe. In North America, we also benefited at Muscle Shoals from continued improvement of operational performance in the quarter. Automotive shipments were relatively stable in the quarter overall, though we did benefit in both regions from the current supply shortages in North America of aluminum automotive body sheet. Price and mix was a tailwind of $15 million, mainly as a result of improved pricing and favorable mix in the quarter. Costs were a tailwind of $40 million, primarily as a result of favorable metal costs given improved scrap spreads and higher metal pricing environment in North America and increased consumption of scrap given the Muscle Shoals improvement, which is partially offset by higher operating costs. FX and other was a tailwind of $6 million in the quarter. For the full year 2025, PARP generated adjusted EBITDA of $353 million, an increase of 46% compared to 2024. The drivers of the full year performance were similar to those in the fourth quarter, though we benefited more in the fourth quarter from favorable metal costs compared to the full year. Now turn to Slide 11, and let's focus on the AS&I segment. Adjusted EBITDA of $5 million increased by $1 million compared to the fourth quarter of last year. Volume was a $4 million tailwind as a result of higher shipments in industry-touted products, partially offset by lower shipments in automotive. Industry shipments were up 33% in the quarter versus last year as we had higher shipments in Valais following recovery from the flood last year. The industrial markets in Europe appear to have bottomed, although they remain at depressed levels. Automotive shipments were down 10% in the quarter with weakness in both North America and Europe. Even though the broad automotive market in North America are relatively stable, our automotive structures business was negatively affected by the current supply shortages of aluminum automotive body sheet and its impact on production of certain platforms in the region, which automotive structures business supply to. Price and mix was a $6 million headwind in the quarter. Costs were a tailwind of $1 million, primarily due to lower operating costs, partially offset by the impact of tariffs. FX and other was a tailwind of $2 million in the quarter. For the full year 2025, AS&I generated adjusted EBITDA of $72 million, a decrease of 3% compared to 2024. The drivers of the full year performance were similar to those in the fourth quarter, except that volume was stable for the full year. And in the third quarter, we received net customer compensation for the underperformance of an automotive program. It is not on the slide here, but our holdings and corporate expense for the full year 2025 was $44 million, up $11 million compared to the prior year. The increase is primarily due to higher labor costs and costs associated with corporate transformation projects. We currently expect holdings and corporate expense to run at approximately $50 million in 2026. Now please turn to Slide 12. It is not on the slide here, but I wanted to summarize the current cost environment we're facing. As you know, we operate a pass-through business model, so we're not materially exposed to changes in the market price of primary aluminum, our largest cost input. On other metal costs, following the U.S. tariff announcements in 2025, market aluminum prices in the U.S., which includes the LME aluminum price plus the Midwest premium have risen sharply to historical levels. Spot scrap spreads for aluminum, mainly used beverage cans or UBCs have also improved from historically tight levels experienced in the second half of 2024 and into 2025. Both of these dynamics unfolded as we moved through the year in 2025. Given that a portion of our scrap purchases were negotiated previously, we did not benefit much from this dynamic in 2025 until the fourth quarter and the favorable impact was augmented through strong performance at Muscle Shoals in the quarter. As we look at 2026, we expect to benefit from these trends, especially in the first half. Moving on to inflation. Inflationary pressures continue today across operating cost categories, including labor, energy, maintenance and supplies, albeit at more normal levels. Regarding tariffs, we have made some progress on pass-throughs and other actions to mitigate a portion of our gross tariff exposure, and we believe at this stage, our direct tariff exposure remains manageable and the current tariff and trade policies are net positive for us. In terms of the overall cost management, we have demonstrated strong cost performance in the past, and we're confident in our ability to maintain a right-sized cost structure in any environment. On that front, we're pleased today to announce our next group-wide excellence program, which we're calling Vision 2028. This program will target both operational efficiencies and cost reduction across our businesses and is one of the building blocks in our road map to our 2028 targets. We look forward to updating you on our progress going forward. Now let's turn to Slide 13 and discuss our free cash flow. We generated $178 million of free cash flow in 2025, well ahead of a very challenged 2024. The increase in free cash flow in 2025 was primarily a result of higher segment adjusted EBITDA and lower capital expenditures, partially offset by higher cash interest. Looking at 2026, we expect to generate free cash flow in excess of $200 million for the full year. We expect CapEx to be approximately $115 million, which includes approximately $100 million of return-seeking CapEx, primarily related to key aerospace and recycling and casting projects we announced previously at Issoire, Muscle Shoals and Ravenswood. We expect cash interest of approximately $125 million and cash taxes of approximately $70 million, and we expect working capital and other to be a use of cash for the full year. As Ingrid mentioned previously, we continued our share buyback activities in the quarter. During the quarter, we repurchased 2.4 million shares for $40 million, bringing our 2025 total to 8.9 million shares for $115 million. We have approximately $106 million remaining on our existing share repurchase program, which we intend to complete by using our free cash flow generated this year. Now let's turn to Slide 14 and discuss our balance sheet and liquidity position. At the end of the fourth quarter, our net debt of $1.8 billion was up approximately $50 million compared to the end of 2024, with the largest driver being the translation impact from the weaker U.S. dollar at the end of the year. We reduced our leverage to 2.5x at the end of 2025, which is at the upper end of our target range. We expect leverage to trend lower in 2026 and to maintain our target leverage range of 1.5 to 2.5x over time. As you can see in our debt summary, we have no bond maturities until 2028. And as of the end of 2025, we had no outstanding borrowings under the Pan-U.S. ABL facility. Our liquidity increased by around $140 million from the end of 2024 and remains very strong at $866 million as of the end of 2025. With that, I'll now hand the call over to Ingrid.