Peter Z. Vanacker
Analyst · Deutsche Bank
Thank you all for joining today's call as we discuss our first quarter results, and thank you, Dave. As some of you know, Dave Kinney is retiring after a decade leading Investor Relations and nearly 35 years with the company. I am sure you will all join me in congratulating Dave for his significant contributions to the company and wishing him well in retirement. Succeeding Dave is David Dennison, who brings nearly 30 years of industry experience to the role across planning, commercial and strategic functions, including most recently in the Circular & Low Carbon Solutions business. I am confident you will find David to be another great partner as our new Head of Investor Relations. Before we turn to our performance, I want to acknowledge the human impact of the tragic ongoing situation in the Middle East. The suffering and trauma of war is catastrophic for all involved, and our thoughts are with those affected. Our first priority is the continued safety of our people, and we have already executed on protocols to protect our employees and contractors in the region. This situation in the Middle East has materially disrupted global energy and petrochemicals markets. We expect the impacts will extend beyond the end of the year with much of the world's petrochemical capacity constrained or shut down. LYB's U.S. and European production capacity is a critical resource for filling the global gap in supply for our essential products. Supported by our operational excellence and the work from our value enhancement program, we are increasing production to meet this demand. At the same time, we remain focused on executing our strategy. Our portfolio transformation has reached another significant milestone with the sale of four European assets. While increased cash generation and profitability will improve our credit metrics, we are maintaining our discipline on capital expenditures. And we are undertaking deliberate actions to further streamline our fixed costs and underpin our ability to generate attractive value during both cyclical highs and lows. With that being said, let's take a moment to review LYB's safety performance with Slide #3. Safety remains foundational to how we operate. Our year-to-date total recordable incident rate of 0.13 is among the best in our sector and reflects the commitment of our employees and contractors. Turning to Slide 4. The Middle East conflict and its unprecedented effects on energy prices and global logistics has shifted the paradigm for petrochemicals. At the high end of the cost curve, naphtha-based producers in China and Southeast Asia have faced sharply higher costs driven by the compound impact of higher crude prices, the loss of sanctioned crude discounts and weak co-product values. In addition, pre-conflict, approximately half of Asia's imported crude came from the Middle East. The war has impacted security of supply for Asian crude and petrochemical feedstocks, leading to lower production and a substantial reduction of exports from the region. At the low end of the cost curve, U.S. ethane economics have improved, strengthening the cost advantage of LYB's U.S. Gulf Coast assets with low-cost raw materials and increased production to serve increased global demand. In Europe, higher prices are now offsetting higher energy and feedstock costs as imports from the Middle East and China decline. And while this chart focuses on ethylene, we find similar dynamics in play across nearly all LYB products. Clearly, we are operating in a dynamic environment where dramatic changes are possible within short time periods. Our global operational and marketing network has already yielded valuable insights, which have enabled us to rapidly adapt to the changing environment. These insights inform our position that the impacts from the war will be long-lasting. We believe the geopolitical risk premium for crude oil will persist even after a resolution to the current conflict, and discounts for sanctioned crude are unlikely to return. Both of these impacts should durably steepen the global cost curve relative to pre-war conditions. Across feedstocks and petrochemicals, physical damage from the war and accelerated shutdowns will require time and resources to repair. And some older, smaller and less economical plants under evaluation for potential rationalization may not restart at all. This could provide a lasting benefit to supply and demand balances. Of course, we are mindful of the potential for second order impacts like demand destruction for discretionary spending, especially if oil prices remain at recent highs. But we remain confident that our cost-advantaged asset base and deliberate execution will enable LYB to continue to generate value through the cycle. Now let's turn to Slide 5 as we discuss the tangible steps we are taking to execute on our strategy to build a more resilient LYB. Over the past 3 years, we have executed on significant portfolio transformation. This included ceasing refining operations, closing our Dutch PO joint venture, divesting our EO&D business and the ongoing transformation of our APS portfolio. And as we announced this morning, we reached another significant milestone in our portfolio transformation by completing the sale of four European assets. This transaction sharpens the focus of our capital allocation towards strategic assets that advance long-term value creation for LYB. We extend our gratitude to our friends and colleagues that helped accomplish this transaction. We are particularly thankful for those who are transferring to the new organization for their contributions, professionalism and resilience throughout the process. As they transition to a stand-alone business, we wish them and the new company success in the next chapter ahead. We continue to benefit from our team's vigorous work on the cash improvement plan. We are making progress toward our target of $500 million of incremental cash flow this year, which will bring the cumulative total since 2025 to $1.3 billion. We remain focused on disciplined management of trade working capital, which despite higher volumes and prices was $450 million lower on March 31 than a year prior. We are also continuing to streamline the organization, including our Executive Committee. The effects will flow through the organization over the coming months to create further efficiencies. First quarter fixed costs across the company are already under $50 million lower than first quarter of 2025, including closure costs. And since the end of 2024, we have reduced headcount by approximately 3,000 positions or 15% through the combination of fixed cost reductions and portfolio management, including the sale of our European assets announced earlier this morning. Our initiatives are yielding results and more improvement is underway. Even with our sharp focus on capital discipline, we remain poised to realize future value creation. We're operating our Channelview PO/TBA plant above benchmark rates and modest investment in Hyperzone reliability and acetyls debottlenecks will deliver incremental value. Construction on MoReTec-1 continues as planned and is expected to ramp up towards the end of 2027. Together, we expect these future growth projects will increase our EBITDA by approximately $400 million. In addition, VEP continues to drive down our costs and increase our reliability and productivity. Now let's turn to Slide 6 as we discuss our financial performance. During the first quarter, earnings were $0.49 per diluted share with EBITDA of $615 million. EBITDA improved by nearly 50%, supported by both typical seasonal trends and a significant improvement in market conditions during March. Cash and liquidity remained robust with balances of $2.6 billion and $7.3 billion, respectively, at quarter end. I will now hand over to Agustin to discuss our financial performance in more detail. Agustin?