Mark Marinko
Analyst · B. Riley Securities
Thanks, Katherine. Turning to Slide 4. The fourth quarter net loss attributable to SunCoke was $1 per share, down $1.28 versus the fourth quarter of 2024, primarily driven by onetime items totaling $0.85 per share net of tax, including a noncash asset impairment charge, primarily due to the closure of Haverhill I. Site closure costs were primarily related to Phoenix operating sites and restructuring, and transaction costs, primarily related to the acquisition of Phoenix. Fourth quarter net loss was also impacted by lower coke sales volumes in the Domestic Coke segment due to the breach of contract by Algoma. Our full year net loss attributable to SunCoke was $0.52 per share, down $1.64 versus the full year 2024. The decrease was primarily driven by onetime items totaling $0.97 per share net of tax, including a noncash asset impairment charge, primarily due to the closure of Haverhill I, acquisition-related transaction and restructuring costs and Phoenix operating site closure costs. Full year net loss was also impacted by the change in mix of contract and spot coke sales. Coupled with lower economics on the Granite City contract extension in the domestic coke segment, partially offset by lower income tax expense driven by capital investment tax credits. Consolidated adjusted EBITDA for the fourth quarter 2025 was $56.7 million, down $9.4 million versus the prior year period. The decrease was mainly driven by lower coke sales volumes due to the breach of contract by Algoma, lower economics on the Granite City contract extension and lower terminals handling volumes due to market conditions, partially offset by the addition of Phoenix Global. On a full year basis, we delivered adjusted EBITDA of $219.2 million, down $53.6 million versus the prior year. The year-over-year decrease was primarily driven by the change in mix of contract and spot coke sales, lower economics on the Granite City contract extension, lower coke sales volumes due to the breach of contract by Algoma and lower terminals handling volume due to market conditions, partially offset by the addition of Phoenix Global. Turning to Slide 5 to discuss the year-over-year adjusted EBITDA variance in detail. Our Domestic Coke business delivered full year adjusted EBITDA of $170 million, down $64.7 million from the prior year period. Results were impacted by the change in mix of contract and spot coke sales, the lower Granite City contract extension economics and the Algoma breach of contract. Our Industrial Services segment, which includes the former Logistics segment and new Phoenix Global business delivered full year adjusted EBITDA of $62.3 million, representing a year-over-year increase of $11.9 million. The increase is primarily driven by the addition of Phoenix Global, partially offset by lower terminals handling volumes due to market conditions. Finally, our corporate and other expenses, which includes results from our legacy coal mining business and Brazil Coke making business were $13.1 million, an increase of $800,000 year-over-year. Turning to Slide 6 to discuss capital deployment in 2025. We generated operating cash flow of $109.1 million in 2025. Net cash provided by operating activities was negatively impacted by 2 items: number one, the accounting treatment of a portion of Phoenix Global's acquisition price, Phoenix's management incentive plan and transaction costs, cash payments totaling $29.3 million were included in the acquisition price but flowed through our operating cash flow as a use of cash. Number two, the $30 million impact from the breach of contract by Algoma, representing the total outstanding accounts receivable and coke and coal inventory on the books at year-end. Without the impact of these 2 onetime items, our operating cash flow would have been approximately $59 million higher. Net borrowing on our revolver was $193 million. Cash acquired from the Phoenix Global acquisition was $24.3 million. And after factoring in the $29.3 million flowing through operating cash flow, the net purchase consideration for Phoenix was $295.8 million. Capital expenditures came in at $66.8 million, which is slightly below our revised guidance of $70 million due to the timing of CapEx payments. We also returned capital to our shareholders in the form of $0.48 per share annual dividend, which was a use of approximately $41 million of cash. We ended 2025 with a cash balance of $88.7 million and $132 million of availability on our $325 million revolver, resulting in strong liquidity of approximately $221 million. Now I'd like to turn to our expectations for 2026. Slide 8 lays out our SunCoke's historical adjusted EBITDA, free cash flow generation, annual dividends paid per share and gross leverage. SunCoke has a strong track record of generating steady free cash flow, and we expect the trend to continue with the addition of Phoenix Global. Our deliberate and careful capital allocation decisions over the last several years have strengthened our balance sheet and financial position while continuing to reward our long-term shareholders. We refinanced our debt and prioritized deleveraging in the midst of COVID-19 which allowed us to significantly lower our interest expense, resulting in higher free cash flow conversion. We expanded both our foundry market presence and participation in the spot market -- spot blast coke market during '23 and '24, while our terminals expanded both their customer base and their services. With our leverage target and sight, we prioritize return of capital to shareholders by establishing a quarterly dividend and increasing net dividend each year for 3 years in a row. While our 2025 results reflect the challenging market conditions we operated in during the year, we still generated positive free cash flow for the year. We anticipate meaningful recovery in 2026 with an optimized coke fleet, extended coke-making contracts at Granite City and Haverhill II, improved market conditions for our terminals and a full year of Phoenix Global. With deleveraging as our priority, we plan to use excess free cash flow to pay down the outstanding borrowing on our revolver and anticipate 2026 year-end gross leverage around 2.45x, comfortably below our long-term target of 3x. As Katherine mentioned earlier, we also intend to continue utilizing our free cash flow to reward our shareholders with our regular dividend, which is reviewed and approved on a quarterly basis by our Board of Directors. Moving to 2026 guidance summary on Slide 9. We expect consolidated adjusted EBITDA to be between $230 million and $250 million in 2026. Domestic Coke adjusted EBITDA is expected to be lower by $2 million to $8 million, primarily driven by approximately 220,000 lower contract blast coke sales tons. With the closure of Haverhill I, our revised capacity is now 3.1 million blast furnace equivalent tons. We will be running at full utilization and are sold out for the year. Industrial Services adjusted EBITDA is expected to be higher by $28 million to $38 million in 2026, primarily driven by a full year of Phoenix Global and our expectations for improvement in market conditions for our terminals. Corporate and other expenses are expected to be higher by $5 million to $9 million, primarily driven by normalized employee bonus expense and Phoenix integration-related IT costs. We expect 2026 corporate expenses to be comparable to 2023 and 2024 spending. Moving on to Slide 10 to discuss Domestic Coke segment in detail. In 2026, we expect our Domestic Coke adjusted EBITDA to be between $162 million and $168 million, with sales of approximately 3.4 million tons, which includes contract, foundry and spot blast coke. We have optimized our coke fleet with the closure of Haverhill I operations due to the breach of contract by Algoma. The approximately 500,000 ton reduction in coke production and sales represent our lowest margin tons. As a result, we expect a modest increase in the domestic coke adjusted EBITDA per ton in 2026. Our revised total Domestic Coke blast furnace equivalent capacity is now approximately 3.7 million tons. We have extended our Granite City coke making contract through December 31, 2026, at similar economics to the 2025 extension. We have also extended our Haverhill II contract through December 2028 with similar economics to previous contracts and will provide Cleveland-Cliffs with 500,000 tons of coke annually. Our coke fleet will be operating at full utilization in 2026. We have approximately 3 million tons contracted under long-term take-or-pay agreements and the remaining capacity is sold out for the year between the foundry and spot markets. Finally, we are experiencing a slower-than-normal start to 2026. Our Middletown coke plant experienced a turbine failure during a planned outage, which is impacting power production. This is an insured event, and we expect the turbine to be back in operation midyear. Additionally, the severe winter weather we all experienced over the last few weeks has impacted several of our operations as well. The impact of these events is reflected in our 2026 guidance. Moving to Slide 11 to discuss Industrial Services in more detail. 2026 Industrial Services adjusted EBITDA is estimated to be between $90 million and $100 million. Our outlook for 2026 reflects our expectations for improvement in market conditions. We will have a full year of Phoenix Global in our results for the year. As our terminals handling volumes are largely market-driven, our current guidance assumes improved market conditions in 2026. We have included partial synergies in our 2026 guidance and expect to continue recognizing synergies in 2027. We expect approximately 24 million tons of terminals handling volumes and approximately 22 million tons of steel customer volumes serviced. Moving to Slide 12. Once again, we expect consolidated adjusted EBITDA to be between $230 million and $250 million. Our Domestic Coke segment is expected to deliver adjusted EBITDA between $162 million and $168 million, while the Industrial Services segment is expected to deliver between $90 million and $100 million in adjusted EBITDA. We anticipate CapEx in 2026 between $90 million and $100 million, driven by a full year of Phoenix CapEx requirements. We expect 2026 operating cash flow to be between $230 million and $250 million, and our free cash flow is expected to be between $140 million and $150 million. With that, I'll turn it back over to Katherine.