Tuesday, 02 January 2024 12:17 GMT

Suzano’S Currency Windfall Veils Operating Challenges In Q1 Earnings Surge


(MENAFN- The Rio Times) Suzano SA, the world's largest eucalyptus pulp producer, announced a first-quarter net profit of R$6.35 billion ($1.06 billion), a dramatic leap from R$220 million ($37 million) in early 2024, according to regulatory filings Thursday.

Revenue rose 22% to R$11.6 billion ($1.93 billion), but operational metrics underperformed amid falling pulp prices and rising costs.

Foreign exchange effects dominated earnings, with a R$7.7 billion ($1.28 billion) non-operational gain from revaluing dollar-denominated debt. Adjusted EBITDA grew 7% to R$4.87 billion ($812 million), missing the R$5.77 billion ($962 million) analyst consensus.

Pulp sales volume increased 10% to 2.7 million tonnes, though prices declined year-over-year, while paper sales surged 25% to 390,000 tonnes following acquisitions of U.S. mills.

Production costs rose 6% to R$859 ($143) per tonne, pressured by maintenance shutdowns at four Brazilian mills. The newly operational Ribas do Rio Pardo mill, running at full capacity, partially offset efficiency losses.



Suzano reduced its net debt-to-EBITDA ratio to 3.0x from 3.6x, deploying R\$3.6 billion ($600 million) toward mill upgrades and R$2.2 billion ($367 million) for shareholder dividends.
Suzano Balances Record Profits and Margin Pressure
Analysts highlighted reliance on currency fluctuations, with pulp EBITDA margins slipping to 42% from 44% despite higher sales. Global pulp demand faces uncertainty from China's economic shifts and potential U.S. trade barriers, though Suzano maintained its 2026 price target of $625 per tonne.

The results underscore Suzano's dual dependency: 70% of revenue ties to the U.S. dollar, shielding against local inflation but amplifying vulnerability to exchange rate swings.

While paper segment expansion and mill investments diversify revenue streams, operational efficiency gaps persist. Shares remained flat post-announcement as investors balanced record profits against shrinking margins.

Market observers caution that sustained growth requires addressing cost controls and productivity, particularly as currency advantages diminish.

The company's focus on deleveraging and strategic capex aims to buffer against cyclical downturns, but pricing pressures and geopolitical risks loom.

Suzano's performance mirrors broader commodity sector trends, where financial engineering often masks underlying operational strains in volatile markets.

The quarter's paradox-record profits paired with weakening fundamentals-highlights the precarious balance between external tailwinds and internal execution.

With pulp prices stagnant and input costs rising, Suzano's ability to streamline operations will determine its resilience as global trade dynamics evolve. Investors now await clearer signals of structural improvement beyond temporary forex gains.

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