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Minerva, Aeris, Petz: Q3 2025 Signals From Brazil's Real Economy
(MENAFN- The Rio Times) Brazil's latest earnings season tells three different stories under one roof. Minerva, the region's leading beef exporter, is surfing global demand and asset integration.
Aeris, a major supplier of wind-turbine blades, is feeling the sting of grid bottlenecks that slow new projects. Petz, a nationwide pet-care retailer, is nudging profits higher.
But the bigger prize depends on the scale of its merger. Together, they show how exports, infrastructure constraints, and consolidation are shaping corporate Brazil.
Minerva (beef exporter) - Q3 2025: Exports Carry The Quarter
Minerva's net income came in at R$ 120 million ($22 million), with EBITDA at about R$ 1.4 billion ($259 million) on record quarterly net revenue of R$ 15.5 billion ($2.87 billion). Gross revenue reached R$ 16.3 billion ($3.02 billion), and exports accounted for 61% of sales.
Volumes rose 45% year over year to roughly 557 thousand tonnes. The story behind the numbers: Minerva 's scale and geographic spread let it arbitrage cattle cycles and demand pockets-China, the Middle East, and North America-while the tail end of asset integration keeps operating leverage favorable.
What to watch next: cattle availability and sanitary market access, which can swing margins more than FX alone.
Aeris (wind-turbine blades) - Q3 2025: Curtailment Turns Profits Red
Aeris posted a net loss of R$ 144 million ($27 million), narrower than Q2 but worse than a year earlier, as EBITDA flipped to negative R$ 48 million ($9 million) on net revenue of R$ 179 million ($33 million).
Domestic blade revenue slumped to R$ 15 million ($3 million), partly offset by exports at R$ 92 million ($17 million) and services at R$ 52 million ($10 million). Four production lines remained idle.
The story behind the numbers: Brazil's renewable boom is outpacing the grid that must carry it, and“curtailment” is now a commercial reality that delays orders and compresses factory utilization.
Aeris 's counterplay-services, export mix, and selective capex (about R$ 6 million, $1 million)-aims to stabilize cash burn until transmission catches up.
Petz (pet-care retail) - Q3 2025: Modest Profit Rebound; Scale Still The Unlock
Petz reported net income of R$ 33 million ($6 million) and adjusted EBITDA of R$ 84 million ($16 million) on revenue of R$ 909 million ($168 million), with same-store sales up 5.3%.
Results trailed some analyst expectations (EBITDA near R$ 120 million, $22 million; revenue around R$ 929 million, $172 million), but the underlying trend is gradual margin repair as newer stores mature and services deepen.
The story behind the numbers: operational discipline helps, yet the structural catalyst is regulatory-approval of the proposed Cobasi merger could reset the market's scale economics, from procurement to logistics to veterinary services. The risk is timing and potential remedies; the opportunity is a cleaner path to profitable growth.
Bottom line
Exports are powering Minerva through the cycle; grid constraints are throttling Aeris's order book; and Petz's real upside hinges on consolidation.
Three companies, one message: Brazil's corporate fortunes in 2025 depend as much on infrastructure and competition policy as on demand.
Aeris, a major supplier of wind-turbine blades, is feeling the sting of grid bottlenecks that slow new projects. Petz, a nationwide pet-care retailer, is nudging profits higher.
But the bigger prize depends on the scale of its merger. Together, they show how exports, infrastructure constraints, and consolidation are shaping corporate Brazil.
Minerva (beef exporter) - Q3 2025: Exports Carry The Quarter
Minerva's net income came in at R$ 120 million ($22 million), with EBITDA at about R$ 1.4 billion ($259 million) on record quarterly net revenue of R$ 15.5 billion ($2.87 billion). Gross revenue reached R$ 16.3 billion ($3.02 billion), and exports accounted for 61% of sales.
Volumes rose 45% year over year to roughly 557 thousand tonnes. The story behind the numbers: Minerva 's scale and geographic spread let it arbitrage cattle cycles and demand pockets-China, the Middle East, and North America-while the tail end of asset integration keeps operating leverage favorable.
What to watch next: cattle availability and sanitary market access, which can swing margins more than FX alone.
Aeris (wind-turbine blades) - Q3 2025: Curtailment Turns Profits Red
Aeris posted a net loss of R$ 144 million ($27 million), narrower than Q2 but worse than a year earlier, as EBITDA flipped to negative R$ 48 million ($9 million) on net revenue of R$ 179 million ($33 million).
Domestic blade revenue slumped to R$ 15 million ($3 million), partly offset by exports at R$ 92 million ($17 million) and services at R$ 52 million ($10 million). Four production lines remained idle.
The story behind the numbers: Brazil's renewable boom is outpacing the grid that must carry it, and“curtailment” is now a commercial reality that delays orders and compresses factory utilization.
Aeris 's counterplay-services, export mix, and selective capex (about R$ 6 million, $1 million)-aims to stabilize cash burn until transmission catches up.
Petz (pet-care retail) - Q3 2025: Modest Profit Rebound; Scale Still The Unlock
Petz reported net income of R$ 33 million ($6 million) and adjusted EBITDA of R$ 84 million ($16 million) on revenue of R$ 909 million ($168 million), with same-store sales up 5.3%.
Results trailed some analyst expectations (EBITDA near R$ 120 million, $22 million; revenue around R$ 929 million, $172 million), but the underlying trend is gradual margin repair as newer stores mature and services deepen.
The story behind the numbers: operational discipline helps, yet the structural catalyst is regulatory-approval of the proposed Cobasi merger could reset the market's scale economics, from procurement to logistics to veterinary services. The risk is timing and potential remedies; the opportunity is a cleaner path to profitable growth.
Bottom line
Exports are powering Minerva through the cycle; grid constraints are throttling Aeris's order book; and Petz's real upside hinges on consolidation.
Three companies, one message: Brazil's corporate fortunes in 2025 depend as much on infrastructure and competition policy as on demand.
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