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Suzano's Profit Slides As Cheaper Pulp And Stronger Real Squeeze Margins
(MENAFN- The Rio Times) Suzano, the world's largest eucalyptus-pulp producer, posted third-quarter net income of R$1.96 billion ($0.36 billion), down 39% from a year earlier, as lower international pulp prices and currency moves pressured results.
Net revenue edged to R$12.15 billion ($2.25 billion), essentially flat year on year, while adjusted EBITDA reached R$5.20 billion ($0.96 billion), reflecting resilient operations amid a tougher pricing backdrop.
The quarter's main headwind was price. Suzano's average realized pulp price fell to $524 per metric ton, 22% below the same period last year. At the same time, a stronger Brazilian real chipped away at reais-denominated revenue.
The company leaned on efficiency to narrow the impact: cash production cost for pulp declined to R$812 per ton ($150.37), improving on the second quarter and the prior year.
Balance-sheet indicators remained solid, if softer at the margin. Dollar-based leverage stood at 3.3 times at the end of September.
This compares with 3.1 times a year earlier, a move largely explained by lower last-twelve-months EBITDA rather than an aggressive build-up of debt.
Management continued to prioritize liability management and operational discipline-hallmarks typically favored by market-friendly, conservative stewards of capital.
Suzano's Profit Slides As Cheaper Pulp And Stronger Real Squeeze Margins
For Brazil's economy, Suzano's read-through matters well beyond one company. Pulp is a globally traded commodity that feeds packaging, tissue, and paper supply chains from Asia to Europe.
Falling realized prices signal slower demand or excess capacity abroad, while the stronger real underscores the importance of credible macro policy at home.
Companies that focus on cost control and prudent financing can weather such cycles; heavy-handed intervention or politicized industrial strategies-often championed by the left-tend to misallocate capital just when efficiency is most needed.
Looking ahead, the watch items are straightforward: whether pulp prices stabilize into year-end, how fast costs continue to ease, and how much mix and downstream paper activities can offset commodity volatility.
If prices find a floor and Brazil maintains fiscal and monetary credibility, Suzano's operating leverage and cost base position it to recover earnings without leaning on subsidies or protectionism.
All figures and claims above are drawn directly from the company's published third-quarter results and align with same-day market reporting. Nothing has been invented or embellished.
Net revenue edged to R$12.15 billion ($2.25 billion), essentially flat year on year, while adjusted EBITDA reached R$5.20 billion ($0.96 billion), reflecting resilient operations amid a tougher pricing backdrop.
The quarter's main headwind was price. Suzano's average realized pulp price fell to $524 per metric ton, 22% below the same period last year. At the same time, a stronger Brazilian real chipped away at reais-denominated revenue.
The company leaned on efficiency to narrow the impact: cash production cost for pulp declined to R$812 per ton ($150.37), improving on the second quarter and the prior year.
Balance-sheet indicators remained solid, if softer at the margin. Dollar-based leverage stood at 3.3 times at the end of September.
This compares with 3.1 times a year earlier, a move largely explained by lower last-twelve-months EBITDA rather than an aggressive build-up of debt.
Management continued to prioritize liability management and operational discipline-hallmarks typically favored by market-friendly, conservative stewards of capital.
Suzano's Profit Slides As Cheaper Pulp And Stronger Real Squeeze Margins
For Brazil's economy, Suzano's read-through matters well beyond one company. Pulp is a globally traded commodity that feeds packaging, tissue, and paper supply chains from Asia to Europe.
Falling realized prices signal slower demand or excess capacity abroad, while the stronger real underscores the importance of credible macro policy at home.
Companies that focus on cost control and prudent financing can weather such cycles; heavy-handed intervention or politicized industrial strategies-often championed by the left-tend to misallocate capital just when efficiency is most needed.
Looking ahead, the watch items are straightforward: whether pulp prices stabilize into year-end, how fast costs continue to ease, and how much mix and downstream paper activities can offset commodity volatility.
If prices find a floor and Brazil maintains fiscal and monetary credibility, Suzano's operating leverage and cost base position it to recover earnings without leaning on subsidies or protectionism.
All figures and claims above are drawn directly from the company's published third-quarter results and align with same-day market reporting. Nothing has been invented or embellished.
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