CVR Partners reports strong Q3 with $4.02 distribution amid tight nitrogen market
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CVR Partners achieves $164 million in Q3 sales and $43 million net income, anticipating favorable pricing trends into 2026 amid tight fertilizer inventories.


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Summary

  • CVR Partners reported strong financial results for Q3 2025 with net sales of $164 million, net income of $43 million, and an EBITDA of $71 million. A distribution of $4.02 per common unit was declared.
  • The company experienced a high ammonia plant utilization rate of 95%, despite some downtime, and reported increased UAN and ammonia prices due to tight inventory levels.
  • For the upcoming quarter, ammonia utilization is expected to be impacted by planned turnaround activities, and the company plans capital spending of $30-35 million, with turnaround expenses between $15-20 million.
  • Management highlighted ongoing projects at the Coffeyville facility to increase ammonia production capacity and reduce reliance on Pet Coke by utilizing natural gas and hydrogen.
  • The strategic outlook remains positive due to tight nitrogen fertilizer inventories and geopolitical factors affecting global supply. The company foresees favorable market conditions into the first half of 2026.

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OPERATOR - (00:00:00)

Greetings and welcome to the CVR Partners third quarter 2025 conference call. At this time, all participants are in listen only mode. A brief question and answer session will follow the formal presentation. As a reminder, this conference is being recorded. It is now my pleasure to introduce your host, Richard Roberts, vice president of FP&A and Investor Relations. Thank you, sir. You may begin. Thank you, Eric.

Richard Roberts - Vice President of FP&A and Investor Relations - (00:00:48)

Good morning everyone. We appreciate your participation in today's call. With me today are Mark Pykosh, our Chief Executive Officer, Dane Newman, our Chief Financial Officer and other members of management. Prior to discussing our 2025 third quarter results, let me remind you that this conference call may contain forward looking statements as that term is defined under federal securities laws. For this purpose, any statements made during this call that are not statements of historical facts may be deemed to be forward looking statements. You are cautioned that these statements may be affected by important factors set forth in our filings with the securities and Exchange Commission and in our latest earnings release. As a result, actual operations or results may differ materially from the results discussed in the forward looking statements. We undertake no obligation to publicly update any forward looking statements, whether as a result of new information, future events or otherwise, except to the extent required by law. This call also includes various non GAAP financial measures. The disclosures related to such non GAAP measures, including reconciliation to the most directly comparable GAAP financial measures, are included in our 2025 third quarter earnings release that we filed with the SEC for the period. Let me also remind you that we are a variable distribution mlp. We will review our previously established reserves, current cash usage, evaluate future anticipated cash needs, and may reserve amounts for other future cash needs as determined by our General Partners Board. As a result, our distributions, if any, will vary from quarter to quarter due to several factors including but not limited to operating performance, fluctuations in the prices received for finished products, capital expenditures and cash reserves deemed necessary or appropriate by the Board of Directors of our General Partner. With that said, I'll turn the call over to Mark Pykosh, our Chief Executive Officer.

Mark Pykosh - Chief Executive Officer - (00:02:18)

Mark thank you, Richard. Good morning everyone and thank you for joining us for today's call. The summarized financial highlights for the third quarter of 2025 include net sales of 164 million, net income of 43 million, EBITDA of 71 million, and the board of directors declared a third quarter distribution of $4.02 per common unit, which will be paid on November 17th to unitholders of record at the close of the market on November 10th. For the third quarter of 2025, our consolidated ammonia plant utilization was 95%, which was impacted by some planned and unplanned downtime at both facilities during the quarter. Combined ammonia Production for the third quarter of 2025 was 208,000 gross tons, of which 59,000 net tons were available for sale and UAN production was 337,000 tons. During the quarter we sold approximately 328,000 tons of UAN at an average price of $348 per ton and approximately 48,000 tons of ammonia at an average price of $531 per ton. Relative to the third quarter 2024, sales volumes were down slightly, primarily as a result of low inventory levels at the end of the second quarter following the strong demand in the first half of 2025, UAN and ammonia prices increased 52% and 33% respectively from the prior year period, driven by tight inventory levels across the system as a result of elevated demand and reduced supply associated with domestic and international production outages. Overall, we had a strong third quarter with UAM pricing above levels we saw in the spring, and we believe the setup is favorable for the remainder of the year and into the first half of 2026. Domestic and global inventories of nitrogen fertilizer remain tight and that has been supportive of higher prices, which I will discuss further in my closing remarks. I will now turn the call over to Dane to discuss our financial results.

Dane Newman - Chief Financial Officer - (00:04:21)

Thank you, mark for the third quarter of 2025 we reported net sales of 164 million and operating income of 51 million. Net income for the quarter was $43 million $4.08 per common unit and EBITDA was 71 million. Relative to the third quarter of 2024, the increase in EBITDA was primarily due to a combination of higher UAN and ammonia sales pricing. Direct operating expenses for the third quarter of 2025 were 58 million. Excluding inventory impacts, direct operating expenses increased by approximately 7 million relative to the third quarter of 2024, primarily due to higher natural gas and electricity costs and some preliminary spending associated with Coffeeville's planned Turnaround. During the third quarter of 2025, we spent 13 million on capital projects, of which 7 million was maintenance capital. We estimate total capital spending for 2025 be approximately 58 to 65 million, of which 39 to 42 million is expected to be maintenance capital. We anticipate a significant portion of the profit and growth capital spending plan for 2025 will be funded through cash reserves taken over the past 2 years. We ended the quarter with total liquidity of 206 million, which consisted of 156 million in cash and availability under the ABL facility of 50 million. Within our cash balance of 156 million, we had approximately 28 million related to customer prepayments for the future delivery of product. In assessing our cash available for distribution, we generated ebitda of approximately 71 million and net cash needs of 34 million for interest costs, maintenance, capex and other reserves and had 6 million released from previous reserves. As a result, there was 42 million of cash available for distribution and the Board of Directors of our General Partner required a distribution of $4.02 per common unit. Looking ahead to the fourth quarter of 2025, 2025, we estimate our ammonia utilization rate to be between 80 and 85%, which will be impacted by the planned turnaround currently underway at the Coffeyville facility. We expect direct operating expenses excluding inventory and turnaround impacts to be between 58 and 63 million and total capital spending to be between 30 and 35 million. Turnaround expense is expected to be between 15 and 20 million. With that, I will turn the call back over to Mark.

Mark Pykosh - Chief Executive Officer - (00:06:34)

Thanks. Dane Harvest is currently on schedule and nearing completion. The USDA is estimating yields of approximately 187 bushels per acre on 98.7 million acres of corn and inventory carry out levels approximately 13%. Soybean yields are estimated to be 54 bushels per acre on 81 million acres planted with inventory carryout levels of 7%. Although the soybean numbers will likely be impacted by ongoing trade friction with China, both of these carryout estimates are at or below the 10 year averages. Grain prices have remained at the lower end the last 12 month range, driven primarily by expectations of large crop production in Brazil and North America this year and potential trade disputes where the purchase of grains may be used as a negotiating tool when reaching trade agreements. December corn prices are approximately $4.30 a bushel and November soybeans are approximately $10.90 per bushel. The Trump administration and congressional leaders have indicated they intend to provide a subsidy program for farmers to help offset lower grain prices and higher input cost. Geopolitical conflicts are continuing to impact the nitrogen fertilizer industry. In the third quarter, Ukraine continued to target nitrogen fertilizer plants and export infrastructure in Russia. After the large planting seasons in the US And Brazil and the loss of production due to geopolitical factors. Fertilizer inventory levels across industry have been tight and are taking time to replenish. We expect these conditions to persist into the spring of 2026 the wild card continues to be the potential for tariffs on Russian fertilizer imports that could have significant impacts on pricing in the near term. Natural gas prices in Europe have been steady since our last earnings call and remain around $11 per MMBtu currently, while US prices continue to range between 3 and $4 per MMBtu. As we near winter, Europe has refilled its natural gas inventories at a lower level than normal and there's a risk of prices moving higher if the winter is cooler than expected. The cost of producing ammonia in Europe has remained durably at the high end of the global cost curve and production remains below historical levels, which has created opportunities for U.S. gulf coast producers to export ammonia to Europe for upgrade. We continue to believe Europe faces structural natural gas supply issues that will likely remain in effect through 2026. We are nearing the completion of the planned turnaround at our Coffeyville facility. In the early phases of the turnaround we experienced an ammonia release which we currently anticipate could delay the completion of turnaround work by a few days relative to the original schedule. We expect the facility to resume full production in the next few weeks. As a reminder, we are currently planning for a 35 day turnaround at our East Dubuque facility in the third quarter 2026. At our Coffeyville facility, we continue to work on a detailed design and construction plan to allow the plant to utilize natural gas and additional hydrogen from the adjacent Coffeyville refinery as alternative feedstocks to third party Pet Coke. This project could also expand Coffeyville's ammonia production capacity by up to 8%. We also continue to execute certain debottlenecking projects at both plants that are expected to improve reliability and production rates. These include water quality upgrade projects at both plants and the expansion of our Diesel Exhaust Fluid (DEF) production and loadout capacity. The goal of these projects is to support our target of operating the plants at utilization rates above 95% of nameplate capacity, excluding the impact of turnarounds. The funds needed for these projects are coming from the reserves taken over the last two years and the board elected to continue reserving capital in the third quarter. While the board looks at reserves every quarter, I would expect them to continue to elect to reserve some capital and we anticipate holding higher levels of cash related to these projects in the near term as we ramp up execution and spending, which we will we expect will take place over the next two to three years. The third quarter continued to demonstrate the benefits of focusing on safety, reliability and performance in the quarter we executed on all the critical elements of our business plan, which include safely and reliably operating our plants with a keen focus on the health and safety of our employees, contractors and communities, prudently managing costs, being judicious with capital, maximizing our marketing and logistics capabilities, and targeting opportunities to reduce our carbon footprint. In closing, I would like to thank our employees for their safe execution during a few brief outages in the quarter, achieving 95% ammonia utilization, and the solid delivery on our marketing and logistics plans, resulting in a distribution of $4.02 per common unit for the third quarter. With that, we're ready to answer any questions. Eric.

OPERATOR - (00:11:40)

Thank you. We will now be conducting a question and answer session. If you would like to ask a question, please press STAR followed by the number one on your telephone keypad. Our first question comes from the line. Of. Rob McGuire with Granite Research. Please go ahead.

Rob McGuire - Analyst - (00:12:02)

Good morning, Mark, Dane and Richard. Thank you for taking my questions. Could you, Mark, go back to the Coffeyville natural gas feedstock project? I apologize, but can you just clarify. I think I missed. When do you anticipate that to start? And are you at a point where you can talk to us about total cost for the project and what you. Expect in terms of returns?

Mark Pykosh - Chief Executive Officer - (00:12:25)

We're not ready to discuss the final costs and returns yet. We're in detailed engineering, so we need to kind of confirm some things about that, you know, in terms of configuration or reconfiguration and the infrastructure needs, you know, but everything looks like it's kind of pencil, excuse me, penciling out the way we thought it would. And that's a. It's a combination project. To be clear. Part of it is taking additional hydrogen from the refinery. The refinery has a reformer unit, so we are talking about taking additional hydrogen from the refinery plus replacing, potentially replacing PET Coke as a feedstock for a portion with natural gas. But the hydrogen component would be an increase in our production capacity. So it's a combination project that includes the ability to replace feedstock plus bring additional hydrogen, which means additional ammonia capacity. That's what I've been referring to in my comments about up to 8% increase in our production capacity. So we have been reserving for that project. And so, you know, we, you know, we will have the capital available set aside for that. And, you know, I'm expecting, you know, by the next call, you know, to be able to talk with more specifics on, you know, that project and moving ahead there. But so far all the engineering work that's coming back in the construction plans look on track. With what we thought, what the original plan was.

Rob McGuire - Analyst - (00:14:17)

Well, thank you. I appreciate that. And shifting gears, any concerns about drought conditions impacting ammonia runs in this ammonia application season?

Mark Pykosh - Chief Executive Officer - (00:14:28)

Not in the markets where we're placed. We've had some moisture here the last week. Particularly the big ammonia run for us is up in the northern plains around East Dubuque, and there's been moisture. So I actually, I think conditions are as close to perfect as we could predict because we've had, you know, the harvest is basically complete there. So we've emptied the fields, the soil temperatures are down, and moisture's come in in the last week. And that combination is about perfect conditions. And I'm expecting a big fall ammonia run. You know, the customers are telling us that we have a good book of business already, but people are coming in now with additional cash orders. And so I expect really a good fall ammonia run. So I'm very optimistic.

Rob McGuire - Analyst - (00:15:24)

Wonderful. And I mean, kind of just moving forward to that question, it's just how significant of an impact do you think it'll be for the acreage to be down this coming season, at least on anticipated acreage? And, you know, is it simply that inventories are down, supply is tight, so you're not concerned at all about selling your volume at elevated prices, or will there be an impact, maybe even on imports?

Mark Pykosh - Chief Executive Officer - (00:15:53)

So there's a couple of different layers to that answer. Number one, you know, we've been expecting, you know, that we were thinking that the acreage, corn acreage, this is corn acreage, would drop next year. I'm. I'm not as sure now, based on, you know, I'm still reading what happened this morning over in Korea with Trump and Xi. But the feeling in the marketplace is that the corn acreage won't drop as much because there's concern about what is the, you know, what the end markets are for soybeans. And so maybe there's going to be more corn acres just on a defensive approach to protect against trade, trade, war, behavior. And so I actually think that the corn acreage might surprise on the upside versus, you know, a drop, you know, a lot of people were talking about drop to below 90s, which is still great. You know, that's. That's a great corn run, but it may not drop as far because I think farmers are of the belief that maybe the end markets will be restricted for soybean exports. So we may end up in a better answer there. I would tell you that if you look at the inventory balances, we're already. We're tight. And I think lower acreage, given where we are from an inventory perspective, probably won't impact as much in 26 as it normally would because quite frankly, you know, there's a rush to try to replenish what we have. And you probably saw the announcement that Nutrien has shut down one of the Trinidad plants, which is an importer to the U.S. and so that's, you know, that's going to affect the replenishment time frame. So I'm not terribly concerned about the acreage. We watch it closely. But right now I think the market is in a position to absorb that.

Rob McGuire - Analyst - (00:17:54)

That's really interesting. And then with regards to the Trinidad and it's just looping Russia in on imports, are you seeing an impact in the marketplace on those imports? At this point in time, we have.

Mark Pykosh - Chief Executive Officer - (00:18:08)

Not seen any impact on Russian imports. In fact, Russia is the particularly like in uan, Russia is the marginal producer in the marketplace and they've been exporting the US in size. So there's been no effect. The fear factor in the market is if there's somehow a tariff or sanctioning of fertilizer coming to the market that could be a big event from affecting supply. So that's a fear factor. But we haven't seen any signs. But during the course of this year, even with all the geopolitical events, there's been no restriction on the imports of Russian. And I'll focus more on uan, but there's urea too. But you know, Russian UAN has been a big factor in the U.S. well.

Rob McGuire - Analyst - (00:19:01)

That's really helpful, and Mark, last question and I certainly won't hold you to this, but I'd love to hear what your outlook is for the price of ammonia, UAN and urea heading into fourth quarter.

Mark Pykosh - Chief Executive Officer - (00:19:13)

You know, it's, you know, we never give out pricing for the, you know, for those products, but it's going to be, it's going to be a solid quarter. And so we've seen a strong market since, you know, the UAN fuel season and the ammonia prepay. So pricing will be higher in the fourth quarter versus 3Q which it know normally would be. So we'll see that show up in the, in the results. And I'm, I'm optimistic, I'm not ready to prognosticate on pricing for spring, but I'm optimistic about the supply, demand, balance and what we're going to see there. So I expect this kind of these sorts of market conditions to carry through 1H26.

Rob McGuire - Analyst - (00:20:01)

Well, all that was really helpful. Thank you so much.

Mark Pykosh - Chief Executive Officer - (00:20:05)

Thanks, Rob.

OPERATOR - (00:20:09)

Thank you. We have reached the end of the question and answer session. I'd now like to turn the floor back over to management for closing comments.

Mark Pykosh - Chief Executive Officer - (00:20:17)

Well, thanks everybody for participating in the call today. And we look forward to reviewing our fourth quarter results with you in February. Have a nice day.

OPERATOR - (00:20:28)

Ladies and gentlemen, this concludes today's call. You may disconnect your lines at this time. Thank you for your participation and have a wonderful day.

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