Earnings call transcript: Ascent Industries misses Q1 2025 EPS forecast

Published 12/05/2025, 22:36
 Earnings call transcript: Ascent Industries misses Q1 2025 EPS forecast

Ascent Industries Co. reported its Q1 2025 earnings, revealing a significant miss on earnings per share (EPS) expectations. The company posted an EPS of -$0.23 against a forecast of $0.12. This discrepancy led to a decline in the stock’s aftermarket trading, with shares dropping 1.48% to $12.63. Despite the earnings miss, Ascent Industries highlighted improvements in gross margin and operational efficiency. According to InvestingPro data, the company has not been profitable over the last twelve months, though it maintains strong liquidity with a current ratio of 3.73.

Key Takeaways

  • Ascent Industries’ Q1 2025 EPS fell short of expectations, reporting -$0.23 versus a forecast of $0.12.
  • The company achieved a gross margin increase to 19.3% from 8.3% the previous year.
  • Net sales declined to $24.7 million from $28 million in Q1 2024.
  • The stock fell 1.48% in aftermarket trading following the earnings announcement.

Company Performance

Ascent Industries experienced a challenging first quarter in 2025, with net sales dropping to $24.7 million compared to $28 million in the same quarter last year. Despite this decline, the company managed to improve its gross margin significantly, rising from 8.3% to 19.3%. The company also reported a positive adjusted EBITDA of $843,000, a notable turnaround from a loss of $2.7 million in the previous year.

Financial Highlights

  • Revenue: $24.7 million, down from $28 million in Q1 2024
  • Earnings per share: -$0.23, missing the $0.12 forecast
  • Gross margin: 19.3%, up from 8.3% in Q1 2024
  • Adjusted EBITDA: $843,000, compared to a loss of $2.7 million last year

Earnings vs. Forecast

Ascent Industries reported an EPS of -$0.23, significantly missing the forecasted $0.12. This resulted in a negative surprise of approximately 291.7%. This miss is notable compared to previous quarters, where the company has shown more stable performance.

Market Reaction

Following the earnings announcement, Ascent Industries’ stock price fell 1.48% in aftermarket trading, closing at $12.63. This decline reflects investor disappointment with the earnings miss. The stock’s movement remains within its 52-week range, which spans from $8.16 to $13.33. InvestingPro data shows the stock has delivered an impressive 36% return over the past six months, with relatively low price volatility (Beta: 0.65). Based on InvestingPro’s Fair Value analysis, the stock appears fairly valued at current levels.

Outlook & Guidance

While Ascent Industries did not provide formal guidance for 2025, the company is targeting significant growth in its Specialty Chemicals segment, aiming for $80 million to $120 million by 2030. For detailed growth projections and comprehensive analysis, including revenue forecasts and margin trends, investors can access the full Pro Research Report available exclusively on InvestingPro. The company expects a growth ramp in the second half of 2025 and plans to shift its product mix towards higher-margin opportunities.

Executive Commentary

CEO Brian Kitchen emphasized the company’s focus on problem-solving and delivering reliable solutions, stating, "We’re not just selling a product. We’re solving problems, creating formulations, and delivering it with speed, reliability, and compliance." CFO Ryan Kovalowskas added, "The foundation is stronger, our focus is sharper, and our optionality is increasing," highlighting the company’s strategic direction.

Risks and Challenges

  • Continued soft market conditions could impact sales and profitability.
  • The tariff environment remains uncertain, potentially affecting costs.
  • Ascent Industries faces competitive pressures in the Specialty Chemicals market.
  • The company’s reliance on domestic raw materials could pose supply chain risks.
  • Achieving the ambitious growth targets may require additional investments.

Q&A

During the earnings call, analysts inquired about the potential sale of the ASTI business and the company’s capital expenditure plans. Management confirmed minimal CapEx needs for growth, estimated at $1-3 million annually, and reiterated that the stock remains undervalued, emphasizing a focus on profitability over top-line growth.

Full transcript - Ascent Industries Co (ACNT) Q1 2025:

Marvin, Call Moderator: Good afternoon, and welcome to Ascent Industries Q1 twenty twenty five earnings call. Today’s speakers are CEO, Brian Kitchen CFO, Ryan Kovalowskas and the company’s on-site investor relations adviser, Ralph Esper. We’ll begin with prepared remarks followed by q and a. Before we go further, I would like to turn the call over to Ralph Esper as he reads the company’s safe harbor statement within the meaning of Private Security Litigation Reform Act of 1995 that provides important cautions regarding forward looking statements. Ralph?

Ralph Esper, Investor Relations Adviser, Ascent Industries: Thanks, Marvin. Before we continue, I would like to remind all participants that the discussion today may contain certain forward looking statements pursuant to the Safe Harbor provisions of the federal securities laws. These statements are based on information currently available to us and are subject to various risks and uncertainties that could cause actual results to differ materially. Ascent advises all of those listening to this call to review the latest 10 Q and 10 ks posted on its website for a summary of these risks and uncertainties. Ascent does not undertake the responsibility to update any forward looking statements.

Further, discussion today may include non GAAP measures. In accordance with Regulation G, the company has reconciled these amounts back to closest GAAP based measurement. The reconciliations can be found in the earnings release issued earlier today and posted on the Investors section of the company’s website at snco.com. Please note that this call is available for replay via webcast link that is also posted on the Investors section of the company’s website. Now I’ll turn it over to our CEO, Brian Kishan, to walk you through the results and what’s driving continued momentum.

Brian?

Brian Kitchen, CEO, Ascent Industries: Thanks, Ralph. Let’s start with the headline. Despite ongoing soft market conditions, we delivered another sharp quarter of operating improvement. We controlled what we could, we stayed disciplined, and we drove measurable improvements through aggressive self help. Net sales from continuing operations totaled $24,700,000 down from $28,000,000 in Q1 of twenty twenty four, reflecting broader market softness.

But that’s where the similarities end. Adjusted EBITDA from continuing operations meaningfully improved, swinging from a loss of $2,700,000 in the prior year to a positive $843,000 this quarter, a $3,500,000 turnaround. The structural changes that we implemented across the organization over the last year are working as evidenced in the results that we are discussing today. It’s a clear reflection of a more profitable book of business, enhanced operating discipline, and better sourcing. Let’s dive into the details with an update on the Tubular Segments.

On April 4, we closed on the sale of substantially all of the assets of Bristol Metals to Taichen International for $45,000,000 subject to certain closing adjustments. With the Bristol divestiture, ASCI remains our final tubular asset in continuing operations, and it performed well in Q1. In Q1, ASCI delivered $6,900,000 in revenue, down slightly year over year. However, gross margin jumped from 12.3% to 24.8%, and adjusted EBITDA rose nearly five times to 1,300,000.0 The story here is disciplined execution, tight cost control, sharper pricing, and operational efficiency. Even in a tough demand environment, we’re proving that value can be created through focus and fundamentals.

Let’s talk about specialty chemicals. First, the macro. We continue to monitor the tariff environment. Over the last year, our strategic sourcing team has done an exceptional job improving our cost structure and building resilience in our supply chain. Because of these efforts, approximately 95% of our revenue is supported by domestically sourced raw materials.

That’s by design, and it’s a major competitive advantage. As tariffs loom, customers are looking for reliable domestic partners, and we’re stepping in to fill that need. In fact, we are currently working with customers to onshore essential ingredient supply chains from Asia, Europe, and Canada. ASCEND is proud to play an active role in domestic manufacturing renaissance in specialty chemicals, and we believe that tailwind is just beginning. Pivoting to our financial performance in q one, our Specialty Chemicals segment continues to deliver in a difficult demand environment.

While revenue declined year over year to $17,800,000 gross profit increased by $2,100,000 rising from 1,600,000.0 in q one of twenty twenty four to ’3 point ’7 million dollars in Q1 of twenty twenty five, a 131% improvement, with gross margin expanding from 7.6% to 21%. Adjusted EBITDA improved by $2,300,000 swinging from a loss of 300,000 in the prior year to positive $2,000,000 this quarter. This strong improvement reflects the underlying muscle of our sourcing, manufacturing, and commercial efforts beginning to strike as one. The story here is about quality over quantity. We’re deliberately shifting our mix to higher margin opportunities, tightening our commercial focus, and aligning our resources around opportunities where we have the right to win.

And it’s working. Throughout 2024, we invested in our ability to be a more capable, more responsive, and more integrated partner to our customers. We’ve aligned technical sales, applications development, operations, and supply chain to deliver a more holistic customer experience. That includes branded offerings in oil and gas and H and I and I, stronger quoting agility, and measured improvements in customer response time and solution delivery. It’s early, but the model is showing traction, and we’re building from here.

In q one, our commercial and technical sales team secured an annualized $7,500,000 of net new business with EBITDA margins in excess of 20%. Importantly, this growth was well dispersed across key end markets, including oil and gas, case, lubricants, textiles, and other industrial applications. What’s even more encouraging is the balance of that growth. 25% came from net new customer relationships. We are winning new customers.

75% was an expansion within our existing customer base, a clear sign that our value proposition is resonating and our service execution is driving an increased share of wallet. We’re not just selling a product. We’re solving problems, creating formulations, and delivering it with speed, reliability, and compliance. We’re customizing product products in quantities both large and small in ways that traditional manufacturers simply won’t and delivering that customization with the level of flexibility and technical depth that classical distribution models can’t match. It’s a hybrid of custom manufacturing and high service distribution, and it’s working.

This is what sets us apart. It’s not just what we make, it’s how we make it work for each customer. Momentum is building not only in our operational performance, but also in market engagement. Average daily trading volume jumped to roughly 63,000 shares in q one of twenty twenty five, a 60% lift versus q one of twenty twenty four. That surge is proof that the market is beginning to tune into our story.

In March, Brian and I joined the Planet Microcap podcast to unpack our story and our transformation roadmap. The reaction was immediate, new conversations, fresh inbound interest, and a broader audience tracking Ascent progress. Before I pass it off to Ryan, I want to thank our entire team at Ascent who has continued to demonstrate incredible grit, hustle, and the drive to win. I would also like to thank our investors for the confidence that they have placed in both Ryan and I and the team that we’ve assembled. With that, I’ll turn it over to Ryan to provide a bit more context behind our financial performance.

Ryan?

Ryan Kovalowskas, CFO, Ascent Industries: Thanks, Brian, and good afternoon, everyone. Let me take a few minutes to walk through our first quarter financials, highlighting many of the points Brian touched operational discipline and the structural changes we’ve been driving across the business. In the first quarter, revenue from continuing operations was $24,700,000 a year over year decline of $3,200,000 or 11.5% from Q1 twenty twenty four. It’s important to note that this top line contraction was not only anticipated, it was largely intentional. As Brian alluded to, as part of our strategic repositioning, we actively chose to exit certain low margin, low value volume streams in favor of higher value, more technically demanding business.

That decision contributed to reduction in pounds shipped, but was offset in part by a 13.5 increase in average selling prices. The result is a leaner, more profitable commercial base that better aligns with our long term margin and return profile. Further evidence of our progress can be seen in gross profit, which nearly doubled to $4,800,000 or 19.3 percent of sales, compared to $2,300,000 or 8.3% last year, an expansion of over 1,100 basis points. This improvement reflects not just better pricing discipline and product mix, but also structural tailwinds from lower raw material costs, a continued focus on strategic sourcing, and improving throughput at our plants. These margin gains are not episodic.

They represent real progress in repositioning the business for sustainable profitability. Turning to our cost structure, we’ve made disciplined progress in enhancing operating efficiency, an outcome that reflects not only our internal focus on talent and process, but also tangible reductions in external spend. As a result, SG and A declined to $5,600,000 a reduction of $1,100,000 year over year. Efficiency increased as we saw SG and A representing 22.5% of sales, down from 23.9% in Q1 twenty twenty four. Importantly, this improvement did not stem simply from broad cost cutting.

Rather, it reflects the intentional allocation resources into people and processes that are now delivering leverage. Throughout 2024, we made precise, targeted investments in commercial, technical, and operational roles, designed not to simplistically grow the org chart, but to extract value from underutilized assets, improve workflow discipline, and accelerate decision velocity. This is a deliberate approach. We invest where we see measurable return, and we structure our organization to remain lean, agile, and performance driven. The outcome underscores our commitment to building a scalable, performance driven organization, one where cost efficiency is a function of execution, not austerity.

That same discipline and focus is beginning to show up in our financial results. Most notably, on a consolidated basis, adjusted EBITDA turned positive at $843,000 an increase of $3,500,000 from the $2,700,000 loss in Q1 of last year. This milestone reflects a combination of gross margin recovery, cost discipline, and early leverage on a more productive revenue base. This is the beginning of a more durable trend in operating performance, and we believe the underlying earning powers of this business is only just starting to show through. Finally, our balance sheet remains a key strategic advantage.

We ended the quarter with $14,300,000 in cash and no debt before the divestiture of substantially all of the Bristol assets for $45,000,000 providing significant flexibility as we evaluate capital deployment options. On a trailing basis, our cash burn has improved significantly, and we continue to target self funded growth where possible. During the quarter, we also repurchased approximately 17,000 shares at an average price of $12.73 reinforcing our conviction in intrinsic value and long term fundamentals. From an inorganic growth standpoint, we remain highly selective and disciplined. While market activity has remained muted, our strength in balance sheet gives us the optionality to act when the right opportunity presents itself without compromising on return thresholds or integration fit.

We’re focused on businesses that complement our platform capabilities and growth aspirations, those with enhanced margin profiles, or portfolios that bring differentiated customer relationships. Until then, capital preservation and disciplined execution remain our default posture. To summarize, the revenue contraction this quarter reflects strategic pruning of lower margin business and repositioning for profitable growth. We delivered over a 1,000 basis point increase in gross margin expansion and achieved positive adjusted EBITDA, driven by efficiencies in our structural cost basis and mix improvements. We’re operating with discipline, improving cash conversion, and have $14,300,000 in cash and no debt before the Bristol Sale, giving us real flexibility.

Foundation is stronger, our focus is sharper, and our optionality is increasing. With that, I’ll turn it back over to the operator for questions. Thanks.

Marvin, Call Moderator: Thank you, sir. At this time, we’ll conduct a question and answer session. As a reminder, to ask a question, you will need to press 11 on your telephone and wait for your name to be announced. And our first question comes from the line of David Siegfried of Private Investor. Your line is now open.

David Siegfried, Private Investor: Hey, guys. Congratulations on the momentum and the gross margin and on the Bristol sale.

Ralph Esper, Investor Relations Adviser, Ascent Industries: Thank you.

David Siegfried, Private Investor: I think I know I’ve appreciated the investor conferences and the transparency from that. I think that’s been really good. A question though on the ASTI business. So that’s doing well right now, 1,300,000.0 adjusted EBITDA in Q1. So let’s say you get 4,000,000 to $6,000,000 in adjusted EBITDA in 2025 and get a 4 to 6,000,000 multiple on that.

Would you say that in this climate ornamental stainless domestic manufacturer is a more attractive target than it was, we’ll say even six months ago?

Brian Kitchen, CEO, Ascent Industries: Yeah, David, hey, it’s Brian. Appreciate the comments. And regarding your question, I wouldn’t say it’s materially changed. The demand has remained incredibly soft. We’re seeing things pick up obviously in Q1, but it’s still relatively soft market conditions.

Related to the tariffs, we’re getting some additional looks, but the barn doors are not being blown off at this stage.

David Siegfried, Private Investor: Got it. Is that still a possibility that it could be sold in 2025?

Brian Kitchen, CEO, Ascent Industries: Yes, we’re always evaluating options to monetize the value out of all of our assets.

David Siegfried, Private Investor: Okay. I think it was mentioned that the goal for 2025 in chemicals is not top line, but profitability. And obviously, you’re there now. Do you think that with the sticky revenue and the earnings profile that we can begin to get guidance going forward?

Brian Kitchen, CEO, Ascent Industries: Yes, I’ll let Ryan comment on that further, but I would suggest that that’s not going to happen inside of 2025. We’re still while we stabilized significantly in 2024, there’s still some stabilization activities happening in 2025. I think it’s just a little bit too premature to start flashing guidance.

Ryan Kovalowskas, CFO, Ascent Industries: Yeah, like O’Brien’s comments. I think as we continue to reevaluate the portfolio and the customers and the mix of products, I think until we get a more stable base, I think we’re going to continue to kind of withhold forward looking guidance, just until we get a better handle on switching the business to this more higher margin style business that we’re looking for.

David Siegfried, Private Investor: Okay. Now you did mention that in one of the conferences that the goal is essentially 80,000,000 a year now chemicals to 120,000,000 by 02/1930 with your existing asset base. So that growth would start happening 2026. Is that the plan?

Brian Kitchen, CEO, Ascent Industries: Yeah, I think we’ll start to see some element of growth certainly in the second half of the year. The team has developed a really strong and compelling selling project pipeline. As you know from our prior conversations, the sell cycle is not instantaneous. It does take some time, even for branded product sales. So we’ll start to see a ramp in the second half of the year and bridging into a much more compelling top line in 2026.

David Siegfried, Private Investor: Okay, good to hear. And did I hear that correctly that in 2024 I think it was 75% commodity, 25% blended in your chemicals and that 2025 would be like 60 fivethirty five mix. If you want to get to a fifty fifty split. Yeah.

Brian Kitchen, CEO, Ascent Industries: Yeah. Yeah. That’s right. So twenty twenty twenty four, we ended the year with 75, 20 five split between custom manufacturing and branded product sales. I’ll tell you that from a Q1 standpoint, we’re in that same genre today.

But we do have hopes that we’ll be able to drive that towards a sixty fivethirty five split by the end of this year.

David Siegfried, Private Investor: Got it. And this can all be done with the existing capacity and minimal CapEx?

Brian Kitchen, CEO, Ascent Industries: Absolutely. Yeah. So I mean, our our run rate CapEx is between 1 to $3,000,000 a year for the past, you know, four years. We believe that that’s, reasonable, a reasonable assumption moving forward in our asset utilization today is is incredibly low. We have tons of runway for organic growth.

David Siegfried, Private Investor: Okay, good. And then, 17,000 shares essentially bought in Q1. Was the board limited or was the buyback limited because of the Bristol transaction just wasn’t able to be in the market the way you wanted to be?

Brian Kitchen, CEO, Ascent Industries: Yeah. I think from a q one standpoint, we executed against the buyback within the confines of the existing buyback program that we have. Certainly, our option out our optionality has increased with the personal sale, and we’ll be looking at that moving forward.

David Siegfried, Private Investor: Got it. Do you still feel the stock’s undervalued at these levels?

Brian Kitchen, CEO, Ascent Industries: My personal opinion, yes.

David Siegfried, Private Investor: And so with that expanded stock buyback that was announced on February 18, so you have the ability to buy at higher prices and a greater amount. Is that what’s being said?

Brian Kitchen, CEO, Ascent Industries: We do. Obviously, they’re limited on a daily basis on the number of shares that we can acquire at certain price points, but yes.

David Siegfried, Private Investor: Got it. Okay. Well, thank you. Very good. Good to see the progress.

Brian Kitchen, CEO, Ascent Industries: Appreciate the questions, David.

Marvin, Call Moderator: Thank you. At this time, this concludes the question and answer session. I’ll now turn the call back over to Mr. Kitchen for closing remarks.

Brian Kitchen, CEO, Ascent Industries: Okay. Great. Thank you, Marvin. We’d like to thank everyone for listening to today’s call, and we look forward to speaking with you again when we report our second quarter twenty twenty five results.

Marvin, Call Moderator: Ladies and gentlemen, this does conclude today’s teleconference. You may disconnect your lines at this time. Thank you for your participation.

This article was generated with the support of AI and reviewed by an editor. For more information see our T&C.

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