Alcoa Corp. (NYSE:AA) reported mixed second-quarter results after Thursday’s closing bell.
Earnings of $2.12 per share missed the Street estimate of $2.25. Meanwhile, revenue of $3.97 billion beat the analyst consensus estimate of $3.94 billion.
Revenue rose 24% year over year (Y/Y) and was the highest in the company’s nearly 10-year history.
Adjusted EBITDA rose $306 million sequentially to $901 million, supported by stronger aluminum prices, higher shipments, and improved product mix.
Primary aluminum production increased by 30,000 metric tons sequentially and achieved year-to-date production records at four smelters and one refinery.
The company completed production restarts at San Ciprian, Alumar, Lista, and Portland, added approximately 25,000 metric tons of flexible casting capacity, and delivered 726,000 metric tons of aluminum shipments during the second quarter.
Segment Performance
Aluminum segment revenue rose 31% to $3.3 billion, supported by higher shipments, stronger average realized aluminum prices, and improved value-added product premiums.
Shipments increased by 113,000 metric tons sequentially, helping the segment deliver record adjusted EBITDA of $1.1 billion and an EBITDA margin of 32.3%. Performance benefited from higher LME prices, regional premiums, increased volumes, a stronger product mix, and solid customer demand across North America and Europe.
Alumina segment revenue declined 3% to $637 million, primarily due to lower bauxite offtake and supply agreement volumes, along with operational challenges at the Pinjarra refinery.
Adjusted EBITDA decreased $56 million sequentially, impacted by higher production costs, lower cost absorption, and increased fuel oil and diesel expenses.
Outlook
In the company conference call, Alcoa lowered its 2026 alumina production outlook, now expecting production of 9.5–9.6 million metric tons and shipments of 11.5–11.6 million metric tons, primarily due to operational challenges at the Pinjarra refinery during the second quarter.
For the third quarter, Alcoa expects alumina segment performance to improve by approximately $10 million, while the aluminum segment is projected to remain broadly stable sequentially.
It also said that Section 232 tariff costs on U.S. imports of aluminum from Canada are expected to decrease by approximately $10 million.
AA Price Action: Alcoa shares were down 0.75% at $46.50 during premarket trading on Friday, according to Benzinga Pro data.
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