Southern Copper just proved it can mint money at $4.24/lb copper: margins widened to 56%, cash costs dropped 21% quarter-over-quarter, and the balance sheet is now funding a $7.4 billion growth pipeline that lifts output toward 1 million tons by 2028—yet world exchange inventories sit at a razor-thin 7-day cover, setting up a potential price spike if demand surprises.
The headline numbers that moved the tape
- Net sales: $3.0B, +20% YoY on the back of 11% higher copper prices and 4% volume growth.
- Adjusted EBITDA: $1.75B, +23% YoY; 56% margin versus 55% last year and 54% in Q4 2024.
- Net income: $946M, +29% YoY; 30% net margin leaves SCCO among the most profitable large-cap miners.
- Operating cash flow: $721M, +9% YoY despite a $711M one-time tax true-up for 2024 earnings.
- Unit cash cost after by-product credits: $0.77/lb Cu, down 21% sequentially—lowest since mid-2022.
Why cash costs collapsed even as inflation lingers
Management credited three levers: (1) the new Buenavista zinc concentrator—running at name-plate 105k tpa—delivering industry-leading zinc C1 costs; (2) higher copper and silver by-product prices that shaved $1.29/lb off the copper cost curve; and (3) 12% sequential drop in treatment & refining charges (TC/RCs) as Chinese smelters cut utilisation. Currency tailwinds from a weaker Mexican peso added a further 3¢/lb tailwind.
Market backdrop: one week of copper cover and a 300k tonne deficit
Global visible inventories are estimated at ~one week of world consumption, the tightest since 2005. LME stocks at 155k tonnes are 42% below the 10-year average, while Shanghai bonded warehouse data show a 28% draw-down since December. SCCO reiterated its 300k tonne 2025 deficit forecast, citing 4.5% demand growth from renewables, data-centres and grid re-rating that outpaces 3% mine supply expansion.
Production roadmap: 968k tonnes this year, pause in 2026, then the growth wave
Guidance for 2025 copper output was lifted 2.4k tonnes to 968.2k on better SX-EW cathode recovery at Buenavista. Management flagged a “small reduction” likely in 2026 as legacy pits age before Tia Maria (120k tpa) and Los Chancas (80k tpa) push group production above 1 million tonnes in 2028. The path implies a 6% CAGR in copper volumes from 2024-30—among the fastest in the large-cap space.
Capital allocation: $7.4B committed, balance sheet unscathed
A three-year capex envelope of $1.5B (’25), $2.3B (’26) and $2.7B (’27) will be funded 70% from operating cash flow and 30% from low-cost Mexican bank lines and export credit agencies. Net-debt/EBITDA exited March at 0.6×—comfortably below the 1.0× covenant ceiling—leaving room for the recently declared $0.70 cash plus 0.99% stock dividend that equates to a 7.8% annualised yield at today’s share price.
Risk radar: illegal miners, tariffs and the 2026 cost base
The Los Chancas camp attack destroyed $3M of equipment and stalled early-works by six weeks; management is working with Peruvian authorities to remove 75 illegal miners before re-starting land clearing. On tariffs, CFO Raul Jacob stated SCCO can re-route 35% of U.S.-bound cathode to Latin American or Asian clients within 60 days should a 25% import duty materialise. Lastly, inflation-linked labour contracts in Mexico reset in January 2026, adding an expected 6% to the peso-denominated cost base—likely capping further unit-cost declines next year.
Valuation snapshot: still a discount to copper levered peers
At $45 per share SCCO trades at 5.9× 2025E EBITDA and 11× earnings—an 18% discount to the large-cap copper peer median despite a superior ROIC (>20%) and the lowest quartile cash cost. Every $0.10/lb move in copper adds ~$310M to annual EBITDA; apply the peer-average 6.5× multiple and the stock offers $8 per share upside if the $4.50/lb forward curve materialises.
Investor takeaway: margin king meets supply squeeze
Southern Copper’s Q1 shows it can expand margins even before the copper market fully tightens. With visible inventory at crisis-level lows and a multi-year growth pipeline fully funded, the stock is arguably the cleanest levered play on a 2025-26 copper deficit. Risk-reward skews positively unless macro shocks crater demand; watch Q2 TC/RC negotiations and Peruvian permitting headlines for tactical entry points.
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