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Cleveland-Cliffs slumps after quarterly revenue misses estimates

Cleveland-Cliffs slumps after quarterly revenue misses estimates
Cleveland-Cliffs slumps after quarterly revenue misses estimates

Cleveland-Cliffs' shares fell over 17%?Monday after the steelmaker reported a fourth-quarter profit that was below Wall?Street expectations.

Shares of the company were trading at $12.22 and were on track for their largest single-day decline since October 21.

Cleveland-Cliffs CEO Lourenco Goncalves stated that the company's performance in 2025 would be affected by the weak production levels of the automotive industry, the termination a 5-year contract for slab supply with ArcelorMittal, and the impact the Trump administration’s sweeping metal tariffs will have on its Canadian operations.

Goncalves stated that "Canada became a dump for producers who were trying to avoid US tariffs and downstream Canadian manufacturing suffered as well."

Commercial contracts lagged behind despite the tariffs, which boosted U.S. spot steel prices. The industry had to adjust to an older price index, leading to a 'lower fourth-quarter selling price.

Tariffs have further hurt the sales of?the automobile sector?, which accounts for 28% of Cleveland-Cliffs quarterly steelmaking revenues. The bottom line of U.S. carmakers has also been hit by higher production costs.

LSEG data shows that the company's revenue for the quarter decreased marginally to $4.31 Billion from a previous year, which is below analyst expectations of $4.59 Billion.

The total revenue for 2025 also dropped to $18.61 from $19.19 billion.

The steel producer, however, posted a narrower-than-expected quarterly loss.

Its adjusted loss per share was 43 cents in the quarter that ended on December 31 compared to 68 cents one year earlier. Analysts, on average, had expected a loss per share of 60 cents.

Goncalves stated that the company expects to incur higher costs during the next quarter due to "the recent spike in utilities costs" and a change in (product) mix, before returning to normal in Q2, with improved steel pricing and increased shipment volumes.

The company wants to?finalize a deal in the first half 2026 with Korean steelmaker Posco.

The median price target compiled by LSEG of 15 brokerages that cover Cleveland-Cliffs was $13. By 2025, this stock would have gained 41.3%. Reporting by AnshumanTripathy and AatreyeeDasgupta from Bengaluru, Editing by MajuSamuel and Shakesh Kuber

(source: Reuters)