Icahn Enterprises LP
NASDAQ:IEP

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Icahn Enterprises LP
NASDAQ:IEP
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Price: 7.72 USD -0.64% Market Closed
Market Cap: 4.6B USD

Q1-2025 Earnings Call

AI Summary
Earnings Call on May 7, 2025

NAV Decline: Net asset value decreased by $336 million from the previous quarter, mainly due to negative fund performance and the accrual for the distribution.

Fund Performance: Investment funds were down about 8.4% for the quarter, primarily impacted by healthcare holdings.

Energy Segment: Energy EBITDA fell to negative $61 million from $203 million a year ago, driven by refinery turnaround and negative RINs valuations.

Automotive Challenges: Automotive sales dropped 9% year-over-year, but management is making investments and closing underperforming stores to improve long-term profitability.

Liquidity: The company reported $1.3 billion in cash at the holding company and $900 million in the funds, maintaining what it called a significant war chest.

Distribution: The board maintained the quarterly distribution at $0.50 per depositary unit.

Outlook: Management remains focused on value creation in the portfolio, expects further operational improvements, and highlighted positive trends in some business segments.

Net Asset Value

NAV fell by $336 million compared to the previous quarter, primarily due to negative fund performance and an accrual for the distribution. However, gains from CBI and Auto Service partially offset these declines.

Investment Fund Performance

The investment funds were down about 8.4% in the quarter, mostly due to poor performance in healthcare investments. Management noted that quarter-to-date marks are now modestly positive, factoring in recent market movement.

Energy Segment

The energy business posted negative EBITDA of $61 million versus $203 million last year, hurt by refinery downtime at Coffeyville and unfavorable RINs valuation. The fertilizer business provided some offset thanks to higher prices and strong utilization.

Automotive Segment

Automotive sales fell 9% year-over-year, excluding the now-completed wind down of the parts business. The company is investing in labor, inventory, facilities, and marketing to improve performance, closing underperforming stores and adding greenfield locations. Early signs of improvement in car count, tire volumes, and revenue were noted late in the quarter.

Portfolio Value Creation

Management emphasized potential value creation in several portfolio holdings, such as AEP, Wix, Century, and Caesars. They highlighted growth drivers including AI-driven electricity demand, asset sales, and potential business unlocks.

Liquidity

Icahn Enterprises ended the quarter with $1.3 billion in holding company cash and $900 million in the funds. Total holding company cash and investments in funds stood at $3.8 billion, with $1.3 billion in cash and revolver availability at subsidiaries.

Real Estate and Other Businesses

Real estate adjusted EBITDA decreased by $1 million year-over-year, with legacy inventories expected to sell out by 2027. Food packaging and home fashions also saw EBITDA declines due to lower prices, higher costs, and product mix. A restructuring is underway in food packaging to drive efficiency.

Energy Segment EBITDA
-$61 million
Change: Down from $203 million in Q1 2024.
Automotive Segment Adjusted EBITDA
-$6 million
No Additional Information
Cash and Cash Equivalents (Holding Company)
$1.3 billion
No Additional Information
Cash (Funds)
$900 million
No Additional Information
Total Holding Company Cash and Investments in Funds
$3.8 billion
No Additional Information
Subsidiary Cash and Revolver Availability
$1.3 billion
No Additional Information
Quarterly Distribution per Depositary Unit
$0.50
No Additional Information
Fund Performance
Down 8.4%
No Additional Information
Energy Segment EBITDA
-$61 million
Change: Down from $203 million in Q1 2024.
Automotive Segment Adjusted EBITDA
-$6 million
No Additional Information
Cash and Cash Equivalents (Holding Company)
$1.3 billion
No Additional Information
Cash (Funds)
$900 million
No Additional Information
Total Holding Company Cash and Investments in Funds
$3.8 billion
No Additional Information
Subsidiary Cash and Revolver Availability
$1.3 billion
No Additional Information
Quarterly Distribution per Depositary Unit
$0.50
No Additional Information
Fund Performance
Down 8.4%
No Additional Information

Earnings Call Transcript

Transcript
from 0
Operator

Good morning, and welcome to the Icahn Enterprises L.P. First Quarter 2025 Earnings Call with Andrew Teno, President and CEO; Ted Papapostolou, Chief Financial Officer; and Robert Flint, Chief Financing Chief Accounting Officer

I would now like to hand the call over to Robert Flint, who will read the opening statement. Please go ahead.

R
Robert Flint
executive

Thank you, operator. The Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995 provides a safe harbor for forward-looking statements we make in this presentation, including statements regarding our future performance and plans for our businesses and potential acquisitions. Forward-looking statements may be identified by words such as expects, anticipates, intends, plans, believes, seeks, estimates, will or words of similar meaning and include, but are not limited to, statements about the expected future business and financial performance of Icahn Enterprises LP and its subsidiaries

Actual events, results and outcomes may differ materially from our expectations due to a variety of known and unknown risks, uncertainties and other factors that are discussed in our filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission. including economic, competitive, legal and other factors. Accordingly, there is no assurance that our expectations will be realized. We assume no obligation to update or revise any forward-looking statements should circumstances change, except as otherwise required by law. This presentation also includes certain non-GAAP financial measures, including adjusted EBITDA.

A reconciliation of such non-GAAP financial measures to the most directly comparable GAAP financial measures can be found in the back of this presentation. We also present indicative net asset value. indicative net asset value includes, among other things, changes in the fair value of certain subsidiaries, which are not included in our GAAP earnings. All net income and EBITDA amounts we will discuss are attributable to Icahn Enterprises unless otherwise specified.

I'll now turn it over to Andrew Teno, our Chief Executive Officer.

A
Andrew Teno
executive

Thank you, Rob, and good morning, everyone. NAV decreased $336 million from the fourth quarter of 2024 driven primarily by negative performance in the funds and the accrual for the distribution, which was partially offset by increases in CBI and Auto Service. CBI share price increased by 3% and which, when combined with additional share purchases of $33 million led to an increase of $80 million from the fourth quarter. The improvement in crack spreads that we discussed last quarter has continued and now that Coffeyville turnaround is complete, We look forward to getting back to business and generating cash flow. Regarding RINs, we remain hopeful that the new administration may lead to the resolution of our outstanding litigation regarding small refinery exemptions, which has the potential to remove the $438 million liability that was recorded as of 1Q 2025 and potentially provide clarity to future years.

As a reminder, during the last Trump administration, Wynnewood received small refinery exemptions. The investment funds ended down approximately 8.4% for the quarter, primarily driven by our health care investments. Given the recent market volatility, we thought it would be helpful to provide an update as to performance through the end of last week. If you were to mark-to-market the funds and add in CVI and UAN, we would be modestly positive quarter-to-date. We ended the quarter with $1.3 billion of cash and cash equivalents at the holding company, an additional $900 million of cash at the funds. So as Carl likes to say, we have a significant war chest to take advantage of opportunities as they arise.

Lastly, the Board has maintained a quarterly distribution at $0.50 per depositary unit. Now turning to our Investment segment. Despite the market volatility, we see considerable value creation potential in our portfolio. At AEP, we see new management closing at our recap, improving regulatory outcomes, solidifying its balance sheet through accretive asset sales and benefiting from tremendous electricity load growth due to AI-driven data center demand. We think AI growth is real and electric utilities, particularly AEV are an excellent way to benefit in the picks and shovels of AI. At [ Wix, ] we see a gas utility that is closing its ROE gap to peers and separating the utility services business with significant growth opportunity.

We see upside in both the gas utility and the services business. In particular, Century should see increasing growth trends as utility customers need to spend additional CapEx to improve and build out both the electrical grid and natural gas networks to support increasing power demands. At Caesars, we recently had 2 employees joined the company's Board of Directors. We think Caesars has an excellent management team with tremendous real estate value, a growing digital business that is deploying its greater than 15% free cash flow yield to repurchase shares and repay debt. In time, we would expect Caesars digital business to be unlocked from its current structure. The funds ended the quarter approximately 20% net long. Adjusting for our refining hedges, the fund was 35% net long.

And now I will pass it on to Ted to cover our controlled businesses.

T
Ted Papapostolou
executive

Thank you, Andrew. I will start at our Energy segment. Energy segment consolidated EBITDA was negative $61 million for Q1 '25 compared to $203 million in Q1 '24. CVR's refining business was negatively impacted by the turnaround at the Coffeyville refinery and unfavorable mark-to-market RINs valuation and offset in part by positive performance in the fertilizer business due to continued higher prices and strong utilization. Turning to our Automotive segment.

Our automotive segment continues to underperform compared to prior year period. Sales were down 9% year-over-year, excluding the wind down of the parts business, which is now complete, sales were down 6%. In order to give the business the resources it needs to succeed, we are investing in labor, inventory, equipment, facilities, marketing and adjusting our distribution footprint. We saw early signs of top line improvement as we have experienced positive trends in car count, tire volumes and revenue as we move through the quarter. Adjusted EBITDA in the quarter was negative $6 million. profitability suffered as we work to get the labor hired, optimized and trained, the inventory in the right place at the right margin and upgrade the facilities and equipment earlier in the year so that we can benefit as the year progresses.

We believe that while painful in the short term, these are the investments to improve long-term profitability. The store portfolio is also going through significant changes. We are closing money-losing locations and growing in areas we have historically generated strong profitability. During the quarter, we closed 24 underperforming locations, we were awarded a contract to operate approximately 15 locations on a military basis that allow us to grow in a capital-light manner. We have been adding additional locations to our greenfield pipeline and our leasing efforts for the excess and available space continue to bear fruit as we have approximately 60 properties under LOI.

We continue to believe that our auto segment will see increasing sales, profitability and cash flows over the coming quarters. Now turning to the other segments. Real Estate's Q1 '25 adjusted EBITDA decreased by $1 million compared to the prior year quarter. As a reminder, we have limited inventory at our legacy Country Club and expect to be sold out during 2027. We are expecting to see increased single-family home sales from our newest Country Club, which has recently cleared a permitting process, and we expect again taking home sale reservations by the end of 2025. In addition, our resort property continues to perform at high levels. On our last call, we discussed a potential sale of certain properties, which was expected to be complete during Q1. This is now expected to close during this quarter.

We are also exploring the sale of additional properties in our portfolio, which, if successful, could close later this year. In addition, we are actively seeking new opportunities that fit our investment strategy. Food Packaging's adjusted EBITDA decreased by $6 million for Q1 '25 as compared to the prior year quarter. The decrease is primarily due to lower price, higher manufacturing inefficiencies and higher material costs. During the quarter, the business commenced a restructuring plan, which includes consolidating 2 North American facilities into 1 and adding a state-of-the-art manufacturing line.

We anticipate this plan will increase operational efficiency and drive margins while maintaining volumes and is expected to be completed during the second half of 2025. Home Fashions adjusted EBITDA decreased by $1 million as compared to the prior year quarter, mainly driven by product mix. Pharma's adjusted EBITDA for Q1 '25 came in lower by $3 million as compared to the prior year quarter. The decrease is primarily due to higher R&D spend for the therapies in clinical development and increased sales and marketing expenses due to the recent global product launch of QSIVA. And now turning to our liquidity.

We maintain liquidity at the holding company and at each of our operating subsidiaries to take advantage of attractive opportunities. As of quarter end, the holding company had cash and investments in the funds of $3.8 billion and our subsidiaries had cash and revolver availability of $1.3 billion. We continue to focus on building asset value and maintaining liquidity to enable us to capitalize on opportunities within and outside our existing operating segments.

Thank you. Operator, can you please open up the call for questions.

Operator

[Operator Instructions] Your first question comes from the line of Andrew Berg of Post Advisory Group.

A
Andrew Berg
analyst

I appreciate all the information. If we can just go back to the automotive segment for a second. Can you give us some idea with respect to the store closures. But right now, how many stores are four-wall EBITDA negative, if possible, what the aggregate EBITDA losses for those stores and the expected timing to get out of any of the money-losing stores?

D
Daniel Fannon
analyst

Andrew, so we're not going to talk about the aggregate amount of store closures just because it impacts the business and the employees. I would say that we have there's a good amount of stores where they used to make significant money, call it back in '22 or '23, which are currently money-losing today. And those stores, I think you we're taking a hard look at what caused them to decline and how do we make them better. And then there's a whole list of other stores where profitability has suffered for some time and those will be closing.

So we will be closing them, the money-losing stores that we want to close in relatively short order. We've been averaging something like 8 a month and I think it also depends on whether we own the location or whether they're leased, right? So if landlords are reasonable or if they feel like they can release the box at an attractive rate and we hope to get out of those pretty quickly and will exit and other situations, we may just wait until the lease terms out.

A
Andrew Berg
analyst

Okay. And the ones you're getting out of are you getting stuck with any dark store lease expense? Or for the most part, when you're getting out of them, we're able to close and not have that liability as a tail?

D
Daniel Fannon
analyst

Yes. So some of them are actually opportunities. So we actually had 1 of our worst-performing stores that was money losing in the box in an area that we thought would be a liability and turned out to be a bit of a bidding war, and we sold it for $4 million, and it was on our real estate value, I think, closer to $2 million. But on the opco, you would have seen it as a negative value. .

So there's a whole host of boxes. Each one is different. Some we'd expect if Pepco exits their box, we may actually lease it to 1 of the competitors if it's far enough away, not to impact our own operations. So I think a large part of the portfolio should not really be considered a liability. It's more of an opportunity to make much more money.

A
Andrew Berg
analyst

Okay. And then sorry, going back to the update you said you're up -- what do you say, a couple of hundred million indicative net asset value quarter-to-date? .

D
Daniel Fannon
analyst

I don't think we said that. I think if you were to look at our public portfolio, so everything in the funds and then the publicly marked investments CVI and UAN, so we were modestly positive as of last Friday.

Operator

[Operator Instructions] That's all for our Q&A session, and we appreciate your participation. I will now turn the call back over to Andrew Tino, President and CEO, for closing remarks. Please go ahead.

A
Andrew Teno
executive

Well, thank you, everyone, for joining today's call. We'll speak to you in a few months.

Operator

Ladies and gentlemen, that concludes today's call. Thank you all for joining. You may now disconnect.

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