Ecovyst — Financial Results
The Advanced Materials & Catalysts Business Was Sold for $556 Million, Dramatically Reshaping the Company
The company completed the sale of its Advanced Materials & Catalysts segment (including the Zeolyst Joint Venture) to Technip Energies on December 31, 2025, for $556 million. A large portion of those proceeds — $465 million — was immediately used to pay down the company's senior secured term loan, cutting total debt from $870.8 million to $397.1 million. This is a defining strategic shift: the company is now a pure-play sulfuric acid business, and its balance sheet is substantially cleaner as a result.
Revenue Rose 21%, But Profitability Fell Sharply
| Metric | 2025 | 2024 | Change |
|---|---|---|---|
| Sales | $723.5M | $598.3M | +20.9% |
| Gross Profit | $158.1M | $163.4M | -3.2% |
| Operating Income | $64.9M | $85.1M | -23.7% |
| Net Income (continuing ops) | $6.3M | $45.5M | -86.2% |
Higher sales were largely driven by passing through elevated sulfur costs to customers — roughly $77 million of the $125 million revenue increase came from that pass-through, which has no impact on profit. Meanwhile, gross profit actually shrank because manufacturing costs rose by $30 million due to inflation, maintenance, and costs from a newly acquired facility. The result: the gross profit margin (profit as a percentage of sales) dropped from 27.3% to 21.9%.
Core Earnings Were Essentially Flat — The GAAP Drop Is Misleading
| Metric | 2025 | 2024 |
|---|---|---|
| Adjusted EBITDA | $172.0M | $172.7M |
| Adjusted Net Income | $45.7M | $51.7M |
Adjusted EBITDA strips out one-time items like transaction costs, asset write-offs, and a tax accounting charge (a $13.3 million valuation allowance increase on state tax credits). On this basis, the core business was nearly unchanged year-over-year. The steep drop in reported net income to $6.3 million was heavily influenced by that non-recurring tax item, not a deterioration in operations.
Unplanned Downtime Hurt the Core Regeneration Business
The company's regeneration services segment — where it recycles spent sulfuric acid from oil refineries — saw lower volumes due to unplanned customer shutdowns and extended maintenance at the company's own facilities. This was a meaningful drag on profitability, as regenerated acid tends to carry better margins than virgin acid. Management flagged this as a key offset against otherwise favorable contract pricing.
Debt Load Cut in Half; Liquidity Is Solid
Following the asset sale and $465 million debt repayment, net debt (total debt minus cash on hand) fell to $199.9 million. The company ended the year with $197.2 million in cash and an additional $67.6 million available under its revolving credit line, for total available liquidity of $264.8 million. No debt principal is due within the next 12 months, and the company was in compliance with all debt covenants.
Share Buybacks Accelerated Significantly in 2025
| Year | Shares Repurchased | Avg. Price | Total Spent |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2025 | 5,752,285 | $8.24 | $47.4M |
| 2024 | 552,081 | $9.05 | $5.0M |
The company bought back roughly 10 times as many shares in 2025 as in 2024, spending $47.4 million at an average of $8.24 per share. With $182.2 million still authorized under the repurchase program — and the board removing the original four-year time limit — buybacks could remain a significant use of capital going forward.