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| Outokumpu |
Outokumpu Europe loss became the defining feature of the group’s 2025 performance. The Finnish stainless steel producer reported weaker deliveries, lower sales, and softer earnings for the year. Europe remained the main drag, while the Americas and ferro-chrome divisions provided support. As a result, Outokumpu Europe loss shows how difficult the regional stainless market remains.
The company’s full-year stainless steel deliveries fell 2.3pc to 1.751mn t. Group sales dropped nearly 8pc to €5.47bn as realized prices weakened in both Europe and the Americas. Adjusted Ebitda slipped to €167mn from €177mn in 2024. Therefore, Outokumpu Europe loss reflects both weaker pricing and a more challenging operating environment.
Fourth-quarter performance was even weaker. Stainless steel deliveries sank 13.5pc to 365,000t, hurt by soft demand and temporary disruption from a new ERP rollout. That rollout affected supply-chain planning in Europe during the quarter. Consequently, operational execution added to already fragile market conditions.
European Stainless Steel Demand Remains the Core Problem
European stainless steel demand remains the biggest weakness in Outokumpu’s portfolio. The company’s European business swung to an adjusted Ebitda loss of €46mn in 2025, compared with a €58mn profit in 2024. Deliveries in Europe fell 6pc to 1.148mn t, while realized prices dropped sharply. As a result, Outokumpu Europe loss was driven by both lower volumes and thinner margins.
The fourth quarter showed even deeper stress. Adjusted Ebitda in Europe deteriorated to negative €56mn, worse than the negative €32mn recorded a year earlier. Deliveries in the region dropped 23pc year on year to 223,000t. Therefore, European stainless steel demand remains too weak to support profitable utilization.
Outokumpu is responding with restructuring. The company is targeting €100mn of structural annual cost savings by the end of 2027, mainly in Europe. It also booked €34mn of restructuring costs in the fourth quarter tied to personnel reductions. Meanwhile, pricing and capacity utilization continue to weigh on margins across the region.
Ferro-Chrome Earnings and the Americas Help Offset the Weakness
Ferro-chrome earnings and the Americas business helped prevent an even weaker group result. In the Americas, adjusted Ebitda rose to €102mn from €59mn in 2024. Deliveries increased 4.36pc to 622,000t as some customers shifted toward domestic suppliers during tariff changes. As a result, the Americas became the clearest positive area in the group.
The ferro-chrome division also delivered another solid year. Adjusted Ebitda rose to €138mn from €106mn, marking a third consecutive annual improvement. Deliveries increased 6pc to 395,000t, supported by stronger external demand and lower variable costs. Therefore, ferro-chrome earnings remain one of the company’s most reliable profit supports.
Outokumpu also continues to position itself for a lower-carbon future. The company confirmed a $45mn investment in a US pilot plant for low-CO₂ chromium metal and enriched ferro-chrome technology. Management also believes CBAM could improve its relative competitiveness because of its lower carbon footprint. However, management still says demand in Europe and North America remains subdued and recovery evidence is limited.
The Metalnomist Commentary
Outokumpu’s results show a familiar European steel problem: cost actions and regulation can help, but weak demand and price pressure still dominate the near term. The stronger Americas and ferro-chrome divisions give the company breathing room, yet Europe remains the business that will decide whether recovery becomes real in 2026.

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