Amag Aluminium Earnings Fall as Tariffs and Weak Automotive Demand Pressure Margins

Amag aluminium earnings fell in 2025 as tariffs, weak automotive demand and high costs hit margins.
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Amag Aluminium Earnings Fall as Tariffs and Weak Automotive Demand Pressure Margins
Amag Aluminium

Amag aluminium earnings fell in 2025 as weaker shipments, US trade tariffs, and soft European automotive demand weighed on performance. The Austrian downstream aluminium producer reported a 23.5pc decline in Ebitda to €137mn, despite a modest increase in revenue.

Revenues rose by 2.1pc to €1.48bn, supported by higher London Metal Exchange aluminium prices. However, total shipments fell by 1.7pc to 417,600t, while external shipments declined by 2pc to 382,000t. This shows that higher metal prices helped protect sales value but did not offset the pressure on operating earnings.

Amag aluminium earnings also faced headwinds from lower premiums, a stronger euro-dollar exchange rate, and tariff effects across the company’s divisions. The result highlights the difficult position of European downstream aluminium producers, which must manage weak regional demand, high costs, and uncertain trade conditions.

Automotive Weakness Hits Casting and Rolling Performance

Amag’s casting division improved productivity but continued to face weak demand from the European automotive industry. US trade tariffs also affected performance, adding another layer of pressure to already fragile customer demand.

The rolling division faced similar challenges in automotive applications. Sales weakened in the automotive sector, although industrial applications and packaging showed stronger demand. This mixed performance reflects a broader split in downstream aluminium markets, where packaging and industrial uses remain more resilient than vehicle-related consumption.

High energy and personnel costs at Amag’s Ranshofen site further compressed margins. This is a major structural issue for European aluminium processors, especially as competition from lower-cost regions remains intense and customers continue to push for cost control.

Higher Aluminium Prices Limit the Earnings Decline

Higher LME aluminium prices helped limit the fall in Amag aluminium earnings. Average LME aluminium prices were 7.4pc higher than in 2024, supporting revenue even as shipment volumes declined.

However, lower premiums reduced the benefit of stronger aluminium prices, particularly in the metal division. The division also faced weaker shipments and exchange-rate pressure, showing that price gains alone cannot fully protect margins when premiums, volumes, and currency conditions move against producers.

Amag declined to provide an earnings forecast for 2026 because market conditions remain challenging. Still, the company pointed to some positive signs from economic forecasts, sentiment, customs arrangements, and order intake. Overall aluminium demand is expected to rise, but rolled aluminium demand in Europe is likely to remain weak.

The Metalnomist Commentary

Amag’s results show that European downstream aluminium remains caught between price support and weak industrial demand. The key risk is that tariffs and high operating costs continue to erode competitiveness even if broader aluminium consumption improves.

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