Taseko Mines Limited (AMEX:TGB) Q3 2025 Earnings Call Transcript November 13, 2025
Operator: ladies and gentlemen, thank you for standing by. At this time, I would like to welcome everyone to the Taseko Mines 2025 Third Quarter Earnings Conference Call. [Operator Instructions]. I would now like to turn the conference over to Brian Bergot. You may begin.
Brian Bergot: Thank you, Jericho. Welcome, everyone, and thank you for joining Taseko’s Third Quarter 2025 conference call. The news release and regulatory filing announcing our financial and operational results was issued yesterday after market close and is available on our website at tasekomines.com, and on SEDAR+. With me in Vancouver today is Taseko’s President and CEO, Stuart McDonald; Taseko’s Chief Financial Officer, Bryce Hamming; and our COO, Richard Tremblay. As usual, before we get into opening remarks by management, I would like to remind our listeners that our comments and answers to your questions will contain forward-looking information, and this information, by its nature, is subject to risks and uncertainties.
As such, actual results may differ materially from the views expressed today. For further information on these risks and uncertainties, I encourage you to read the cautionary note that accompanies our third quarter MD&A and the related news release as well as the risk factors particular to our company. These documents can be found on our website and also on SEDAR+. I would also like to point out that we will use various non-GAAP measures during the call. You can see explanations and reconciliations regarding these measures in the related news release. And finally, all dollar amounts we will discuss today are in Canadian dollars unless otherwise specified. Following opening remarks, we will open the phone lines to analysts and investors for questions.
I will now turn the call over to Stuart for his remarks.
Stuart McDonald: Great. Thanks, Brian. Good morning, everyone. Thank you for joining our call today to discuss the third quarter financial and operating results. As usual, I’ll provide some commentary focusing on the operational results, and then Bryce will get into the financial performance for the quarter. As outlined in our release yesterday, third quarter results were definitely an improvement over the previous 2 quarters, both operationally and financially. Mining in the connector pit had presented more challenges in the early part of this year than we’d anticipated. But on the positive side, the higher mining rates in the last 2 quarters have opened up higher-grade benches that we’ve been anticipating. In the third quarter, grades increased to 0.22%, which is up from 0.19% in the first quarter and 0.20% in the same quarter.
This higher grade ore and less transitional oxide material both benefited mill recoveries, which increased to 77% in the third quarter. Mill throughput has been very steady this year, consistently operating at around design capacity. So overall copper production in the third quarter was just under 28 million pound and that includes 900,000 pounds of cathode production from Gibraltar’s SX/EW operation. Molybdenum production in the quarter was 560,000 pounds, which is also a big increase from prior quarters due to higher moly grades, which typically track copper grades. Costs in the quarter were USD 287 per pound, an improvement over the quarter. Total site costs in the quarter was $7 million higher than the previous quarter, mainly due to SX/EW costs now being expensed as well as increased maintenance costs.
Maintenance costs, including parts and major components is one area where we continue to see steady inflation. And all of that translated into $62 million adjusted EBITDA for the third quarter. Looking ahead, we expect to finish the year with a strong fourth quarter. Gibraltar produced 11 million pounds of copper in October, which was the mine’s highest production month in 2 years. So the quarter is off to a good start. We will provide formal guidance for 2026 in the new year as we normally do. But generally, we’re looking for a more consistent year next year with less quarterly volatility. Now shifting over to Florence, where we have achieved a number of major milestones recently and the operation is now well on its way to producing first copper.
In September, our general contractor achieved substantial completion of the SX/EW plant in plant area. This is a huge accomplishment for the project team. In just 18 months since we broke ground to Florence, our team has been able to deliver this major capital project on time and in line with our previous cost estimates. So it’s really a great achievement and the project is now into the commissioning phase. In mid-October, we received the final regulatory approvals we required to commence wellfield operations. We then initiated a short commissioning period, which included pumping water from the offer to establish hydraulic control in the wellfield. A number of normal course commissioning issues were identified and resolved and in early November, so about a week ago, we began acidifying the commercial well field.

Overall, we’re a few weeks behind our original plan, but we’re very happy with the wellfield performance so far as initial flow rates in the wellfield are in line with and even exceeding our expectations. So it’s early, obviously, but the operation is off to a good start. About half of the wellfield is being acidified now and the second half will start up in the next week or so. And in the weeks ahead, we expect to see the grade of copper and solution or PLS grade from the wellfield start to increase to a point where we can turn on the SX/EW plant and start plating copper cathode. Commissioning of the plant area is advancing in parallel with initial wellfield operations, and we expect to be producing copper early in the new year. An important aspect of the production ramp-up in 2026 will be our ability to develop and integrate additional wells into the operation.
We’re now preparing to restart drilling activity with 2 drills planned to start up here in November, and an additional 2 drills will be added early next year. The operating team in Florence continues to grow. Recruiting has gone very well, and we’re up to about 140 employees on site now. Needless to say, it’s a very busy and exciting time for all of them. It’s great timing to be starting up a major new supply of refined copper inside the U.S. Obviously, copper markets and pricing remains very strong. And there are some interesting dynamics in the U.S. cathode market. Although there are no U.S. import tariffs on refined copper right now, the possibility of tariffs in the future has led to some speculative trading activity and growing capital inventories inside the U.S. The COMEX space has continued to trade at a premium to the LME recently at a 4% premium or roughly $0.20 a pound.
However, our understanding is that the quoted COMEX price may not reflect what can actually be realized in the physical market, and capital sales in the U.S. maybe at a higher discount than normal — higher than normal discounts that you might normally see to the COMEX price. Although we’re still seeing a premium to LME pricing. This is a situation we’re going to continue to monitor as we start cathode sales from Florence in the next few months. The U.S. government has aided that it plans to revisit tariffs in middle of next year with the potential for 15% tariff on cathode at the end of 2026, increasing to 30% potentially at the end of 2027. So in the longer term, this shows the strategic value of Florence, which will become one of the few U.S.-based suppliers of refined copper.
Before I pass the call over to Bryce, I wanted to say a few words about our recent equity offering that was completed in October. The proceeds of that raise have significantly strengthened our balance sheet. We’ve now repaid the $75 million that was drawn on our revolving credit facility, and the remaining funds provide additional working capital support ahead of the Florence ramp up next year. We’re also planning additional spending at Yellowhead next year on environmental and engineering work to support the environmental assessment process. In the third quarter, we held open houses in the local communities and initial feedback has been quite positive. So Yellowhead project permitting is off to a good start, and we continue to view Yellowhead as an important longer-term growth project for us.
And with that, I’ll turn it over to Bryce.
Bryce Hamming: Thanks, Stuart. Good morning, everyone, and thanks for joining us today. Total copper sales for the quarter were 26 million pounds, which includes 900,000 tons of cathode. This was slightly below production due to shipment timing at the end of the quarter. We achieved a strong average realized copper price in the quarter, just shy of USD 450 per pound, in line with the LME average. And this has still continued to strengthen since the quarter end. This strong copper price translated into total revenue of $174 million, which includes $14 million from moly sales. Combination of higher sales volume and strong pricing drove a 50% increase in revenue quarter-over-quarter. On an adjusted basis, we reported net income of $6 million or $0.02 per share.
For GAAP purposes, we reported a net loss of $28 million or $0.09 per share, and that was primarily due to unrealized foreign exchange losses on our U.S. dollar denominated debt and an unrealized derivative loss related to our copper collars we have in place. Adjusted EBITDA came in at $62 million, a significant increase over prior quarter, driven by the higher sales and stronger copper price. Capitalized stripping for the quarter was only $6 million, and it was substantially lower than the previous 2 quarters, and that reflects our progress deeper into the connector pit, where the strip ratio has declined and access to ore has improved. Turning to Florence. We spent USD 27 million on the commercial facility this quarter, and that brings our total capital spend since the start of construction, USD 267 million.
We achieved substantial completion with our contractor in Q3, and we only have a few million more on this capital project to finish the year. This is within a few percentage points of our original construction budget since the start of 2024, and it’s a testament to the execution of our capital projects team. Operating costs at Florence were $8 million in the quarter, and these will increase as we continue hiring full-time staff and ramp up our well field operations, and that will include the procurement and consumption of asset going forward now our operations are underway. We ended the quarter with $91 million of cash. In October, we closed an equity financing, USD 173 million, and we used $75 million of that to pay down our revolver. And with capital spending at Florence largely behind us now and improving production at Gibraltar.
And coupled with this cash injection from this financing, our liquidity outlook is robust. We’re well positioned to support the ramp-up at Florence and advance our work at Yellowhead. That concludes my remarks, and I’ll now turn it back to the operator to begin the Q&A session.
Q&A Session
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Operator: [Operator Instructions] Our first question comes from Duncan Hay from Panmure Liberum.
Duncan Hay: Just a quick one on the wellfield drilling. What’s the — can you talk through the benefits of accelerating that and bringing that forward? I mean, presumably, you’re constrained by capacity in the plant. But yes, what sort of flexibility or comfort does that give you?
Stuart McDonald: Well, I think initially in the ramp-up period, the key for us is going to be opening up additional wells. The constraint is going to be not the plant, but the amount of solution flows that we can get off the wellfield. So it will be key to be advancing that forward. So we’ve got 2 drills starting up here in November, an additional 2 early in the new year. And in Q2 and Q3 next year, we’ll see those additional wells start to come online and contribute to the ramp-up. So no, it’s a big part of the plan. I think it’s always been part of the plan. But yes, glad that we’ve got a solid balance sheet, and we can move forward confidently with that work now.
Duncan Hay: You could see — I mean you’re going to put guidance out in the new year, but that — if you look at what you were thinking, say, 6 months ago, you could have more production next year given the position you’re in?
Stuart McDonald: Well, yes, we’ll see. I mean we’re not — we’re giving — we’re actually not going to give production guidance today. Obviously, the technical report is out there and that had some assumptions about drilling as well. But no, we’re optimistic certainly what we see today, the early results from the well field are positive, but it’s early days. And yes, we’re keep pushing forward. And obviously, first copper is going to be a big milestone for us early next year.
Operator: Our next question comes from Craig Hutchison from TD Cowen.
Craig Hutchison: I realize you guys aren’t going to provide guidance for next year until, I guess, early next year. But just curious how you guys think about the kind of milestones for declaring commercial production. Obviously, ISRs are relatively new for most people. Just how do you guys think about that in terms of production rate you need to get to, to clear commercial product and is it the 60% of design? Or is there some kind of metric that you guys look at to determine that?
Stuart McDonald: Yes, Craig, we’re not thinking about it in that way. I know that’s a conventional way it’s been done in the past for concentrators. It’s going to be a steady ramp-up of production through 2026. And yes, as I said, the key is going to be bringing on new wells, but we should see sequential growth each quarter in the copper production. I don’t know, Bryce, do you want to make a couple of comments about the accounting? So we see, I guess, the rules have changed in recent years.
Bryce Hamming: Yes. I think the real focus will be on our — obviously, our C1 costs. We’re going to be looking at what point that our production generates operating cash flow, operating profit. And with this project, given the nature of the operating costs, that happens relatively back from what we’re seeing, like we could see that by midyear. And then I think as we continue to do the ramp-up, it’s really about free cash flow and making enough money there to pay for the ongoing sustaining capital with the wellfield development. And that we see sort of later by the end of next and then onwards, , of course. So those are kind of the 2 key milestones. I think first is operating profit, operating cash flow and the second really being generating free cash flow. And so that’s what we’re really kind of targeting as we think about that ramp up into commercial operations.
Craig Hutchison: Okay. So I guess until you reach your mid next year, do we assume that some of the costs will be capitalized or the moment you guys are producing sellable cathode, you’ll start booking revenues right way in terms of kind of accounting? Do we think about revenues next year?
Bryce Hamming: Yes. On the accounting side, the standards changed a few years ago. We now recognize revenue once it’s sold. So even the first pounds of capital will be sold. From a capital perspective, there’ll be some of the — until the plant is fully up and running, there will be some of the plant costs which get capitalized until it’s sort of available for its full intended use. . But the key, I think, with this operation, as we’ve looked at it, is the wellfield development cost. So that’s the drilling and development of the wells, that is capitalized. So there will be significant ongoing sustaining capital that’s put to the balance sheet and then amortized over the life of the well.
Craig Hutchison: Okay. Great. And maybe just one last question for me. Just in terms of the capital, you effectively now complete the initial capital spend at this point? Or is there still some lingering costs into Q4?
Stuart McDonald: Effectively, the work is complete. There’ll be a few costs, commissioning costs that kind of trickle in, in Q4. I think we still probably have some of the cost and payables, right, that will come through the cash flow. But effectively, the construction piece is complete.
Operator: [Operator Instructions] There are no further questions at this time. I would now like to turn the call back over to the Taseko team for closing remarks.
Stuart McDonald: Okay. Thanks, everyone, for joining. And yes, if there are other questions, feel free to reach out to any of us. And otherwise, we will talk to you next quarter. Thanks, again. .
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