Good morning, ladies and gentlemen. Welcome to the Earnings Conference Call of Tupy S.A. for the Second Quarter of 2025. This conference is being recorded, and the replay can be accessed on the company's website at ri.tupy.com.br. The presentation is also available for download on the IR platform and website. Please be advised that all participants will be in listen-only mode during the presentation, and later we'll begin the Q&A session when further instructions will be given. This presentation is being recorded and translated simultaneously. Translation is available by clicking on the "Interpretation" button. For those listening to the video conference in English, there is the option to mute original Portuguese audio by clicking on "Mute Original Audio." Before proceeding, I would like to enforce that forward-looking statements are based on the beliefs and assumptions of Tupy's management and on information currently available to the company. Such statements may involve risks and uncertainties as they refer to future events and therefore depend on circumstances that may or may not occur. Investors, analysts, and journalists should consider that events related to the macroeconomic environment, the industry, and other factors may cause results to differ materially from those expressed in such forward-looking statements. The following executives are present at this conference call: Rafael Lucchesi, CEO; Rodrigo Périco, CFO; Ricardo Fioramonte, Vice President of Sales; Toni Bueno, Vice President of Procurement and Logistics; Gatito Genso, Vice President of New Business, Innovation, and IRO; and the Tupy IR team. Now, I would like to give the floor to Mr. Lucchesi, who will start the presentation. Please, Mr. Lucchesi, you may continue.
Good morning, everyone, and thank you for attending this conference call. The scenario of uncertainty observed since last year grew stronger in the second quarter of 2025, reflecting the slowdown in economic activity in the United States and high interest rates, which impact the global economy. This context, combined with depreciated freight prices, has caused transportation companies to postpone fleet renewal and new investments while awaiting more consistent signs of economic recovery, factors that continue to limit demand in the sector. These factors were also reflected in the earnings of our clients, who revised their projections for 2025 downwards. Our sales and production volumes fell by 10%, which was reflected in margins given the lower dilution of fixed costs. These effects together impacted EBITDA for the period by approximately BRL 90 million. We carried out market consolidation moves that were important for the company and its strategy, and that brought us greater competitive capacity and increased our market positions. We will discuss that throughout the presentation. Of course, that also brought greater structural eye-openers. As a result of these factors, the second quarter adjusted EBITDA margin was 8%, comprised of 7% from the traditional business and 10% from MWM. New businesses have contributed to the diversification of our revenue into segments with high growth and profitability potential, such as replacement, energy, and decarbonization, in addition to the greater supply of products and services with higher added value and increased by 12% this quarter. We are adapting our production capacity to this new volume reality and executing an important stage of our synergy plan. This process began in Mexico at the end of 2024. However, changes in the political and economic scenario led to the review of these projects, which is now underway and will be completed next year, with estimated gains of BRL 100 million in 2026. As of 2027, these results will be of BRL 180 million per year. Our global presence, with plants located on three continents, and production flexibility give us greater resilience and are an important competitive advantage and contribute to the acquisition of new contracts. Capacity optimization, along with other efficiency gains being implemented, will allow us to meet current and future demand and leverage our margins when volumes resume. Now, I give the floor to Rodrigo, our CFO, who will present the second quarter's indicators.
Thank you, Rafael, and good morning, everyone. Revenues totaled BRL 2.6 billion in the period, representing a 6% decrease compared to the same period in the previous year. As follows: 46% originated in South and Central America, 36% in North America, 15% in Europe, and the remaining 3% in Asia, Africa, and Oceania. In the analysis by segment, 85% of revenue came from structural components and manufacturing contract segment, which includes cast iron products and high-value added services, such as machining and component assembly. 8% were generated by the distribution segment, mainly responsible for the sale of spare parts, and 7% corresponded to the energy and decarbonization segment, with emphasis on generator sets and solutions aimed at decarbonization. On the next slide, in the domestic market, revenues from the structural components and manufacturing contract segment were impacted by the drop in sales for commercial vehicles, reflecting the reduction in the volume of indirect exports, partially offset by the increasing sales for off-road applications, which showed positive performance in the period. In the export market, revenues declined due to lower demand for commercial vehicles, particularly in the United States, reflecting uncertainties about the macroeconomic scenario that caused potential buyers to postpone the purchase of equipment. We highlight that the highest value-added products reached 45% of these units' revenue, highlighting the strategic relevance of solutions with greater technical complexity and higher contribution to profitability. Continuing, we highlight the distribution unit responsible for the sale of spare parts and hydraulic products. Sales from this unit accounted for 14% of domestic market revenue, up 3%, driven by growth in the spare parts unit. In the export market, sales increased by 2%. In both markets, performance was partially impacted by lower demand for hydraulic products, reflecting the current economic conditions. On the next slide, we highlight the performance of the energy and decarbonization unit, a segment that encompasses generator sets, in-house manufactured engines, maritime applications, lighting towers, and products and services related to decarbonization. The segment had a 20% increase in Brazil, driven mainly by strong growth in sales of generator sets. On the other hand, the drop in sales of self-manufactured engines, influenced by the weaker performance of agribusiness, negatively impacted the unit's earnings in both domestic and export markets. This has accounted for 16% of domestic market revenue and 1% of export market revenue. Continuing the presentation, we have the costs and expenses for the period. Performance was negatively impacted by volume, inflationary pressure on labor and services, and exchange rate depreciation, which were partially mitigated by cost reduction initiatives and productivity gains. In the first half of the year, expenses decreased by 1% compared to the same period of last year, mainly reflecting lower sales volumes and efficiency gains. In the quarter, they increased by 4% compared to the second quarter of 2024. Next, we highlight at the top the adjusted EBITDA, which totaled BRL 210 million in the second quarter of 2025. The margin of the traditional business reached 7% at the quarter, reflecting the double-digit drop in volumes and inflationary pressure, which impacts on operational efficiency and dilution of costs and expenses, resulting in approximately BRL 90 million in impact on EBITDA. MWM's operating margin was 10% in the period, driven by higher sales volumes, better mix, and the implementation of manufacturing organizational optimization projects, which contributed positively to the result. In the lower graph, we highlight the evolution of net income in the second quarter of 2025, mainly influenced by the better financial result and the exchange rate variation on the tax base. On the next slide, we talk about the financial result for the period. The reduction of financial expenses was mainly influenced by the reduction in debt, with repayment of BRL 366 million throughout the first half of this year. On the other hand, financial revenues totaled BRL 33 million, lower than the amount recorded in the same period of last year, sustained by the increase of interest rates, which, together with the allocation strategy, helped to mitigate the effects of lower cash. In the result with exchange rate variations, we recorded revenue of BRL 26 million, explained by two main factors: positive variations of BRL 6 million, resulting from the appreciation of the real on balance sheet accounts in foreign currency, and positive results from hedge transactions with revenue of BRL 20 million, of which BRL 14 million were marked to market gains and an expense of BRL 6 million with cash impact. Below, we have the variations in the main working capital accounts using the first quarter of 2025 as a basis for comparison. Accounts receivable balance was reduced by BRL 93 million in the period, with an impact of two days on the average collection period, a movement that was mainly influenced by the seasonality of the period, with a greater concentration of sales at the end of the period. In inventories, there was a reduction of BRL 93 million, resulting from management initiatives focused on in-process and finished goods, contributing to greater efficiency in the use of resources. In accounts payable, the variation was marked by seasonality, lower purchase volumes, and reduced inventory, factors that directly impacted account balance. Finally, net debt at the end of the second quarter of 2025 was BRL 2.6 billion, corresponding to 2.45x the adjusted EBITDA in the last 12 months. Foreign currency obligations represented 59% of the debt and 39% of the cash balance. We ended June 2025 with a cash position of BRL 1.5 billion. Now, I turn the floor over to Ricardo , Vice President of Sales.
Thank you, Rodrigo, and good morning, everyone. As Rafael and Rodrigo mentioned, the uncertainties about tariffs and their impact on the global economy have affected activity in some sectors that are important to us. This scenario can already be seen in the performance of our customers: commercial vehicles and machinery manufacturers and agricultural machines, whose written quarterly results show revenue declines between 3% and 19%. In the United States, we see the deterioration of several economic and sectorial indicators, such as PMI and Consumer Confidence Index, but mainly a decline in the profitability of transportation companies, reflecting excess capacity and the consequent drop in freight costs. As our customers in the commercial vehicle segment have already reported, truck sales suffered a significant decline in the second quarter, as a large portion of fleet owners continues to wait and see, postponing their purchases. In Europe, despite the reduction in interest rates in some economies and fiscal stimulus measures, the uncertain scenario has also impacted demand in the short term. It's important to highlight that demand does not disappear, as equipment continues to be used. Pent-up demand will be met later, especially from 2026 onwards. The off-road vehicle segment, the inventory normalization, negatively impacted our sales throughout 2024. However, with adjusted inventories in the chain, we see an improvement in our order books in the period. Peak demand shows mixed signals, with some segments performing well, such as power generation, which has been benefiting from expansion of data centers. On the other hand, segments such as construction and mining have been impacted by postponement of investments. This is a good time to highlight that we're growing in the power generation segment, and as announced yesterday in the material fact, we won a new contract to supply cylinder heads for this application. On the next slide, I want to talk about the impact of tariffs on our business and how our presence on three continents is a significant competitive advantage. We've built a unique arrangement in the industry that allows us to allocate products across different plants. This is a risk mitigation tool and allows us to offer products that help customers meet their regional content requirements. This differentiation has allowed us to win new contracts, which, as announced, total additional annualized revenues of $1.4 billion. These new projects will gradually enter production as of the second half of this year and are protected by long-term contracts. They have a higher percentage of added value, such as machining and subassembly services, and will contribute to enrich the product mix with a positive impact on margins. Speaking of tariffs, our exports to the United States from Brazil represent approximately 14% of total revenues. As of April 2nd, our products were subject to a 10% tariff, which is passed on to the customer according to contract and has already been carried out. Since August 6, our products have been subject to a 50% tariff. However, we have inventories in the United States of products that were imported with the 10% tariff that give us coverage for about 10 weeks. Additionally, products that were shipped before August 6 and arrived in the United States by October 4 remain subject to the 10% tariff. Considering inventories already imported and products in transit, we will practically have coverage until the end of the year and therefore do not expect a material impact on our earnings in 2025. These inventories give us a reasonable amount of time to work on mitigation measures for 50% tariffs, such as transferring production to Mexico, and remembering the products that meet USMCA requirements are currently tariff-free. This demonstrates the resilience of Tupy Industrial Structure, which is certainly valued by customers. Now, I turn the floor to Toniy, Vice President of Procurement and Logistics.
Thank you, Ricardo . On the next slide, I want to detail our capacity demobilization projects. Acquisitions brought several commercial benefits in areas such as procurement and logistics, but they also created idle capacity. Our synergy plan already considered the adjustment of production capacity and inventories, and it gained even more relevance in this scenario of declining volumes. This process began in Mexico in 2024 and will be intensified in 2025 and 2026 in all plants. Originally, the plan would be completed this year. However, the tariff contest led to the review of these projects, given the even greater strategic relevance of the operations in Mexico. This reorganization will result in approximately a 25% reduction in capacity compared to the post-acquisition scenario of the Aveiro and Betim plants and is in line with our acquisition and integration strategy. The effects of these actions will begin to be seen next year, with an annual impact of $100 million in 2026 and $180 million per year starting in 2027, resulting from a reduction of fixed costs and optimization of variable costs. The new capacity allows us to meet customer demand, which considers the increase in volumes in 2026 and future growth through the acquisition of new contracts. We aim to achieve a ROIC above the cost of capital in each of the geographies in which we operate, even in a challenging volume scenario. To achieve this, we are implementing an aggressive efficiency and cost reduction plan with initiatives focused on automation, maintenance, workforce productivity, and quality. This plan is additional to what I mentioned previously and should positively impact our margins by up to two percentage points when they reach full maturity at the end of 2026. Now, I give the floor to Gatito, our Vice President of New Business and Innovation.
Thank you, Toni. Good morning, everyone. We are the most recognized engine brand in the country, which also drives the spare parts business, and we are leaders in the generator set market, offering energy security and options with a lower level of environmental impact. What these segments have in common is high growth potential and profitability superior to our traditional business. The distribution and energy and decarbonization units, with low correlation with the company's core business, already represent 30% of domestic market revenue or 15% of total. On the next slide, I want to talk about the fundamentals of the replacement sector, which grew 8% in the second quarter of 2025 and 17% in the first six months of the year. It's a market that benefits from the age of the country's fleet. Today, about one-third of the truck fleet in Brazil is over 16 years old, and 50% of tractors are over 20 years old. This represents a growing and continuous demand for maintenance and replacement parts, and this is where MWM has a great advantage. The strength of the MWM brand is a huge differentiator. We are widely recognized for our quality, robustness, and reliability, which positions us as a reference throughout the chain. We've even managed to price our products better, a direct result of the market's trust in our brand. We have an extremely robust distribution network with more than 700 points of sale in Brazil, which guarantees us capillarity, proximity to the customer, and speed in delivery. On the next slide, I want to talk about the drivers of our growth and the size of opportunities. Approximately 30% of diesel engines in circulation in Brazil were produced by MWM, which gives us a very significant installed base and opens up space to expand our operations with optional and multi-brand parts. Since the beginning of the development of the optional line in 2017, we have already conquered 7% of the market that previously used parallel parts, and we still participate in only 1% of the multi-brand market, parts for engines from other manufacturers. We're expanding our portfolio and advancing in this market, including curating products in China. On the next slide, I discuss the generator set segment, which we started offering in 2019 and in which we became a national leader in just a few years. Revenues grew 19% year -on -year, driven primarily by a more favorable product mix. We're also increasing margins through efficiency gains in the manufacturing process. The demand for energy stability continues to rise, covering urban centers, off-road applications, and agribusiness. Our growth strategy includes expanding our portfolio for these markets, increasing exports. We currently export to 19 countries and offer larger products for data center applications. On the next slide, I want to talk about vehicle transformation projects. We are in advanced talks with urban transport companies, bus, and waste collection companies as well. These sectors represent an addressable market of around 180,000 vehicles for solutions with natural gas, biomethane, and ethanol engines. Public policies have contributed to the large-scale adoption of these technologies. The city of São Paulo will use biomethane solutions in its urban bus fleets. MWM will play a leading role in this journey, providing technical knowledge in engine and biofuel technology. There is a lot going on, and as Investor Relations Officer, I'm delighted to announce that we've launched another channel to share our initiatives, strategies, and future vision with the market. In this first edition, available on our Investor Relations website, our IR Manager, Hugo Zierth, has talks with the leaders of distribution and energy and decarbonization units. Our CEO, Rafael Lucchesi, Ricardo , and Toni also participate in this edition, discussing our earnings and plans for the structural components unit. I invite everyone to watch the content that's directly related to the performance of this quarter and next steps of the company.
We'll now start the Q&A session. To ask a question, please click on "Raise Hand." If your question is answered, you can leave the queue by clicking "Lower Hand." Our next first question comes from André Mazzini from Citi.
Can you hear me? I think it's unmuted now.
Yes, we can hear you.
Okay. Sorry about that. First, about the reduction of 25% in installed capacity, will there be any layoff costs associated with that? If, on the other hand, a larger occupancy of the plant should have an effect on margins in the mid-term? The second question is also about margins. MWM's margin is a highlight at 10%. It used to be 6% when you purchased the company. If you could improve, could you improve margins at MWM from now on? You talked about automation of plants, so probably MWM will go even further up. Thank you.
Hello, André. How are you? This is Rafael Lucchesi speaking. The adjustment of capacity is indeed an agenda that was already part of our strategy, but we had to make a transition. We started an adjustment plan, and then, due to the international scenario, we had to remodel that adjustment. As you put it well, of course, this reduction in capacity will provide us more energy when the market resumes with greater resilience and more competitiveness because we reduce capacity. Now, I'll turn the floor to Toni to complement my answer.
Good morning for the André. Thank you for the question. We went from an occupancy of 65% to 80% of the occupancy rate of our plants. This will naturally favor our margins. Of course, together with all the other moves that we made, this share specifically plays an important role in our projections.
Good morning, André. This is Rodrigo speaking regarding MWM. I'm glad you mentioned that. Yes, indeed, we've improved the margin considerably, but there's still room for improvement because there are many actions regarding restructuring. We've repositioned the brand, all of that done in the last 18 months, and all that brought a significant improvement to operations. We've also repositioned the units. There are three units that are well repositioned. The leaders are very capable, and they look at their units specifically.
This is Gatito speaking, André. The answer is yes. These units in São Paulo are part of the business strategy, anti-cyclical business strategy. As we said in the presentation, if the structural unit suffers with the delay of the renewal of the fleet, as the fleet becomes older, we sell more spare parts. We are growing at a two-digit rate, but we're investing a lot in that unit. MWM has an inventory of engines. More than 2 million engines are made by MWM in Brazil, so we are naturally present there. With the curation of parts all over the world, we want to improve that to 2/3 of engines, not only MWM. This is happening. We believe in that strategy. This unit will perform well throughout the quarter, and it has a better margin, so the mix helps the company. We believe that biofuel engines will become important to our revenues. It's also happening. The vehicle transformation, that is the replacement of diesel engines by biofuel and biomethane and ethanol, is also becoming a reality. To mention the last unit, services and manufacturing, assembly of engines was also important in the mix for this quarter. In summary, we work a lot with these three units so that the three units in São Paulo play an ever more important role in the mix of the company. That was part of our strategy already, and we're very happy that it's growing. The growth of both will help a lot to rebuild the margin.
Thank you very much, Rodrigo, Lucchesi, and Gatito , and have a good day.
The next question comes from Gabriel Rezende from Itaú BBA.
Thank you for the question. Good morning. I would like to have a follow-up on the restructuring process. You mentioned on yesterday's release that this restructuring would lead to a gain of 2 percentage points in the EBITDA margin. What is the starting point for that? If we can see the margin in 2026, as you mentioned in the press release, is this EBITDA margin gain based on the margin for 2026? Let's say 8% adjusted margin to 10% in 2026. The second point, a follow-up on Mazzini's question, you mentioned now about the occupancy that went from 65% to 80% with restructuring. What is the endpoint of this restructuring? What should be the occupancy of the plant after it's finished? If the company would eventually need to expand capacity when volumes expand in 2026 or 2027. Thank you.
Gabriel, this is Toni speaking. Thank you for the questions. Starting with your first question, it's important to separate the topics. The first topic is the reduction of idleness. That's part of our strategy and the entire design of acquisitions of the plant in Betim and Aveiro that happened in the past. The second topic, which is additional, is efficiency topics. They're based on product quality, automation, maintenance, and also increasing data usage in the company. These two topics are different. The two extra percentage points are added related to improving efficiency, and we'll reach the top of those benefits at the end of 2026. Now, as of the second topic, occupancy, 80% of the space, we understand that this is the ideal footprint. Why 80%? Because that enables us, upon receiving new products, to absorb future changes in technologies and continue to be stable in providing our customers with production, even in a scenario of stabilization. Now we have much more capacity to quickly adapt to market changes. This is not a simple scenario, but the goal is for us to adapt quickly, maintaining our ROICs, our ROIC structure, above cost of capital.
This is Gatito speaking, Gabriel. Now, continuing all this plan of capacity plus efficiency takes into account also what we've been discussing with you along the quarter, which are new contracts negotiated by Ricardo , our Vice President of Sales, because there is a cycle of negotiation, preparing the plant, and they start production as of 2026 and 2027. These contracts will take up part of this capacity that's been reserved starting in 2026. There are several actions focusing on efficiency, removal of capacity, and new contracts that will make the company go back to historical levels of contribution margin and EBITDA that it presented before the acquisition.
This is Rafael speaking. Toni and Gatito gave an excellent answer, but one additional comment is the technological trend for reduced volume in engines. New engines have thinner walls, more complex technological structures, but as a trend, they are less heavy. All the answers we gave in terms of value-added and capacity reduction meet the needs of the trends in the technological development that are present in our customers.
Okay, understood. Thank you for the answers, Toni, Gatito, and have a good day.
Our next question comes from Fernanda Urbano from XP.
Good morning, everyone. Thank you for the question. I have two questions. First, a follow-up on the plant reorganization. It's clear from your previous answers how the capacity optimization will be once changes are implemented. I would like to understand, with 85% of usage of capacity, how does that volume compare to current volumes? Should we expect an actual reduction of volume, or that will only improve the use of capacity? I would like to understand the division of capacity of Tupy between Mexico, Portugal, and Brazil after those changes are made. How do you envisage the prospects of cash generation once these changes are implemented? You've mentioned in the presentation and the release a more efficient monetization of working capital, although the EBIT is a bit lower. How do these changes relate to the prospects of cash generation of the company for 2026 and 2027? Thank you.
Hello, Fernanda. This is Ricardo Damashi from Sales speaking. In terms of the adaptation in demand and capacity, the projection we're making is that such adjustments will grant us an optimization of 80%, not 85%, in capacity in the mid-term. That takes into account everything that was said before about the new projects, and also it considers that we are at the lowest demand ever. I mean, something we haven't seen since the pandemic, especially in vehicles in general. We expect the demand to resume as soon as uncertainties are being eliminated slowly, and buyers go back to their activities. Fleet owners go back to acquiring equipment and making investments. We do foresee an activity level much higher than we have now. This 80% that was said gives us room to absorb that in the future.
This is Rodrigo speaking. Fernanda, good morning. When we talk about cash generation, there are two points important to mention. First, capital allocation of the company. As Ricardo said, we are at the bottom of our sales level. Sales and exchange rate are two offensors of the company. Naturally, a drop in sales brings a worsening of our dilution of fixed costs. Today's capital allocated for restructuring, and the second question is going to be made. We had an increase in leverage. It changed a bit, but what happened is that we monitor some important drivers related to leverage. In the company, I'd say that we have operational and financial levers that will be enabled if necessary so that we can meet the plan and also comply with our covenants. The company has said several times that we have a very well-structured debt, low cost. All the maturity dates and terms have been expended recently. We would like to make you comfortable about our liquidity. 2025 is very well solved, and also looking forward to 2026. Just to add on what Ricardo said about the geography snapshot, it's important to bear in mind that the company, in this flexible design, creates communicating vessels among all operations. This movement that we're making to render products more flexible is so complex that we move 52 products among plants or among lines, and more than 100,000 hours of engineering development were dedicated to that, and they need the collaboration of customers and clients. It's important to understand that we have a dynamic system that needs to adapt quickly and in an economically feasible way to the scenario that happens. A question about the snapshot for the future, which is a very interesting question. We are now undergoing a moment in which the market is extremely dynamic with some instabilities. As Ricardo mentioned, Tupy is a global leader in this market. We have operations in three continents, which gives us great resilience. This is extremely important in this new reality of high protectionism. Considering that, Fernanda, our operational base in Brazil will remain a competitive strength of our company. Mexico, because of its positioning and because of the importance of the U.S. market and USMCA, our position in Mexico will become more and more important.
That's very clear. Thank you very much, and have a good day.
Our next question comes from Gabriel Frazão from Bank of America.
Good morning, everyone. Thank you for the question. My question is about the truck market in the U.S. or North America. We've seen a decrease in that market that was driven by high levels of sales of trucks recently. Were these low volumes enough to correct this unbalance between supply and demand, or do you expect any other moves in this market?
Hello, Gabriel. This is Ricardo Fioramonte speaking. Being very objective, based on the orders activity and the orders portfolio of OEM manufacturers in the U.S., we don't envisage a very significant change in the next quarter. It's likely that the industry will remain with low activity levels in the third quarter. At the same time, it's very important to highlight that the fleet is being underused, is being used, the equipment in use are being depreciated, so they're just postponing the demand. This will certainly favor us in the future. We expect and hope that this activity will go back to normal rates as of 2026. It's a big change considering the expectations for the industry as a whole, when in the beginning of this year, we expected higher volumes for this year, as well as the beginning of a free buy, which is no longer an option now. We even work with the possibility of a recovery starting in 2026. Since we're seeing a very steep drop, it's possible that when it resumes, it will be really significant.
Just a complementation, Rafael speaking. The GDP in the U.S. in 2024 grew by 2.8%, and activity level projections for this year are around 1.8%. The reduction in this segment, the data announced for the second quarter of 2025 for commercial vehicles, there has been a reduction of 13% in North America and the United States, and off-road, 20% reduction. That answers your questions a bit, and that impacts Tupy because we are suppliers in this chain, and the United States is our main market. As Ricardo said, we await a recovery, a resumption of these volumes in 2026.
This is Gatito speaking. I would just like to take this opportunity to connect to what Toni mentioned about our efficiency project to reduce capacity and add flexibility to plants. Now, we are in a moment in which demand is not what we expected in the beginning of the year due to U.S. external factors in the U.S. market. We want to make our plants flexible more and more so that we can respond in terms of costs to any demand that's not confirmed, being able to produce in the plant that's most efficient in our geography. The company is executing this plan in 2025, and throughout 2026, this will make us much more efficient. That's why we believe we'll go back to our historical margins before acquisitions, which is what drove us to increase our capacity and be present in new geographies worldwide.
Thank you very much. That's very clear.
Next question comes from Jonathan Coutres from JP Morgan. Mr. Jonathan, your microphone is open.
Thank you. Thank you for the question. I have two questions as well. The first is about the demobilization of the plant. Tupy increased the capacity of production of iron by 40% when compared to 2021. Maybe, if these assets, if you're looking for a purchaser, how is Tupy in negotiating a valuation lower than historical levels when compared to the industry? Maybe it could be focused on assembly and MWM, as well as Aveiro, a plant that is a strategic footprint in Europe. The plan, do you have any estimate of the amount of expenditures in the next quarters? You talk about positive for 2026, but what would be that in the short term? That's the first topic. The second topic is about gross margin. What was the main offensor in this quarter? Because when we look at historical figures, you had reported two bps drop, but the margin was not so negative. Now, is that bigger because of M&As, or is there anything more specific for this quarter? Thank you.
This is Ricardo Fioramonte speaking. Jonathan, thank you for the question. Regarding your question about a possible sale of these assets, it's important to highlight the strategy of Tupy, if I understood your question correctly. Communicating to the market, we have adopted the strategy of consolidating this industry in the West and addressing one of the problems of this industry, which is in the structural idle capacity. Within this role of consolidator, we understand that acquisitions were made with the projection that we were actually acquiring idle capacity. The idea is to remove this capacity from the market, closing that.
This is Rodrigo , just complementing on your question very straightforwardly. The changes in the gross margin mainly refer to sales volume, which causes lower production volume and smaller dilution of costs.
This is Toni speaking. Just adding on the answer about adequacy costs. When we talk about 2025, we projected costs around BRL 12 million for all plants on a consolidated basis and investments for development of tools and machinery tools and improvement lines of BRL 16 million. In 2023, investments are at BRL 13 million and costs at BRL 63 million. These are our projections that are already included in our budget curves and in these last figures disclosed to you in this release, this quarter's release.
Thank you.
Our next question comes from Andressa Varotto from UBS. Your mic is open.
Good morning. Thank you for the question. I have two questions. First, regarding tariffs. Brazil is now subject to a 50% tariff. I would like to understand if there's any difference between what Tupy exports to the U.S., what is subject to 50% and 25%, which is the tariff for auto parts sector, and how the tariff is influencing the project to rationalize capacity. Does it mean that we'll have much more capacity preserved in Mexico than in Brazil? If you have any feedback from clients or customers regarding tariffs, it would be nice. How do you see a potential risk of ending or terminating the long-term contracts that you have with clients once they try to seek other players, or if this is not being discussed? The other question is about contracts that start in the second half of this year. Could you give us any color as to how much revenue they could add in this quarter and next year, and also how this could impact the margin?
Hello, Andresa. This is Ricardo speaking again. Starting with your question about how tariffs apply to our products. Most of the products exported from Brazil to the U.S., as well as most of Tupy's portfolio, are directed to commercial vehicles. In our case, most of this volume has a tariff of 50%. Only a small part is subject to the tariff of 25%. You asked about how this impacts the plant reorganization. This is the time to highlight this unique arrangement that Tupy built in the casting industry during years, having a footprint of manufacturing plants in three different continents, which allows us flexibility to allocate production according to our convenience. Right now, Mexico operations are an important strategic asset for us. This is the long-term solution for these high tariffs imposed on Brazil if those remain in force. We work with a scenario so that if products remain subject to tariffs, they will be transferred to Mexico. Andresa, going back to your second question about new contracts, we should be feeling a higher impact this year, which is not happening due to the commercial vehicles' condition in the U.S. Certainly, as of next year, there will be a positive effect of those contracts. We believe there will be up to 10% growth in revenues coming from these new projects.
This is Gatito speaking. Andresa, just to highlight something that we've been talking for some quarters now. All these commercial agenda built that will start generating revenue in 2026-2027 was built starting three years ago, also based on a consolidating strategy scenario for the industry in the West. We have more power because we have this strategy of having plants in three different continents and because of our volume. Ricardo may talk more about them, but these new contracts that are worth more than a billion come with an added value and under new contribution margin conditions. Is that right?
Yes, this is right. We are pricing the value that our footprint offers to our customers. We are the only independent casting company that is able to produce cylinder heads in the USMCA region according to the requirements, and we can help our customers build or comply with their regional requirements. Some of these new contracts should also be bringing products, which is not happening yet due to the reasons we mentioned here. This agenda of new contracts, combined with the optimization of plants, supports our belief that the structural components industry will go back to historical margins at some point in time, back then of when we were before this strategy.
Thank you very much.
This ends the Q&A session. I would like to hand the floor to Mr. Rafael Lucchesi for his final remarks.
I would like to thank you again for attending this conference call and reinforce our commitment to profitability, cash generation, and return on capital in all our business units. The necessary adjustments are being made with immediate actions and adapting the company to the lower sales volume. More than specific initiatives, this plan has structural effects and permanent gains, making Tupy, transforming Tupy into a more efficient company and better prepared for the future. Thank you and see you in the next quarter.