Good morning, ladies and gentlemen. My name is Maria, and I am your conference facilitator today. I'd like to welcome everyone to Cleveland-Cliffs Third Quarter 2022 Earnings Conference Call. All lines have been placed on mute to prevent any background noise. After the speaker's remarks, there will be a question-and-answer session. The company reminds you that certain comments made on today's call will include predictive statements that are intended to be made as forward-looking within the Safe Harbor's protections of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. Although the company believes that its forward-looking statements are based on reasonable assumptions, such statements are subject to risks and uncertainties that could cause actual results to differ materially.
Important factors that could cause results to differ materially are set forth in reports on Form 10-K and 10-Q and news releases filed with the SEC, which are available on the company's website. Today's conference call is also available and being broadcast at clevelandcliffs.com. At the conclusion of the call, it will be archived on the website and available for replay. The company will also discuss results excluding certain special items. Reconciliation for Regulation G purposes can be found in the earnings release, which was published this morning. At this time, I would like to introduce Celso Goncalves, Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer.
Thank you, Maria, and thanks to everyone for joining us this morning. Before going through our Q3 results, let me start by highlighting the $1.8 billion improvement to our balance sheet that was outlined in our earnings release this morning. During the quarter, we signed two new labor agreements covering approximately 14,000 USW-represented employees, encompassing more than half of our workforce. These agreements also cover benefits for over 22,000 retirees. The ratification of these labor agreements triggered a remeasurement for the associated pension and OPEB plans, essentially requiring a refresh to all assumptions that go into calculating the value of those liabilities, including primarily interest rates, asset returns, and most importantly, the premiums that we pay for retiree healthcare expenses. With interest rates higher this year and asset returns lower, those two first factors effectively offset each other.
The third factor, the updated healthcare premiums, resulted in a significant reduction to our overall liabilities. Using our size and scale to our advantage, we were able to proactively renegotiate significantly lower premiums with our health insurance providers at much lower costs. All in all, these updates reduce our net pension and OPEB liabilities on our books by $1.8 billion relative to the end of 2021, a 63% reduction. Our pro forma net liability for pension and OPEB is now only $1.1 billion, compared to $2.9 billion at the end of 2021 and $4.2 billion at the end of 2020, after we acquired ArcelorMittal U.S.A. In less than two years, we have reduced this liability by over $3 billion.
As you may recall, the pension and OPEB liabilities we assumed were by far the largest piece of the enterprise value of the ArcelorMittal U.S.A. Acquisition, and now most of those liabilities have moved over to equity on our balance sheet. Going forward, these changes will also reduce our OPEB cash funding obligations by more than $100 million per year, cutting this use of cash by more than half. Since the larger of the two labor agreements was not ratified until October 12, meaning after the end of Q3, the full impact of this change was not reflected on the actual 9/30 balance sheet. That's why we provided the pro forma calculation in our press release this morning. Furthermore, the impact of these renegotiated healthcare premiums is also applicable to other plans that will not be remeasured until December 31st.
As a result, when we report the Q4 and year-end 2022 financials, we expect these liabilities to be even lower on the 12/31 balance sheet. Also, to be clear, the benefit we have gotten just comes from reduced premiums from healthcare providers and does not reflect any reduced benefits for our retirees. This was truly a win-win for both the company and the union, and we thank the USW for their partnership to make it happen. Now, moving on to our results. In Q3, we generated $5.7 billion of revenues, $452 million of adjusted EBITDA, and $288 million of free cash flow.
On the revenue front, steel sales volumes of 3.6 million net tons held roughly steady with the prior two quarters, as lower demand from service centers and distributors was offset by higher automotive volumes. Very importantly, Q3 of 2022 was our best quarter to the automotive market since the semiconductor shortage began, but is still well below what we would consider normalized compared with the period from 2014 to 2019. Going forward, in Q4, we expect total volumes to increase as a result of further improved automotive, service center, and slab demand. On the pricing side, our sequentially lower average selling price was driven by the index-linked portion of our business, with declines in the hot-rolled, cold-rolled, and slab indices. We also had declines in EBITDA for our third-party pellet and scrap businesses as a result of lower pricing.
Looking into the fourth quarter, the improvements we achieved on the contractual fixed prices that reset in October, will help to mitigate the lagged impact of continued falling index prices. A product mix heavier in slabs and HRC will be a negative factor on our realized price. Our adjusted EBITDA performance was also impacted by higher reported operating costs, which on a unit basis trended upward in Q3 due to the lagged effects of higher cost inventory that we foreshadowed on our previous call. Compared to 2021, our 2022 costs have been up meaningfully due to inflationary pressures on input and energy costs, as well as lower production volume and higher repair and maintenance spending.
From a cash cost standpoint, though, these costs peaked in Q2, but the impact on our results was not fully flushed through EBITDA until Q3, a dynamic that can be seen when comparing the Q3 and Q2 cash flow statements. With all big repairs behind us, our repair and maintenance expenses have begun to decline rapidly here in Q4. Going forward, increased production volumes will also further dilute our fixed costs. From a free cash flow standpoint, we generated almost $300 million of free cash flow in Q3, largely driven by a significant amount of working capital release during the quarter. Price declines combined with lower costs of inventory should lead to continued release of working capital in Q4 and into next year, supporting strong free cash flow generation and partially offsetting the cash flow impact of declining EBITDA.
Also, our capital expenditures should decline in Q4 and even further into next year, where we expect total CapEx to be between $700 million and $800 million in 2023. We also expect cash taxes to be negligible for the rest of this year, with a substantial refund coming in early 2023. Of course, pension and OPEB cash needs will decline substantially as discussed earlier. Consistent with our previously stated capital allocation priorities, we continue to use the majority of our free cash flow to pay down debt. During Q3, we reduced net debt by $200 million, and on a year-to-date basis through today, we have reduced our net debt by $1 billion, bringing our current net debt level below where it was before we completed the acquisition of ArcelorMittal U.S.A.
Our capital allocation priority remains to continue reducing our overall debt, and beyond that, we still have around $800 million remaining under our current share repurchase authorization. With almost $2.5 billion of liquidity, a much cleaner balance sheet with meaningfully reduced pension and OPEB obligations, lower operating costs going forward, less CapEx next year, minimal cash taxes for the remainder of this year, cash coming in from working capital, and no major bond maturities until 2026, we are in great shape to navigate any potential recessionary environment. Very importantly, our automotive shipment levels in Q3 have indicated that our largest end market has been countercyclical due to the massive backlog from lower production over the past two years.
The strength of our automotive franchise with our unique product offering and ability to lock in fixed price contracts will reduce volatility, especially now that our major maintenance, repair, and capital expenditures are behind us and costs begin to trend meaningfully lower. I will now turn the call over to our CEO, Lourenço Goncalves.
Thank you, Celso, and good morning, everyone. Throughout my several years with Cliffs, our company has transformed and adapt to several different challenges, but two elements have remained constant throughout. Our commitment and full support to manufacturing in the United States is one, and the importance we place on our people is the other. This is not just a speech. We have backed this up with actions. Our latest labor agreement with our USW-represented workforce is the most recent demonstration of that. The deal provides increased wages, offers better insurance, gives improved pension benefits, and enhances vacation and holiday provisions. We also agreed to continue to invest in our facilities at $4 billion over four years, combining CapEx and OpEx, which is consistent with typical spending on these types of investments for our footprint.
We also kept the retiree benefits strong, and we're able to negotiate lower rates across the board, as Celso has already explained it. Together with our union partners, we have integrated four standalone companies in a span of just two years, overcame a difficult pandemic, completed the construction of a state-of-the-art direct reduction plant, invested to keep our mills at an automotive-level standard, paid down significant amount of debt, and drastically reduced our pension and OPEB liabilities, which we assumed two years ago in order to make the entire transformation possible. Our third quarter results were unique in that they reflect abnormally elevated costs, the largest portion of which was incurred in the second quarter, but did not flow all the way through until Q3.
We have been pretty open since day one that the set of assets we acquired, particularly those from AM U.S.A., were a bit underinvested, and at some point, would need some catch-up repair and maintenance. We got great value on this asset on these two acquisitions. In fact, over the past two years, we have already paid ourselves back with profits from the business, even with the persistent underperformance of the automotive industry during that timeframe. That said, embedded in the low acquisition price was an implied catch-up repair and maintenance cost. That is now behind us. As a major supplier to the automotive sector, the quality standards for our equipment must be pristine. We ramped up repairs beginning in the fourth quarter of last year, reinvesting a portion of our record profits earned throughout the year.
It was around that time that we were signing new fixed contracts with our automotive customers at higher prices, so it was even more important that our equipment capability was taken care of. As our spending picked up, both CapEx and OpEx, in many cases, we found more work to do than we initially anticipated. The best example of this was the outage of our Cleveland Works facility, which lasted from March through August. The original scope of the blast furnace reline expanded to effectively include the rebuild of the wastewater treatment plant and the powerhouse located on-site, as well as several other smaller jobs. Fast-forward to the present moment, we are now at the point where the major maintenance cycle has been concluded.
Due to the work we have done, our equipment is in great shape, and we are primed to meet the unique needs of our customers, particularly in automotive. The most common feedback we consistently hear from these automotive customers is about our perfect steel quality and our ability to keep them in steel during a time that the entire automotive sector has been deeply affected by underperformance from several suppliers throughout their supply chain. Not the case with what they buy from Cleveland-Cliffs, and these clients know that. Throughout this year, and particularly during the big repairs, we have seen the negative impact of lower production volume, reducing our ability to dilute our fixed costs. In the first nine months of 2021, we sold 12.5 million tons of finished steel compared to 10.9 million tons of finished steel so far this year.
That being said, automotive steel demand has started to improve in Q3, and we expect our volumes to increase further in Q4. That will result in improved costs going forward. The remaining drivers of higher costs, including increase in natural gas, electricity, and alloys, are not unique to us, and we have also seen some relief in these areas. All in, based on our inventory status and current outlook for input costs, we expect our reported unit costs in Q4 to fall at least $80 per ton compared to Q3, with further reductions into the first half of 2023, even after factoring the increased wages in the USW labor agreements that were recently ratified. As for demand, we were encouraged by the 100,000 tons volume improvement from our automotive customers from Q2 to Q3.
While they're still not back to normalized levels, the worst impact of the chip shortage seems to be behind us. In our view, automotive is now in position to carry the market. Despite the Fed's best efforts to damage the job market, unemployment at 3.5% is at a 50-year low, and that means people both need cars to go to work and can qualify to buy cars because they have jobs and paychecks. Inventory levels at car dealers remain so remarkably low that even if there is a consumer slowdown at the end user level, there will still be a lag acting as a buffer until a slowdown in the production of cars, SUVs, and trucks eventually falls. The current average age of light vehicles on the road of over 12 years is the highest on record.
Also, for those of you that have rented a car in the past year, there is clear evidence that fleet inventories need to be replenished as well, a meaningful 20% of the light vehicle market with a healthy backlog. Our October fixed contract renewals were another success, and the weighted average of the price increase we achieved would represent the second-best October renewal cycle in our legacy company's history, only behind last year. As we come to the table for our renewal cycle in January, our customers are being reminded that what we offer them cannot be compared to a CRU spot price. The difference between what makes up a CRU price and how we do business in automotive is night and day, we manage our production schedule based on the auto OEM's needs.
We have to reserve our variable capacity to align with their production forecast, and we hold their inventory if they have production issues, which by the way, happens a lot. We have a fully dedicated customer service group that manages this complicated just-in-time inventory system to the point that our customers don't even have to think about steel. It's there when they need, automatic. This is all before we even consider the constant technical support, research and development, and of course, quality of materials that we provide them. In sum, in the United States, automotive steel means Cliffs. Now that they have microchips, we want each one of our automotive clients to be successful in 2023. They have a unique opportunity in 2023 as automotive may be the only sector with pent-up demand taken care of.
The last thing they need now is not having access to all the specs of steel they need to produce cars. That can be a lot more devastating than not having microchips. On the distributor and service center portion of the business, customers have been following the typical herd mentality and buying hand to mouth in recent months. The strengthening of the dollar has not helped the price either, but the economics of overseas imports no longer make sense, supporting demand from domestic suppliers as we close out the year. Our August price increase announcement brought some buyers off the sidelines, and we secured additional Q4 orders as a result. As long as underlying demand stays this way in the coming quarters, a restock will need to happen.
Our grain-oriented and non-oriented electrical steels continue to see very strong demand, and we anticipate rapid price increase in the fixed price for those products. We have an infrastructure bill that should finally start to drive steel demand in the next year. We expect automotive taking up more steel share, and we have manufacturing being re-shored. When this thing turns around, it will turn around sharply. With an ongoing war, multi-decade highs in inflation, rapidly rising interest rates, and a focus on mitigating climate change, we are living in a difficult time in a world in transition. But we have already proven that Cleveland-Cliffs is capable of overcoming difficulties. The key to that is having the right people. People is the foundation of ESG. You cannot pretend to care about the environment if you neglect your people. And Cleveland-Cliffs will never do that.
Several companies, the vast majority actually, fight their ESG challenges with MOUs, letters of intent, and press release, while Cleveland-Cliffs and very few others take concrete action. We built a direct reduction plant before it was trendy. We adopt HBI using blast furnaces, and we will remain on the cutting edge. Next for us will be the use of hydrogen, first in our direct reduction plant, and then in our blast furnaces. Blast furnaces have always been on the forefront of technological innovation in iron making and steel making, and our current utilization of HBI as part of the burden in our blast furnaces is further confirmation of that. The future use of hydrogen and carbon capture will be the next examples of American blast furnaces in the vanguard of CO2 emissions reduction. Other companies in the United States and abroad are building new plants.
New plants add CO2 emissions regardless of the process utilized. Cleveland-Cliffs is not adding capacity and will not add capacity. We are reducing emissions within our existing installed capacity, and that's the ultimate goal. After we completed two years ago, a transformational, once in a generation consolidation of the American steel industry, some outsiders were fixated on the resulting pension and OPEB liabilities. Fast-forward in less than two years, those liabilities have been made irrelevant. With our major repair and maintenance impacts behind us, no ongoing or planned new construction projects, an improving automotive sector, and most importantly, labor peace throughout our organization, we are ready to continue to execute like we have been doing for eight years. With that, I will turn it over to Maria for Q&A.
Thank you. We will now be conducting a question and answer session. If you would like to ask a question, please press star one on your telephone keypad. A confirmation tone will indicate that your line is in the question queue. You may press star two if you would like to remove your question from the queue. For participants using speaker equipment, it may be necessary to pick up your handset before pressing the star keys. One moment please while we pull for questions. Our first question comes from Lucas Pipes with B. Riley Securities. Please go ahead.
Good morning, everyone. Congratulations on the OPEB obligation reduction. Lourenço, I remember during COVID, you used some common sense incentives to drive vaccination participation. I imagine maybe you used similar common sense approaches to drive this really significant reduction in healthcare premiums. Now, I would appreciate it if you could comment on some of the factors that drove that. Thank you very much.
Thanks, Lucas. Look, this is a negotiation that is extremely complex. It's not just the scale where you go and you push, because that actually takes cooperation with the unions in order to get accomplished. The vast majority is the USW, which we consider partners, and we consider that we are better because we have them with us. The USW, the machinists, all the unions in our company, and that gives us the ability to include the non-union personnel as well. We present a very unified front when we negotiate with these healthcare monsters. I think it's a first in a lifetime that a company of our size was able to accomplish what we got. It's a cost per person that was cut in half.
I'm not talking about SteelCo, I'm talking about companies in general. This is a unique thing. This is called management. Of course, I know that everybody's looking to the quarter results, and I'm looking too, and I don't like it. Costs are necessary, and prices, we fight with the weapons we have, and we accomplish the best we can get. Eventually, we're gonna have a quarter like Q3 that was not fantastic in terms of profitability.
If you take one step back and see what we have accomplished, not just having the contract done with the union, but using the fact that we have a re-ratification to accomplish a much bigger picture type of thing that will kind of change the landscape in terms of how healthcare is taking care at this point at Cliffs, maybe later and broader the steel industry, and maybe later, broader into the United States. I think that's how investors, real investors, should look into this thing.
That's very, very good to hear. Lourenço, switching topic, you touched on pricing. Three months ago, you were able to comment on the October contract resets with the auto customers. For January, do you have an indication at this point what direction pricing might take on the fixed portion? Thank you very much for your perspective.
Thanks, Lucas, for the question. As you know, October, the result of our October negotiation are not reflect into the numbers just yet because we are reporting Q3. Of course, we know that. What we are going to have going forward is a much better number coming from our October tranche that we negotiated, and the accomplishment is good. Of course, I'm not going to give any numbers, but we are in good shape. Remember, we're the only ones supplying exposed parts, for example. We know that, they know that. We compete very little with the ones that can produce the more plain vanilla type of grades.
We also keep reminding the car manufacturers that the car is a complicated puzzle and we are the only ones that have all the pieces of the puzzle, so that gives us leverage in the negotiation. We can't stress that enough. In the past, we had Bethlehem Steel, LTV Steel, AK Steel, Armco, Inland Steel Company, keep going. They are all Cleveland-Cliffs now. Car manufacturers know that. That's a very important part of our negotiation. I think I have it. I have given enough color to you to see the picture.
Lourenço, I appreciate the color very much. I'll turn it over for now, but continued best of luck. Thank you.
Thanks.
Our next question comes from Emily Chang with Goldman Sachs. Please proceed with your question.
Good morning, Lourenço and Celso. Thank you for taking my questions. My first one is just around.
Yeah, Emily.
Hi. My first question is just around costs. Understandably, you're looking at $80 a ton lower costs into the fourth quarter. Perhaps could you share maybe what you're seeing the moving pieces to be that would drive 2023 costs below that mark as well?
Yeah, I'll let Celso answer that, this one. Celso, please go ahead.
Yeah, sure. Hey, Emily. You know, as we stated on our prepared remarks, there was a lot of repair and maintenance that we had to do here in 2022.
As we look to next year, you know, a lot of those repairs and maintenance costs are gonna come down significantly. You can expect them to be down in the area of $400 million for next year. You know, we'll have a lot lower idle costs next year relative to this year. We don't have any major outages like we did this year. There's a lot of tailwinds that are gonna start dropping our costs here rapidly. You know, as we increase our volumes, you know, this year we've been kind of at that 3.6 million ton level every quarter, and we're really pushing to get up to 3.8-4 million tons again. That's gonna further dilute our fixed costs going forward as well.
You have other things like, you know, energy costs. Natural gas has come down a lot, you know, and things like that are also gonna be a tailwind next year.
Great. Thanks, Celso . Just a follow-up, can you remind us on your gas and coal costs? On the gas side, you're still hedging 50% of that and the remaining 50% is spot. With the coal piece of it, how should we think about the upcoming contract renegotiations there? Thank you.
Yeah. On natural gas, you're correct. We're hedged 50% through the end of next year at this point. If you look at the futures curve for gas, it's around $5 per MBTU, compared to, you know, almost $7 that we're realizing here this year. Those costs are coming down. Then on the met coal side, you can probably model coal cost to be up, call it 5%-7% next year. It's still not meaningful.
Great. Thank you.
Our next question is from Tristan Gresser with BNP Paribas. Please proceed with your question.
Yes. Hi. Thank you for taking my question. The first one is on the plate market. Can you discuss a bit the market dynamics there, the elevated premium compared to HRC, but also the sustainability of that. Moving forward with Nucor, a competitor ramping up capacity, how do you prepare for the arrival of increased competition in the market, and how strategic plate shipments are in Cleveland-Cliffs? Thank you.
Tristan, the sustainability in price of the plate market is just about fewer participants and all of them responsible. In the light flat rolled, we have at least one in the United States that's totally responsible and two in Canada, they're completely irresponsible. Irresponsible players destroy the market, and market destruction affects everybody. In situations like that, management matters. Don't believe that we are here in the receiving end of this bad behavior from competitors that we know well, and we are not going to do the same thing and retaliate and create issues for them. The plate markets don't have that because everybody's in the market to make money. Everybody's in the market to do the best for their companies and for their shareholders. That's why we have a much better market in plate than in light flat roll.
As far as new capacity, the new capacity that's coming is overdue. Plate has been a playground for imports for a long, long time, and I'm happy that Nucor put the capital to deploy capacity where capacity is needed and push imports out. That's a good mentality. One sector that will be good for us, Cleveland-Cliffs, as far as plate going forward, is military. It's not just U.S. military. Of course, U.S. military goes without fail. We are receiving orders from lots of countries that are friends of the United States. They're all stepping up their expenditures on plate-related business. We are the ones in the United States, out of Coatesville, mainly out of Coatesville, but also out of Burns Harbor, that can produce quality military-level plate.
That will be one of the superstars of 2023. I hope I gave you the picture you're asking for.
Yeah. That's very interesting. Thank you. My second question is a bit more on something you touched on in your remarks and about decarbonization in general. We're starting to see steelmakers in Europe getting large sums of money to decarbonize and build DRI capacity and electric arc furnace capacity as well. How do you view that in global perspective as those steelmakers can be competitors sometimes? Is that a signal for you to go to U.S. government and also do the same? Or do you believe that there may be room for more aggressive, maybe trade sanctions regarding Europe?
Yeah. Decarbonization in the United States is not, at least so far, has not been done through subsidies. It has been done through action, and a couple of responsible companies are doing very serious things. As you may know, we built an HBI plant, and we use our HBI in our blast furnaces. Because we use our HBI in our blast furnace, our coke rate is 50% of the coke rates in Europe. 50% coke rate, less coke usage means 50% less CO2 from coke. It 's 1-to-1 in the stoichiometric relation. We are really decarbonizing in the United States. In Europe, there's a lot of talk about decarbonization, but I think that the problem in Europe right now is currency, heating homes, find a way around the lack of gas from Russia.
I think Europe right now has a lot more important fish to fry. Decarbonization will be last for the one that can do it. That's the United States. We are doing, and we'll continue to do our own way.
All right. Thank you.
No question about pension or OPEB? Your financial institution out of Europe is the most concerned about pension or OPEB, and then you knock it off, and you don't even ask me a question.
Well, it's pretty clear, so we take note.
Okay. All right. Good.
Of course, thank you.
Okay. Good. All right.
Our next question is from Curt Woodworth with Credit Suisse. Please proceed with your question.
Thank you. Good morning. I just wanted to follow up with respect to the cost guidance for next year, you know, around the $400 million, because I think this year you outlined, you know, $200 million of reline costs, and I think there was other, you know, kind of inventory absorption issues and high cost inventory, in fact, in the P&L, I believe of another $100-$150. You know, is the apples to apples kind of comparison for next year, you know, would that be more like $100 million down? I just want to make sure I'm understanding kind of the cadence of cost relative to this year.
Yeah. Let me add some more color there, Curt. Thanks for the question. As we try to explain in the prepared remarks, you know, the costs that we're seeing here in Q3 were largely a function of elevated spend from Q2. I think everyone kind of understands that, right? You could see in our cash flow statement that inventory was a $250 million inflow, and it was a $250 million outflow last time. But almost everything that drove costs up this year is coming down. Like I said, you know, not only the kind of inflationary pressures that we're seeing on input costs, but also, you know, repairs and maintenance, as I stated, you know, are expected to be lower by $400 million next year.
Everything that has driven cost up this year is starting to materially come off a cliff. We're gonna see the benefit of that in the quarters to come. I don't know if I specifically answered your question, but happy to add more color if needed.
Okay. MRO apples to apples will be down $400. Should we assume because I don't think you have a major reline next year, that would give you another $200-$300, so kind of a total cost down potential of $700 for next year. Is that correct?
That's correct. Yep.
Okay. Just a follow-up on, you know, trade policy in the United States. There's still Russian pig iron coming into the country. Just kind of curious, just in general, what communications you've been having, you know, with maybe Department of Commerce and just kinda any updates on how you see trade policy in the U.S. Thank you.
Yeah. Look, Curt, Lourenço here. We communicate with them, but this pig iron that comes into the country directly or indirectly through rerouting and transshipment, it doesn't happen on a vacuum. It happened because the ones that import pig iron imported pig iron, and they know what they're doing. We are not cops. We can inform, and we inform, but that's pretty much it. If a company imports pig iron from Russia, don't play the "I'm a nice guy." You are supporting a dictator. You are supporting a butcher that fifty years from now will be put at the same level as Hitler. There are companies in Germany that still as of today pay the price for supporting the Nazi regime.
The ones that import pig iron are setting themselves up for future scrutiny. It might look good for the quarter. It might not look good in five to 10 or 20 years.
Understood. Thank you.
Our next question is from Alex Hacking with Citigroup. Please proceed with your question.
Yeah. Thanks. Good morning, Lourenço and Celso. On the automotive side, if I look at the U.S auto SAAR, it seems like it's been running maybe 20% below where it should, you know, 13 million versus 16-17. You know, is that how we should think about the impacts on your volume? Because if I sort of run it through your auto volumes, it would seem like you've been shipping 300-350,000 tons below what you would normally expect to. That would be the amount of volume that we could potentially see recover every quarter as the automotive market recovers. Is my math there kind of correct?
You are directionally correct. Yeah. We are still in the 13-14, less than 14. Within the 13s, in automotive. It was kind of expected by now that this level would be a lot closer to what was the normalized level between 14 and 19. Let's put it like that. We are still running behind. They are still running behind. This being said, it's encouraging to see a quarter that was concrete. We have a concrete number to show and say, "Look, we're 100,000 tons better." It's not anything to throw a party of, but it's encouraging. It's a step in the right direction. Car prices are increasing to the end user, so the car manufacturers are making money.
The biggest supplier of steel to the car manufacturers is making money as well on that sale, on those sales, and plans to continue to make money on those sales. We might have too many car manufacturers in the United States. That's another thing that we need to think about. We are taking that into consideration in our strategic analysis.
Okay. Thank you. Celso, I think you mentioned in your remarks that you would not be paying cash taxes for the rest of the year. Would you expect to pay full cash taxes in 2023? Thank you.
Yeah, I mean, that's right. You know, in Q4, cash taxes are gonna be minimal. Then, you know, for 2023, obviously it's gonna depend on profitability. You know, depending on how things play out, we could even have a big tax refund coming, so that could be a source of cash early in 2023 as well.
Thanks. What would be the driver of the tax refund? I apologize for asking another one.
Yeah. I mean, we've made some overpayments here this year, so some of that would be reversed back and we'd get some cash inflow from that.
Got it. Thank you very much.
Yep. No problem.
Our next question comes from Carlos De Alba with Morgan Stanley. Please proceed with your question.
Yeah. Thank you very much. Good morning. Regarding prices, you know, I know that you don't wanna give us a number, and it's understandable, but maybe just talking about the outlook for January reset of your contracts. If I'm not mistaken, that is a bigger chunk of renegotiation for you guys. How is that progressing given the trend that we have seen in the spot market down, but the recovery in auto sector volumes that should potentially offset that, maybe more than offsets that. Any color for the January reset of those contracts, that'll be great.
Yeah. Look, the trend will be the same. We are just starting actually, so there's not a lot of details available on the automotive contract renegotiation on the specifics like we have for October. You're right, Carlos, it's the vast majority. The trend has been put in place. Our conversations with the January crowd should be even more facilitated by, one, the fact that these clients that we deal with in January tend to be a little more reasonable. And second, because they are seeing what we are doing with others, because it's funny, all these prices are extremely confidential, but they know a lot more than we release because we respect our NDAs.
At this point, they know that we're not bluffing. They know that we're real. At the beginning, it was kind of, "Oh, who is this new Cleveland-Cliffs thing and, who is this Lourenço guy?" Now they know. It's, I believe it to be easier.
All right. In terms of volumes, just to clarify, so it's clear that production in the fourth quarter is going to improve. Shipments to the automotive, like, sales volumes to the automotive sector will also increase. Just to double-check, the overall volumes, shipment sales volumes in the fourth quarter, do you also expect them to move higher?
Yeah, we are. Look, we no longer have big repairs in place, so we are expecting to recover our backlog to our usual 4 million tons of shipments a quarter, 3.9-4 million tons a quarter. It all depends on how much slabs we are going to add to the mix. That's why I'm saying 3.9-4. But actually, more slabs, even though they help dilute the fixed cost, they are not exactly our best money maker, if you will, because it's lower value added than hot-dip galvanized for exposed part or ultra-low or anything like that. That's.
Right. Finally.
That's a play between the mix and the volume. The higher volume helps cost, but eventually the higher volume comes from products that have a lower margin impact.
Right. No, that's clear. Okay. If I may, just one final question. With the cost coming down, CapEx, you know, in the $700 million-$800 million range next year, even contemplating lower steel prices, it seems that your free cash flow generation is gonna be quite interesting, quite good. Any changes on the capital allocation front as you continue to prioritize debt reduction and maybe some share buybacks, not dividends, yet?
Look, the priority continues to be paying down debt. We continue to do that quarter after quarter after quarter after quarter. Even though the underlying EBITDA was lower, cash flow was not. Remember the priority. The priority is not to impress the street. The priority is not to add the number of subscribers like these unicorns. Our priority is to pay down debt. We've gotta generate cash. We did not renegotiate with our healthcare contracts because we'd like to be nice. It's because we'd like to reduce costs to generate cash to pay down debt. We are doing exactly what we told you guys that we'd be doing. The investors that understand that will stay with us. Actually, they'll take the opportunity of the shares on sale to buy more.
If we are going to be able to buy more, we have the authorization. What's my priority, Carlos? My priority is to pay down debt, not to pay a dividend. To pay down debt. When we get to a point to say, "Yeah, that's good. That's the level that I feel like is sustainable going forward. There is no inflation. The Fed is no longer crazy. They are not trying to destroy the economy. They are not trying to generate unemployment," because that's what they're doing, and we are in a much more stable world, we can do whatever we need to do to continue to grow towards the returning capital to the shareholders. Don't neglect the fact that we bought a lot of stock so far. We did, and that's returning money to the shareholders.
All right. Excellent. Thank you very much, Lourenço.
Thanks, Carlos.
Our next question is from Timna Tanners with Wolfe Research. Please proceed with your question.
Yeah. Hey, good morning. I really like Lourenço's point about all new mills add carbon emissions. That's fun. Wanted to just ask a follow-up on the volume side, if I could.
Sure.
Looking ahead, you know, we've seen a mix of philosophies out there. Some mills are adding capacity and running it, some are cutting capacity and shutting. Cliffs obviously benefits, as you point out, from running more volumes. You have Cleveland back running, you have automotive improving, but yet your steel production is still below year-ago levels. I'm just wondering how do we think into next year on, you know, the mix of your potential volume and how that can help continue to cut your average costs? Thanks.
Thanks for the question . Now, look, we will continue to maximize the utilization of the assets that we have. We are not going to take equipment down just to implement discipline in the market if others are completely undisciplined, if the others feel like their business model is predicated on destroying the marketplace just because they feel that they can put the scrap price wherever they want. They might be right, but we just don't agree with that type of approach. We run our assets to minimize our costs. As long as we can make money, we will run. I think that that's a good balance because we can generate cash that way.
Don't count on me to take my capacity out to make the life of others better. That happened in Q2 and a portion of Q3 because I had to make a big repair at Cleveland Works. When Cleveland Works was done, we came back. We also remember, Cleveland Works. I don't know if you know that, but it's the biggest producer of advanced high-strength steels for automotive, non-exposed uses. The one reason that we fixed that thing is because we have a lot of confidence that automotive will pick up, and the orders that come to Cleveland Works will start to fire up. Actually, we are seeing that as we speak. Others cannot do that. That's why our capacity can come back.
Can come back because it's serving markets that, I believe in 2023 might be the only ones that will be, exciting, automotive being the biggest one.
Got it. Is it reasonable to assume that continued progress in automotive recovery can result in Cliffs producing over 4 million tons again per quarter? Can that mix still be kind of swayed to automotive, or is it gonna be, you know, also seeping into some of those other businesses? Because I think we've seen a bit of mix deterioration into the fourth quarter. Just how do you see that going forward?
Yeah. I think I already explained this mixed deterioration, but automotive is the reason why we are back to $4 million a quarter. It will be that going forward. That's automotive. Automotive is supporting this growth.
It's also gonna.
Okay. I'll leave it there.
What I just said?
No, I was just correct, you said $4 million. It's 4 million tons.
Oh, oh. Tons. Sorry. Yeah. The old man is making.
Misheard. Thank you.
4 million tons.
Ladies and gentlemen, there are no further questions at this time. This concludes today's presentation. You may disconnect your lines at this time.