Good morning, ladies and gentlemen. Welcome to Sigma Lithium's 2026 1st quarter earnings conference call. We would like to inform you that this event is being recorded, and all participants will be in a listen-only mode during the company's presentation. There will be a replay for this call on the company's website. After the prepared remarks, there'll be a question-and-answer session for participants. At that time, further instructions will be provided. I would now like to turn the conference over to Ana Hartley, Vice President of Investor Relations. Please go ahead, Ana.
I'd like to welcome you to our 1st quarter 2026 earnings conference call. Joining me on the call today is Ana Cabral, Co-Chair and CEO of Sigma Lithium. Our earnings press release and presentation are available on our website. I'd like to remind you that some of the statements made during this call, including any production guidance, expected company performance, update on mining operations, the timing of our projects, and market conditions, may be considered forward-looking statements. Please note the cautionary language about forward-looking statements in our presentation and press release. I will now be turning the call to Ana Cabral.
Thank you, Ana. With that, I commence Sigma's first quarter 2026 earnings presentation. Please notice the forward-looking statements that we're going to make in this presentation. We're going to talk quite a lot about our predictions and expectations. With that, I would very much like to present the Sigma Lithium 2026 version. We are at our most efficient, most competitive. We became a financially resilient, low cost, and we're very well-prepared to deliver on our high growth this year. Well, first, we'll talk about our enhanced operational efficiency. We have upgraded our mining in record timetable. We prioritized our operations, and we brought in a larger fleet that has the capacity to match our Greentech 3.0 plant. At that plant, we have been achieving record recoveries in clean tech industrial processing. We have the most advanced DMS plant in the world.
Our lithium is 100% sustainable. We have reached the Quintuple Zero Lithium a few years ago. Zero tailing dams, zero hazardous chemicals, zero accidents for 1,010 days. We use 100% renewable electricity, and 100% of the water is reused and recycled. We do not use potable water. There's nothing like Sigma. We have reached our most profitable quarter since production started 3 years ago. On margins, we have reached the highest profitability in our history. We're very, very proud to present 61% gross margins, 39% EBITDA margins, unadjusted, as posted, published in our financial statements, and 26% profit margins. At the same time, our debt and cash positions has strengthened our balance sheet. We have significantly decreased total debt, 32% in 2 years, 21% in 1 year, total debt.
Our cash increased to $28 million as of May 15, 2026, today. That's financial resilience achieved throughout the down cycle. Production has resumed cadence of high sales of high-purity lithium oxide concentrate. We are on track to deliver 240,000 tons of lithium oxide within the next 12 months. That positions us to deliver on our growth. We are executing significant near-term growth. We're going to resume construction of Phase 2. That would allow us to double production during 2027. Meanwhile, our commercial team has outstandingly delivered to the company. In addition to opening up a whole new business selling high-purity lithium fines, we have achieved a record lithium price equivalent to $2,150 this quarter on the high-growth material sold. We're very proud to show that Sigma has one of the best safety records in the industry.
We reached 1,010 days with zero accidents, and we've never had a fatality in our 14-year history. That's a result of our rigorous safety protocols that begins with employee engagement in very strict processes, a direct connection to the factory floor, which actually is responsible to help us deliver these enhanced performance. Our TRIFR was zero, which is an incredible source of proud to all of our team. I'll start with the financial highlights of the quarter. First, I want to talk about the financial resilience and debt repayment we were able to achieve as a result of our robust margins. Profitability for the first quarter 2026 clearly demonstrated that numerically. We achieved 61% gross margins and 26% net profit margin.
On our EBITDA and operating margins, which are proxy to cash flow generation, we delivered 39% EBITDA margins in the quarter, unadjusted, as published, and 33% operating margin in the quarter. In the meanwhile, we've delivered a total debt repayment of 33% over two years. That's a significant deleverage. Over the last year, we've delivered a total debt repayment of 21%. Our revenues are also up 48% quarter-on-quarter. Here we compare with the third quarter of 2025, which is the most comparable quarter as we were ramping down our mining operations in order to execute the upgrade. If we compare with the previous quarter, our revenues are up 150%. Our cash is $28 million as of today, May 15th, which demonstrates that we're actually very profitable in delivering on these numbers. Cash is cash.
That positions us very well to execute the significant new growth opportunities that we have ahead of us. First, we're going to resume construction of Phase 2. That will enable it to double production capacity during 2027 and triple production capacity by the end of next year with Phase 3. Over the last two years, we have significantly increased our margins. They are the highest in our history. In the first quarter of 2026, this quarter, we have posted 61% gross margins. That compares to 23% in the first quarter of 2024. On EBITDA, our EBITDA margins was 39% this quarter. That compares to 9% in the first quarter of 2024. Our operating margin had the same behavior, 33% in our first quarter compared to -1% in the first quarter of 2024.
Net profit, we had a 26% net profit margin compared to minus 19% in the 1st quarter 2024 when we were just starting our operations. This demonstrates how Sigma has been thriving through the down cycle, and we are extremely well-positioned to now enjoy our first bull market since we began our operations. Everything from here will be excess returns. This slide demonstrates our disciplined financial execution. We have repaid 75% of our short-term bank trade debt in the last year. Those were the trade finance lines that we used to finance our operations throughout the last two years. They've gone from $90 million down to $13 million only. That is a staggering 75% reduction. Not just that, in the last quarter alone, we managed to decrease these lines in 46%. That's a quantification of our ability to generate cash.
As we generated cash, we paid down short-term expensive debt. This slide is another demonstration of our disciplined financial execution. Over the last 2 years, we repaid 33% of our total debt and 21% of our total debt was repaid over the last year. Our debt went from $201 million in the first quarter of 2024 to $134 in the first quarter of 2026. This is significant deleveraging. The total debt is essentially the short-term bank trade finance debt that we discussed in the previous slide, plus the shareholder and development bank debt that sits in our balance sheet now as short-term debt because it's due in December of this year.
$134 million is an amount that's easily obtained by Sigma through cash flow generation and through the monetization of its future production through prepayment of offtakes. The point I made in the previous slide is demonstrated on this page. Our offtake agreements enable our debt repayment and help us fund growth CapEx. Last year, we signed and closed a $96 million prepayment on a 70,500 ton offtake agreement for one year. That repayment has been paid to us in installments, and the purpose of it is to fund working capital. In fact, that offtake helped us deliver the upgrade of our mining operations. Last quarter, we also announced and signed a $50 million conventional offtake with prepayment. The purpose of that offtake is to help us repay the total debt that was shown in the previous page.
Half of our total debt, approximately, that sits in the short term and is due in December, will be repaid with the proceeds of this offtake with prepayment. We're also working in a few contract negotiations for a similar transaction for another $50 million that will basically tie up 50,000 tons for 2026 and 70,000 tons for 2027 in offtakes. Those are going to be conventional offtakes with prepayments that will have proceeds directed to complete the repayment of the total debt we've shown in the previous page. We're also in contract negotiations for $100 million of prepayments for our production starting into 2027, and that will be delivered throughout the 5 years or the 7 years onwards from 2027.
The use of proceeds of that contract will be for growth CapEx, meaning building our next plants, Plant One and perhaps Phase 3, as we could double down on this prepayment for $100 million given the scale of our current production with just one plant. Meaning, with the current production forecasts for the next 12 months, we could actually honor all of these offtakes from 2026, 2027, 2028 and beyond, and with those proceeds, fund the debt repayment and also our growth CapEx. This slide illustrates our cash position for the first quarter of 2026 and a bit beyond. Here, I illustrate how we have actually built up our current cash position of $28 million as of today, May 15th, 2026.
We started with $6 million at the end of the first quarter, and then we've had net inflows of $34 million, receivables from materials sold and delivered, and prepayment installments from that $96 million offtake, and additionally, prepayment installments from low-grade sales, meaning the sales of our tailing fines. We've had $19 million of operating costs, so that all in, that represents net inflows of $34 million. We've had $3 million of CapEx, and then we had $11 million of interest and debt repayment, as we've discussed in previous slides. That led us to a cash at the end of first quarter of $4 million plus $22 million of receivables for materials delivered to the clients. Due to cut off, those receivables came to our balance sheet in the days following the 30th of March.
Today, we've had $28 million in cash in our bank as of May 15th. In this quarter, we are also expecting inflows already signed of approximately $40 million, again, related to the $96 million prepayment for 70,000 tons we discussed earlier. In addition, we expect the signed prepayment for the offtake for 40,000 tons to close, and that will bring inflows of an additional $50 million. This page summarizes our published 1st quarter financial statements, but more importantly, it demonstrates how our low-cost position underpins Sigma Lithium's financial resilience. We sit at the very low end of the cost curve for hard rock lithium material industrial manufacturers. As a result, we have been very well-positioned to enjoy excess returns entering into the secular cycle for lithium.
More importantly, as we went through the last 2 years of down cycle, we have increased our efficiency and increased our discipline. We have maintained that discipline entering into this bull cycle. That is why we have this entrenched competitive advantage. We have always been to the left of some of the African country producers, which just demonstrates how well-positioned we are as far as the global lithium industry. This next section talks about the operating highlights for the first quarter of 2026 and our outlook. This slide outlines the production volumes delivered by Sigma Lithium every quarter. It demonstrates how we resumed sales cadence of our primary product, the high-grade lithium concentrate. We go through all the stages of our outlook. In other words, how we have upgraded our industrial plant from first quarter 2024 all the way through the fourth quarter 2024.
We have reached and maintained industrial cadence throughout 2025. It shows how in the third quarter 25 we had demobilized the mining contractor. It also shows how in the first quarter 26 we have managed to primarize and upgrade our mining operations in record time. We have mobilized our fleet on schedule, combining sales of low-grade and high-grade product, basically the low-grade funding the upgrade of the mine. We have ramped up our mine tracking to 33,000 ton plan on schedule. This quarter, we have already achieved 20,000 tons as of now, May 2026. The outlook of 33,000 tons for the second quarter is perfectly reachable and perfectly achievable. Entering into the next quarter, we have larger fleet fully mobilizing.
In fact, the 60 ton trucks are fully mobilized, and then we have the 75 ton excavators fully mobilized. That increased our haulage capacity significantly. We came from 40 ton trucks into 60 ton trucks. That's a 50% overall increase in haulage capacity. Going into the next quarter, we're gonna have an additional fleet continuing to mobilize, additional large fleet continuing to mobilize trucks and compatible excavators. All in all, the geometry optimization and the stripping have gone as planned. Our ongoing mine develop has unlocked very large mine blocks, which then have been transformed into lithium oxide into our upgraded 3.0 Greentech Plant. The next step up in the third quarter will be to maintain that pace and maintain that cadence.
We are guiding to 240,000 tons for the next 12 months, we're maintaining our guidance of 200,000 tons for the year 2026. This slide makes it quite simple for our shareholders. We're forecasting the cash flows, and we here demonstrate our robust cash flow generation forecasted for 2026 and beyond. We have actually created a forecast for 3 different price scenarios: $1,500 per ton, $2,000 per ton, and $2,500 per ton. It's important to remind that the current prices sit around $2,900-$3,000 per ton. As far as production guidance in volumes, we simply condensed the quarterly forecast and the quarterly historical production demonstrated in the previous slide.
Again, what we are guiding is not different than what we have achieved over 3 years sequentially, cadently, because we are an established producer. The historical production for 2024 was 240,000 tons. In 2025, we delivered 180,000 tons as a result of the upgrade on the mine that we decided to promote precisely for this moment. In the next 12 months, we're very well positioned to deliver approximately the same 240,000 tons or 270,000 tons that we have been historically delivering over the last 3 years. For this year, we will be delivering 200,000 tons. That translates into the numbers for cash flow we are forecasting here.
Again, at $1,500 per ton with just 1 plant, we are planning to produce $130 million of cash flow. That's just 1 plant at 240,000 tons estimated to be achieved in the next 12 months. That is a quite conservative cash flow forecast. Again, at the top end of our forecast, we are still 20% below the current prices, and with just 1 plant, we are forecasting to achieve $330 million for the next 12 months and again, using just 240,000 tons of production forecasts, which, as you can see, is very much in line with the levels of production forecasts we've been achieving over the last 3 years of operation.
Now, near-term growth. Once we complete the second plant at 520,000 tons of production, we are estimating forecasts at least these 3 different price scenarios that range from $320 million to $760 million approximately, which are very robust numbers. This slide, in summary, demonstrate that Sigma, because of our cost discipline, because of our operational efficiency, is a cash flow machine. That is essentially what we are. We are wired and structured as a company to deliver cash flow to our shareholders, organic cash flow in any market scenario, beginning with $1,500 per ton. This slide basically recaps how we are going to execute the near-term growth. It is a recap slide, it ties well with the previous slide.
Is just to remind everyone that we have actually initiated the construction of Plant Two. We advanced quite a lot on it. More importantly, we have been benefiting in that construction process from a streamlined timetable because the infrastructure has been already built way back in order to support Plant One. As you can see in the schedule, we are at civil foundations over halfway through that because, again, most of the long-term duration items in a construction schedule have already been built or have already been executed, such as earthworks and foundations, water drainage, and the recycling recirculation systems. We're mostly with the construction in place. Where are we in construction? We needed to order and assemble machinery, which is the expensive part of construction, which we do plan to resume in the second half of the year.
As a continuing, again, what is our production profile going to look like? For 2026, 200,000 tons. For the next 12 months, 240,000 tons. Once we complete Plant Two, 520,000 tons. That's fully funded. Once we complete Plant Three, 770,000 tons of lithium oxide. Reminding everyone that Plant Three is not yet funded. However, each 1 of these new plants cost just $100 million. If you compare that with the cash flows we've shown that we expect to generate, 1 can see that these numbers are actually quite low in the big picture for Sigma today, given our robust margins and our ability to generate cash flow and to access cash flow with our clients through prepayments of our future production and of our current production.
We're very proud of these pictures, and we have a video that we posted on our website that we encourage everyone to see. These pictures were taken last week, and they demonstrate the upgrade, the modernization, and the significant capacity increase of our mining fleet. What you see here are trucks which have a 50% higher haulage capacity than the previous fleet we have. 50%. Here is our mine. This slide is a picture that I particularly like very much because it merges two concepts that are very dear to us, operational efficiency with these very large haulage trucks, but more importantly, they are pausing there on a brief Sunday shift change against the backdrop of our rock piles.
These rock piles are just material taken from the pit, and we actually actively regenerate them by planting them with grass, so the rock piles become incorporated to the landscape. All these conversations about our piles are just much ado about nothing because there are two kinds of piles. Rock piles are gonna look like this, hills incorporated to the landscape. Our tailings are actually being sold, so very soon this year, we're gonna be zero tailings. Why? Because we dry stack them, reprocess them, so we are actually able to sell them as high-purity, low-grade lithium oxide. We're very, very proud of continuing on this trajectory of becoming or being one of the most sustainable lithium operations in the world. This is another picture of our upgraded, modernized, and increased capacity.
We have all these trucks lined up so that we demonstrate our haulage is actually much higher, much more efficient, and much more modern than what we had before. Our mine now honors our state-of-the-art 3.0 Greentech lithium oxide plant. Wrapping up our quarterly presentation, we're gonna talk about what we expect regarding shareholder returns for the rest of the year. This slide just quantifies why we believe Sigma is very well positioned for a re-rate for our shareholders. On the page, we show that our production cadence for high growth being reached now, in addition to our growth plans in execution for the second plant, basically demonstrate that Sigma is not rated to its cash flow generation capabilities in current delivery.
At 40,000 tons of lithium carbonate equivalent, we are valued at $2.3 billion, which is a significant discount to some of our peers in other parts of the world. More importantly, even to some of our peers that do not even produce, they have a similar valuation to the company. It's basically the rerate quantified and demonstrated in numbers. Now I open for Q&A from the current shareholders and the current audience to this quarterly presentation. Thank you very much for listening to us.
Thank you very much for the presentation. We will now begin the Q&A section. To ask questions, just queue the question in the Q&A button. Please be aware that your company's name should be visible for your question to be taken. Please hold while we poll for questions. Our first question comes from Joel Jackson with BMO. It seems you expect production to be 13 KT in June, then 24 KT in July. How do you get such a large jump in production month-over-month?
Thank you for the question. Hi, Joel. Well, essentially, we haven't given monthly guidance, but as you can see in 1 of the slides, we've significantly increased the haulage capacity of the fleet, and we have even larger fleet being fully mobilized. In other words, as we commence mobilization in February and we continue on with mobilization, we increase the number of shifts continuously with the mobilization. In other words, it wasn't just about getting the equipment to site, it was about getting the equipment to basically be available to us for 4 shifts. We've gone from getting the equipment available, large scale equipment, to commencing it with 1 shift, then moving from 1 shift to 2 shifts, and then as personnel went through basic security training, we've gone from 2 shifts to 4 shifts. Why so? That's the night shift.
We commenced personnel on the day shift, and that split into 2 shifts, and then we just moved into the night shift at once they received very detailed protocols for night operations. Again, without giving guidance per month, this is sort of how we have actually a very beautiful mobilization curve throughout this quarter as we try to give as much detail as possible to everyone in a very specific slide, where we end up with 33,000 tons of material on the quarter.
Our next question comes from Sibo Feng with CICC. Regarding Phase 2 and 3 expansion, may we have more color on a detailed timeline for Phase 2 and Phase 3 construction commissioning ramp-up period?
Thank you. Thank you very much for the question. We've given quite a lot of detail on Phase 2. In other words, we are planning to resume. There's a timetable what we've done so far on Phase 2. We basically paused in civil works, just sort of the last layer of civil works. We are planning to resume that in the second half of the year. As we have discussed, financing is quite available given where the industry is, given obviously the fact we're being fully funded by the Development Bank, given the progress we've delivered so far on resuming our operations in full, at full capacity. If once we resume construction at that stage, what needs to happen? We need to order equipment and receive equipment. We're giving ourselves a quite conservative timetable for that to take place.
Even if we put in a 12-month, basically equipment assembly, commissioning, arc, that would basically get Phase 2 fully running within just sort of mid-year next year. Phase 3 could happen in parallel or could happen sequentially. As we made it clear in the slide, Phase 3 isn't funded, but again, for the same reasons, we don't see funding Phase 3, again, just another $100 million as an issue. We're quite confident that we will be able to either sequentially continue on Phase 3, or funding available, we could actually engage in 2 constructions at once. One key point about both phases is they're both supported by existing infrastructure in place. In 2022, as we built our Plant One, we built infrastructure to support 3 lines, 3 industrial plants.
As we pause short of 2 lines, in other words, as we just built 1 plant, the infrastructure is there. What we call Phase 2 and 3 is simply industrial lines, and that's it. These actually have quite a reduced timetable, and we can build them quite expeditiously.
Our next question comes from Joel Jackson with BMO. Back on slide 16 and providing 200 KT production guidance for the year, are we wrong in assuming you expect Q3 at 72 KT?
You're not wrong. We're just trying to be conservative, but that could happen. I mean, again, why? Because we've done it before. What we try to do is to anchor our forecast into very achievable numbers, and that's why we've kind of given investors as much as we could as far as building blocks for forecasted production. Thank you for the question, Joel Jackson.
Next question from Ailing Chen with Hot Win. Many Australian lithium producers have recently signed offtake agreements that include floor price mechanism to provide downside protection during periods of lithium price weakness. As Sigma Lithium continues negotiation with existing and potential offtake partners, could management comment on whether future contracts may also include floor price provisions? In addition, could you provide an update on the current status of Sigma's ongoing offtake negotiations, including how much future production is currently under discussion, the level of interest from customers, and whether the company expects to finalize any new agreements in the near term?
It's a great question. Thank you for the question. Let me unpack your question. The first thing, it's commendable what the Australian producers have done in getting floor prices. Could we get them? Absolutely. Do we need them? No, we don't. Given that our production costs are so low, as we've shown in one of the slides, we don't really focus on floor prices. What we focused on was to commit as little production as possible so that we can maximize the amount of prepayments obtained from our customers.
As we thought through our offtake strategy, given that we do not need floor prices, and it does carry a price in terms of amount of product being made available to the customer to actually bring a floor price mechanism into the contract, we've just forsaken them because we're solving for another objective, which is to commit as little product as possible. We've shown that in the two offtakes already signed and that have already been ongoing here at Sigma. For example, the first offtake for $96 million basically ties up only 70,500 tons of product for just one year. If one divides one amount per another, you get to an implied what we call premium price or offtake rights price of about $1,300, that's a very good monetization of future production.
The second, we've initiated discussions about it last year when the lithium price curves were slightly different. Again, it carries an implied monetization price of $416, which, it's actually higher than some of these announcements with floor prices we've seen. It's essentially a commercial discussion. It's not a one-size-fits-all, but I really wanna highlight the fact that given that there are agreements being signed with floor prices, we've seen, we've got a demonstration right there of how robust is the interest from clients to secure the right to purchase production. Again, I must highlight that we're not locking future prices. These aren't derivative agreements. These aren't for sales.
These are just clients paying producers in advance for the security of having the product made available to them as they deliver on their own growth. Why is that? Because we are in a very robust environment for demand growth. We are delivering manufacturing, advanced manufactured products into advanced manufacturing industries, and they now run the gamut from EVs to data center battery storage materials, to defense to, you know, a whole array of advanced manufacturing industries to transportation, electrification of what we call larger and larger haulage transport vehicles, beginning with large scale trucks now going into what we call barges. It is actually fascinating what is happening with the diversification of the demand for our products and how rapidly the demand grows in the current scenario for energy security and energy transition worldwide.
Next question from Ailing Chen with Hot Win. Sigma currently has approximately 300,000 tons lithium oxide intermediate products inventory. Could management provide an update on the current commercialization and sales progress of this material? Specifically, how much of the existing inventory has already been sold or committed? What is the current market pricing for Sigma's lithium oxide intermediate products? Is pricing linked to lithium concentrate benchmarks, fixed price agreements, or negotiated on a spot basis? How should investors think about the potential cash flow contribution from this inventory?
That's a great question. Yes, we do have 300,000 tons of lithium oxide, low-grade products available. They are currently commanding a price of about $77-$80 ex works at plant in the market. We price these products off DSO as per Shanghai Metals Market. If one looks at these benchmarks, they are updated daily, sometimes weekly, but no more often than daily. It's quite straightforward to calculate how valuable these products are for our clients because these are not DSO. These are processed low-grade high purity materials at about 1% and 1.1% of lithium oxide content, which are pre-crushed in a way and pre-separated. They're bringing a 30% savings for our customers, hence the heightened demand.
Again, unpacking your question, we are in a wait-and-see strategy to decide what to do with these products, given that the prices are now settling around these levels of $80 per ton ex works. However, as we are still finalizing deliveries on the previous sale of 400,000 tons announced last quarter, we would just commence deliveries of these products somewhere in beginning of third quarter. Most likely we will wait until then to decide what to do with those materials as prices continue to be quite robust and demand is very much there. One point I want to highlight about your question is, on an ongoing basis, we will continue to generate that kind of inventory, given that we're back at full processing lithium oxide from fresh rock.
On a 12-month basis, we generate about 250,000-300,000 tons of what we call the lithium fines, the lithium low-grade materials. Therefore, this could become an ongoing business if prices remain at the current levels. One could forecast the extra cash flow coming from these businesses on whichever basis one uses for lithium oxide pricing. It's roughly a tenth of the pricing. These markets are becoming more and more mainstream. I highlight the sale that one of our peers in Australia has done to one of our European trading companies recently at about $290 per ton CIF. Transportation costs vary, but I just gave you my cost ex works, which is cost at plant. Assuming lithium prices remain robust as they are, these markets for low-grade materials do continue.
The contribution to cash flow is essentially the 250,000-300,000 tons of material times I mean, currently, that would be $80 per ton. On an ongoing basis, it would vary based on the lithium oxide price forecasts for each one particular analyst.
We are showing no further questions. I am returning to our CEO, Ana Cabral-Gardner, for her final remarks.
I wanna thank all of you for your participation on this call. I wanna thank our incredible team for having gone through last year and coming out stronger, fitter, more resilient, and ready for our first bull market. As you may recall, Sigma initiated production in the middle of 2023. We barely caught a bull market. The best is yet to come, given that whatever comes our way now as far as prices is excess returns, given our very low extremely low-cost position, always to the left of most African, all African producing nations. We're very excited and very enthusiastic about the near-term future, the short-term future, the midterm, and the long term, because we were built to withstand any moment or any point of the lithium cycle.
we conclude the 1st quarter of 2026 conference call of Sigma Lithium.