Christina L. Zamarro
Thank you, and good morning, everyone. Mark has shared important context for what impacted our second quarter relative to our expectations. Looking at the financials, about half of the miss in the quarter came in our Commercial business given materially weaker OEM replacement demand globally. The other half was driven by lower consumer OEM replacement volume. Second quarter sales were $4.5 billion, down 2% from last year, given lower volume and the sale of OTR, partly offset by increases in price/mix. Unit volume declined 5%, reflecting the impacts of global trade disruption on OE production, distributor and fleet buying patterns and consumer sell-out trends. Gross margin declined 360 basis points. SAG was lower by $39 million, consistent with results in Q1. Segment operating income for the quarter was $159 million. Goodyear net income increased to $254 million, driven by a gain on the sale of the Dunlop brand. Our results were impacted by other significant items, including rationalization charges of $59 million. After adjusting for these items, our loss per share was $0.17. Turning to the segment operating income walk on Slide 10. The sale of the Off-the-Road business reduced earnings by $23 million during the second quarter. After this change in scope, our SOI declined $152 million versus last year. Lower tire unit volume and factory utilization were a headwind of $51 million. Price/mix was a benefit of $91 million, driven by our recent pricing actions in the U.S. and Canada. Price/mix came in $44 million lower than we guided on our first quarter call, driven by headwinds in commercial truck of about $30 million and lower mix in the Americas as U.S. dealer and distributor demand was geared toward our lower price point products in advance of announced price increases. Raw material costs were a headwind of $174 million and Goodyear Forward contributed $195 million of benefit during the quarter. Inflation and other costs were a headwind of $127 million and other was a headwind of $18 million. The second quarter also included the nonrecurrence of 2024 net insurance recoveries of $63 million. Turning to the cash flow and balance sheet on Slide 11. Our second quarter use of free cash flow was stable versus last year despite increases in working capital. Our free cash flow includes benefits of $191 million in the quarter and $376 million year-to-date from proceeds from the sale of OTR and Dunlop. This amount includes $86 million of inventory held for sale that will transfer at the end of the year and $290 million for long-term supply and transition agreements that we are amortizing into SOI over roughly 5.5 years. Net debt declined over $600 million, which reflects the proceeds from asset sales this year, net of cash used for working capital and restructuring as part of Goodyear Forward over the last 12 months. We continue to expect to receive gross proceeds of $650 million from the sale of our Chemical business later this year. Moving to the SBU results on Slide 13. Americas unit volume decreased 2.6%, driven by headwinds in consumer OE and replacement. While the U.S. consumer replacement markets were up 5%, low-end imports continued to outperform and grew approximately 15% during the quarter, which was an all-time high following a record quarter in Q1. U.S. industry sell-out is about flat year-to-date. In addition to the churn we're seeing in the Consumer business, Americas commercial OE volume declined 22%, where speculation surrounding changes to the implementation of 2027 EPA mandates negatively impacted demand. At the same time, commercial nonmember imports grew 32% during the quarter. Americas SOI was $141 million or 5.3% of sales, a decrease of $100 million compared to last year, driven by higher costs net of Goodyear Forward benefits. On Slide 14, EMEA's second quarter unit volume decreased 2%, driven by declines in replacement volume, where we saw channel destocking in summer tires. This trend was driven by distributors prioritizing imports ahead of potential tariffs. In late May, the EU announced it had launched an investigation on Chinese passenger tire imports with potential for applicable rates to be between 41% and 104%. The investigation should be complete by the end of the first quarter next year, although the EU has begun to register the imports beginning in late July for potential retroactive tariffs. This change led our distribution channels in EMEA to prioritize deliveries of imports during the quarter, similar to the actions we saw in the U.S. On the other hand, EMEA's consumer OE volume grew 11% and registered share gains of about 2.5 points despite significant contraction in the industry. This growth helped to offset some of the weakness in the summer selling season. Like our experience in the Americas, we also saw significant weakness in Europe's Commercial business with truck registrations declining 15% across the EU. Fleet replacement demand was also extremely cautious given the impact of tariff uncertainty on the flow of cross-border logistics and steeper costs. Segment operating income in EMEA was a loss of $25 million, consistent with results in Q1. Turning to Asia Pacific on Slide 15. Second quarter unit volume decreased 16%, driven by replacement volume, reflecting our strategic decision to rationalize less profitable SKUs. Additionally, replacement trends were impacted by weak demand in China. OE volume was also lower despite overall industry growth given our customer mix. We expect that our China OE volume will improve over the course of the second half. Segment operating income was $43 million and 9.4% of sales. Excluding the sale of the OTR business, Asia Pacific's segment operating income was flat and SOI margin grew 150 basis points. Turning to the outlook and as we consider the industry environment more broadly, we expect the themes that we saw in the second quarter to remain with us through the near term. In commercial truck, we are seeing a recalibration to changes in global trade. And based on what we know today, we would not expect a recovery for the Truck business until 2026. Our current demand forecast would take our full year commercial earnings about $135 million lower than our prior forecast and to the lowest absolute level we have on record. This decline represents about 650,000 to 700,000 units less than our prior forecast, reductions in price/mix and higher inefficiencies in our factories given very low levels of utilization and the flattening variability of our cost curve. In addition to impacts and lower truck tire volume, we also expect higher tariffs related to U.S. supply coming from our truck tire joint venture in Vietnam and supply of U.S. retread products, which are sourced from our Brazil operations. The near-term outlook for the Consumer business has also weakened since our first quarter conference call. We now expect global OE volume reductions beyond what we had accounted for in our prior forecast. More significantly, we expect consumer replacement volume to be challenging, driven by disruption in the U.S. market. We also expect increased risk in EMEA with the announcement of the tariff investigation in the EU, creating risk as dealers and distributors may continue to allocate liquidity and shelf space for imports, which could soften our sell-in of winter tires. We expect to mitigate some of the higher costs we will incur as a result of lower production with proceeds from business interruption insurance related to the fire at our factory in Poland in late 2023. At the same time, we'll continue to execute on Goodyear Forward to best position our costs for when the environment stabilizes. As we look at industry factors influencing our outlook, we expect that it will take longer for us to achieve our 2025 year-end margin and leverage objectives. While we continue to expect to exceed the original goals of Goodyear Forward, both in terms of cost savings and in gross proceeds from asset sales, the recent disruption related to tariffs and impacts on the global supply chain have overshadowed our success. We remain confident in our ability to recover and return to growth in earnings once this turbulence subsides. Turning to the third quarter. We are expecting volume that is more reflective of our first half experience with global volume down about 5%. In addition, we expect higher unabsorbed fixed costs of $50 million, driven by lower production in the second quarter. As we reduce inventories in line with our sales, we expect our unabsorbed fixed cost to increase in the fourth quarter. Price/mix is expected to be a benefit of approximately $100 million, driven by the benefit of our recent pricing actions and raw material index contracts with our OE and fleet customers. Raw material costs will increase approximately $50 million. At current spot and currency rates, Q4 would be a benefit of approximately $15 million. Goodyear Forward will drive benefits of approximately $180 million. Inflation, tariff and other costs are expected to be a headwind of approximately $180 million, reflecting higher costs given U.S. tariff impacts and a global inflation rate of about 3%. This amount captures above-average increases in freight rates and transitory manufacturing costs associated with announced facility closures. We expect this amount to increase in the fourth quarter. Based on rates in effect today, our annualized tariff costs are about $350 million, up from our prior estimate with increases in applicable rates in Brazil and Vietnam, both impacting our Commercial Truck business. Foreign exchange will be a benefit of $5 million. And finally, the nonrecurrence of insurance proceeds received last year is $17 million and the sale of OTR is $10 million. With that, we'll open the line for your questions.