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DATE
Thursday, May 7, 2026 at 5 p.m. ET
CALL PARTICIPANTS
- President & Chief Executive Officer — Jesse Gary
- Senior Vice President & Chief Financial Officer — Peter Trpkovski
TAKEAWAYS
- Net Sales -- $649 million, increasing by $15 million sequentially, primarily due to higher LME prices and regional premiums despite lower shipments.
- Net Income -- $338 million, translating to $3.23 per share, with adjusted net income of $171 million or $1.63 per share after excluding exceptional items.
- Adjusted EBITDA -- $231 million, up $60 million sequentially, attributed to improved LME and premium pricing, lower operating expenses, and favorable sales mix, partly offset by higher energy and raw material costs.
- Q1 Shipments -- 123,000 tons, reflecting a decrease from the prior quarter due to the full-quarter outage at Grundartangi Line 2.
- Cash Balance -- $332 million at quarter-end, supported by proceeds from the Hawesville sale and offset by CapEx and insurance receivable lags.
- Net Debt -- $220 million, now below the company’s stated target of less than $300 million.
- Q1 CapEx -- $76 million, of which $71 million was related to Mt. Holly expansion, Grundartangi Line 2 restart, and Jamalco’s new power unit.
- Q2 Adjusted EBITDA Guidance -- $315 million to $335 million, with expected realized LME of $3,175 per ton, Midwest premium at $2,450 per ton, and European premium at $485 per ton.
- Operational Expansion -- Mt. Holly expansion is on schedule, targeting full ramp by end of June and increasing U.S. production by nearly 10% and plant capacity to approximately 230,000 metric tons.
- Grundartangi Restart -- Potline 2 successfully restarted; full restoration targeted by end of July, operating at reduced amperage pending transformer installation in Q4.
- 45X Tax Credits -- $198 million in receivables as of March 31; expected 2025 payment of approximately $94 million to be received in the next few months.
- Hawesville Sale -- $200 million in proceeds received before fees, contributing directly to liquidity and debt paydown.
- Insurance Recoveries -- $83 million received to date, with timing-related cash flow lag; an additional $46 million advance arrived in early April (not included in Q1 numbers).
- Q2 Operating Expense Increase -- Anticipated rise of $15 million to $20 million versus Q1, partly due to higher production at Mt. Holly and Grundartangi and additional seasonal employment.
- Q2 Volume & Sales Mix -- Projected to improve by $15 million to $20 million as incremental Mt. Holly tons ramp.
- Global Market Deficit -- Management estimates a 2026 global aluminum deficit of 1.4 million tons, intensified by 2.5 million tons of Gulf region production curtailments arising from Strait of Hormuz closure and Middle East conflicts.
- Oklahoma Smelter Progress -- The project with Emirates Global Aluminum is advancing engineering, power, and financing, aiming for final investment decision and groundbreaking by year-end; designed for 750,000-ton/year capacity using EGA’s EX technology.
- Capital Allocation Framework -- After reaching liquidity and net debt targets, excess cash in Q1 and Q2 has been allocated to Mt. Holly and Grundartangi projects, with further capital returns under future consideration as expansion spending subsides.
- Hedge Effects -- Heavy fuel oil hedge book has partially offset Jamalco’s exposure to rising fuel prices due to Middle East-induced cost pressure.
- DOE Grant -- Clarity confirmed that the $500 million U.S. Department of Energy grant is available for the Oklahoma smelter project, to reduce total project capital requirements upon final investment decision.
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RISKS
- Peter Trpkovski highlighted, “energy and raw materials were a headwind this quarter,” referencing higher winter power prices at Sebree and input cost pressure for heavy fuel oil, caustic, coke, and pitch across operations.
- Keenly noted supply chain strain: Jesse Gary explained, “The importance of ensuring secure U.S. supply chain has never been so evident as today following disruptions in production in the Middle East,” with 2.5 million tons of disrupted Gulf supply directly impacting global deficit calculations.
- Jamalco faces headwinds from “lower quality bauxite than expected” and remains in the process of adjusting mining plans to address associated alumina input cost risk.
- Insurance reimbursement lags: Business interruption recoveries in Iceland are trailing submitted claims by one to two quarters, tightening short-term cash flow.
SUMMARY
Century Aluminum Company (CENX 1.96%) delivered significant sequential gains in both net sales and adjusted EBITDA, driven mainly by pricing improvements and regional premium strength. Major capital projects at Mt. Holly and Grundartangi advanced on schedule, enabling management to forecast robust Q2 adjusted EBITDA and improved operating leverage as volumes ramp. Expanded U.S. and European production positions the company to capitalize on the acute global aluminum supply deficit exacerbated by geopolitical disruptions. Progress on the Oklahoma smelter, confirmed DOE grant eligibility, and maintained capital discipline support a constructive near-term financial outlook.
- The company expects to complete both the Mt. Holly expansion and full Grundartangi restart by the end of July, with full production benefit realized from Q3 onward.
- Cash generation is projected to further strengthen as delayed insurance recoveries and 45X tax credit payments materialize in upcoming quarters.
- Management indicated capital returns to shareholders will be evaluated as major project spend subsides and cash flow visibility improves post-Q2.
- Jesse Gary estimated that spot market values could support as much as $400 million in quarterly adjusted EBITDA, “plus some additional uplift from the Mt. Holly restart expansion project,” once full production is reached and current market pricing fully flows through results.
INDUSTRY GLOSSARY
- Section 232: U.S. trade provision enabling tariffs or quotas on aluminum imports for national security reasons.
- 45X Tax Credits: U.S. federal credits under Section 45X incentivizing domestic production of certain minerals, including aluminum, to support clean energy supply chains.
- LME: London Metal Exchange, the global benchmark for pricing industrial metals such as aluminum.
- EX Smelting Technology: Emirates Global Aluminum’s proprietary process for more efficient primary aluminum smelting, to be implemented in Century’s Oklahoma project.
Full Conference Call Transcript
Jesse Gary: Thanks, Chad, and thanks to everyone for joining. I'll start today with a discussion of the dynamic global aluminum market and the opportunities that we see for Century going forward to provide secure supply chains into the U.S. and European markets. I'll then review our first quarter operational performance, including the excellent progress we made on our Mt. Holly expansion project and the restart of Potline 2 at Grundartangi. Pete will then walk you through our Q1 results and Q2 outlook before I conclude the call with the latest on our new Oklahoma smelter project with EGA.
Just before we get started, I'd like to thank the Century team across our sites for a strong quarter of safety performance, especially while executing major capital projects at each of Grundartangi, Jamalco and Mt. Holly. You should each be proud, at Century, ensuring that each of our employees returns home safely at the end of their shift is our first priority. Turning to the market on Page 5. It is certainly obvious to all of those on the call that we find ourselves today in one of the most dynamic markets for aluminum in recent memory.
Strong global aluminum demand driven by macro trends in lightweighting and electrification have persisted into 2026 and accelerated into other sectors as demand for power and data infrastructure build-out, commercial aviation and defense and rearmament manufacturing has increased. In the U.S. specifically, we are already beginning to see increased value-added product demand following President Trump's April 2 executive order that closed valuation loopholes that importers have been using to cheat the Section 232 system, especially in downstream extruded products. We are grateful to President Trump for taking this additional action to ensure that the entire U.S. aluminum supply chain is able to grow and expand to meet our domestic national security needs with American metal.
As the largest U.S. producer, Century will continue to do its part to invest in expanding and building the U.S. aluminum base, starting with our Mt. Holly expansion and continuing with our Oklahoma smelter project. Back to each of those in a bit. Turning to the supply side. The importance of ensuring secure U.S. supply chain has never been so evident as today following disruptions in production in the Middle East. We estimate that approximately 2.5 million tons of production in the Gulf countries has been disrupted by either production curtailments due to raw material shortages arising from the closure of the Strait of Hormuz or direct Iranian drone and missile attacks.
We stand by our industry colleagues who have been so unfairly affected by such attacks. Note that, while the large majority of Middle Eastern metal goes to the European and Asian markets, Century has been supporting our existing U.S. customers that have been impacted by the Middle East disruption through the placement of our expansion tons from Mt. Holly to repair these strained supply lines and ensure our U.S. customers have access to the metal that they need. The timing of our Mt. Holly restart could not be better in this regard, providing additional American metal units to the domestic market.
As you can see on Slide 6, the Middle Eastern disruption has expanded our expected 2026 global deficit to 1.4 million tons. Over the course of 2026, this supply deficit should lead to further destocking from global inventories, creating a healthy go-forward environment for Century in both the U.S. and Europe. Turning to Page 4 on operations. Our smelters had an excellent first quarter with strong operating performance across Grundartangi, Mt. Holly and Sebree. We are now moving into a very busy second quarter for the operations team. The strong operating performance and stability throughout our smelters enabled the timely startup of our expansion project in Mt. Holly and the restart of Potline 2 in Grundartangi last month.
Both projects are off to an excellent start. At Mt. Holly, the team started the first pots 3 weeks ago, and the start-up is progressing on schedule to bring the full expansion project online by the end of June. As a reminder, this project will increase Mt. Holly's total production to approximately 230,000 metric tons and add over 125 full-time U.S. manufacturing jobs at the plant, increasing total U.S. primary aluminum production by nearly 10%. As we have discussed in the past, the project should increase Mt. Holly's profitability significantly and fully repay its capital cost by the end of 2026.
Please keep in mind that due to the incremental nature of the restart process, we will not see the full impact of our expanded Mt. Holly production run rate until Q3. We've included the incremental tons that will be produced in Q2 in our Q2 outlook that Pete will cover with you in a bit. At Grundartangi, we restarted the first pots on Line 2 on April 23, just 1 week after commencement of new pots at Mt. Holly. The restart has gone well, and we remain on schedule to restore all pots on Line 2 by the end of July.
As we discussed last quarter, following the return of all cost to service, the plant will return to nearly full production, but will run on a slightly reduced amperage until our new replacement transformers have arrived and are installed in the fourth quarter. Our anticipated production for both projects is included in our Q2 outlook and our full year volume guidance shown on Page 16. Pete will give you some additional detail on spending on both projects as well as associated insurance recovery for Grundartani in a minute.
At Jamalco, the refinery continued its recovery from Hurricane Melissa and associated power instability in Q1 and progressed with the commissioning of its new steam generation turbine, which we expect to be completed later this quarter. The global alumina market has been impacted by the conflict in the Middle East, where smelter closures have temporarily decreased global demand for alumina and weighed on global alumina prices. At the same time, the closure of the Strait of Hormuz has impacted caustic soda and heavy fuel oil prices, although, our HFO hedge book has offset some of this impact.
The plant has been experiencing some lower quality bauxite than expected from certain of its mining areas and is in the process of adjusting its mining plan accordingly. Finally, Sebree had another excellent quarter of performance in Q1, overcoming higher energy prices arising from Winter Storm Fern to deliver another strong set of results. Sebree is off to another great start in Q2. I'd like to extend a special thank you to the entire Century operations and technical teams for their tremendous performance over the last 6 months to enable these 2 major projects at Mt. Holly and Grundartangi to proceed successfully at the same time.
Their skill and hard work has delivered these projects on or ahead of schedule, bringing significant production back into a market facing significant disruption from elsewhere in the world. This is not easy, and our team has knocked it out of the park. Pete will now take you through our first quarter financial performance and Q2 outlook.
Peter Trpkovski: Thank you, Jesse. I'll begin with a review of our Q1 financials and then cover the restart of operations in Mt. Holly and Grundartangi, along with an update on business interruption insurance in Iceland. I'll conclude with our Q2 outlook. Turning to Slide 8. Q1 shipments totaled approximately 123,000 tons, down sequentially due to Line 2 in Iceland being offline for the full quarter following its idling in late October 2025. Net sales reached $649 million, an increase of $15 million, primarily driven by higher LME prices and regional premiums despite lower shipment volumes. Net income was $338 million or $3.23 per share, while adjusted net income, excluding exceptional items, was $171 million or $1.63 per share.
Exceptional items included the unrealized derivative losses, restart expenses at Mt. Holly, a gain on the Hawesville transaction and business interruption in Iceland. Adjusted EBITDA was $231 million for the quarter, driven by higher LME and regional premiums, improved operating expenses and favorable sales mix. These gains were partially offset by higher energy prices and raw material costs. Our cash balance stood at $332 million, including the cash proceeds from the Hawesville sale. We continue to prioritize debt reduction. And to this end, $8 million of industrial revenue bonds were paid down using the Hawesville proceeds. As a result, net debt declined to $220 million, below our target of less than $300 million.
This positions us well as we move into a period of strong organic growth and capital-intensive spending to add production volume at Mt. Holly and Grundartangi. Turning to Page 9. Adjusted EBITDA rose by $60 million in Q1 to $231 million. Realized LME was $2,900 per ton, up approximately $285 from last quarter. The U.S. Midwest premium increased to $2,200 per ton, up approximately $420 and the European premium climbed $80 to approximately $310 per ton. Combined, these prices added $85 million versus the prior quarter. As anticipated, energy and raw materials were a headwind this quarter.
We experienced higher-than-normal winter power prices for Sebree following winter storm burn, and we have begun to see input cost pressure across the other raw materials, including heavy fuel oil and caustic for the alumina refinery as well as coke and pitch for the smelters. Operating expenses were favorable over prior quarter as spend related to the restart and expansion projects will now mainly hit in Q2, along with the metal units. Volume and sales mix were favorable as our annual sales contracts went into effect, reflecting an uplift in billet sales as anticipated. Now let's turn to Slide 10 and look at cash flow. We began the quarter with $134 million in cash.
We generated $231 million in adjusted EBITDA from operations and closed on the sale of Hawesville receiving $200 million in proceeds before fees. We continue to accrue 45X tax credits with $198 million receivable as of March 31 for full year 2023 and 2025 U.S. production as well as now the first 3 months of 2026. We expect to receive our full year 2025 amount of approximately $94 million in the next few months as we just filed our full year '25 tax return with the IRS last week. Quarterly CapEx totaled $76 million, of which $71 million is related to investment for Mt.
Holly expansion and Grundartangi restart of Line 2, plus our new power generation unit, TG4 at Jamalco. We expect a similar amount of CapEx in Q2 to finish these projects and then should return to more normalized levels. Insurance recoveries in Q1 trailed claims by $38 million, which reduced cash flow from adjusted EBITDA. This is primarily timing. And in early April, we did receive an additional $46 million advance from our insurers, which is not reflected here in our Q1 results. We have received a total of $83 million in insurance recoveries to date. We continue to expect payments to lag 1 to 2 quarters behind our submitted insurance claims.
Semi-annual interest payments were made in Q1 related to our senior secured notes and hedge settlements for $14 million. We remain focused on debt reduction, having repaid our industrial revenue bonds following the Hawesville transaction. Lastly, on cash flow. Working capital increased due to higher pricing and timing of payments on our major raw materials and customer receipts. We ended Q1 with $332 million in cash, reaching our net debt goal of under $300 million with strong liquidity in place. We have reached this position despite cash timing mismatch in insurance reimbursements in Iceland and 45X tax credits in the U.S., which should further improve our cash position from here over the next 2 quarters.
This strong cash and liquidity position supports our continued short-term focus in Q1 and Q2 on our expansion project at Mt. Holly as well as restarting Line 2 in Iceland and investing in the new steam generation turbine at Jamalco. Now, let's turn to Slide 11 and I look ahead to the next 90 days. For Q2, our lagged LME and regional premiums are expected to be up across all 3 components. We expect a realized LME of $3,175 per ton, a lagged U.S. Midwest premium of $2,450 per ton and the European duty pay premium of $485 per ton in Q2.
Taken together, the lagged LME and delivery premium changes are expected to have an $85 million to $95 million increase to Q2 adjusted EBITDA when compared with Q1 levels. Note that, due to our contractual lags, realized LME and premiums will be below spot levels in Q2. Current spot prices should then provide a further tailwind when they roll through our Q3 results. We expect U.S. energy prices to improve by $15 million from prior quarter as power prices moderated after the effects of winter storm burn. This benefit is partially offset by heavy fuel oil prices that have risen with the broader oil price increase since the Middle East conflict started.
Looking at our other raw materials, we expect increases in our coke, pitch and caustic prices. As Jesse mentioned, we also expect to see some Jamalco cost and volume headwinds from lower bauxite quality impacting our overall alumina input costs. Taken together, we see a headwind of $10 million sequentially. We expect operating expenses to increase $15 million to $20 million into Q2 in part to match increased production at Mt. Holly and Grundartangi. In addition, as normal around this time of year, we also have some additional seasonal costs as we hire summer help across all of our assets.
Volume and sales mix is expected to improve by $15 million to $20 million as we begin to see the incremental benefit of the additional Mt. Holly volume ramping up. We will not reach our full run rate volume impact from the Mt. Holly expansion and Grundartangi restart until Q3. The volume from these projects, especially the additional Mt. Holly tons will be an additional tailwind to the third quarter results. All told, at expected realized prices, we expect Q2 adjusted EBITDA in the range of $315 million to $335 million. And with that, I'll hand the call back to Jesse.
Jesse Gary: Thanks, Pete. As we discussed last quarter, Century is ready to capitalize on the significant opportunities in front of us to add production in a market that is becoming increasingly short due to rising demand. This need for additional production has now significantly increased with the smelter disruptions in the Middle East. In Europe, the restored tons we are bringing on in Iceland will supply additional metal units and especially value-added products into a rising European duty paid premium environment that has now been exacerbated by the significant reduction in imports from the Middle East and Africa. In the U.S., the Mt. Holly expansion is already stepping in to fill disrupted offshore supply chains for our key domestic customers.
By the end of July, for the first time in over a decade, all Century assets should be operating at full production capacity. The need for secure supply chains has never been more clear. Disruptions in the Middle East to both production capacity, but also to free transit itself are leading supply chains across a multitude of commodities strained and unable to deliver to intended markets. In an increasingly complex world, it is imperative that we are able to meet our domestic needs for critical minerals with domestic production.
To this end, Century and our joint venture partner, Emirates Global Aluminum continued to advance our Oklahoma smelter project in Q1, retaining Bechtel to complete the next stage of engineering work, advancing power discussions in Oklahoma and making significant progress on financing discussions, which we expect will result in a final investment decision and groundbreaking by the end of the year. The Oklahoma smelter is being designed with EGA's state-of-the-art EX smelting technology and will be the first smelter in the world to use this technology. At 750,000 metric tons, the new smelter will more than double total U.S. aluminum production and will restore domestic production of military-grade high-purity aluminum.
The restoration of domestic military grade production is of ever-increasing importance as we emphasize rearmament following the conflicts in Ukraine and the Middle East. Truly, once built, the Oklahoma smelter will be amongst the most efficient and advanced in the world and the crown jewel of the U.S. industrial base. No company is investing more to restore U.S. aluminum production than Century. Century is already the largest producer of aluminum in the United States, employing more American primary aluminum workers than any other company. And thanks to President Trump's leadership and the Section 232 program, we plan to invest billions more in new and expanded production at Mt. Holly in our Oklahoma smelter project.
Thanks for joining the call today, and we look forward to taking your questions.
Operator: [Operator Instructions] Your question from the line of Nick Giles with B. Riley Securities.
Nick Giles: Obviously, a lot of volatility right now in the Middle East and some severe disruptions. I was just wondering if you could touch on if you've had any opportunities to take market share while some of these tons have been out of the market. And then my follow-up question was really just what your dialogue with EGA has looked like, if there's been any -- if there could be any change in scope of the project just on the back of all of these disruptions.
Jesse Gary: Nick, thanks a lot. Good question. So as I said on the call, our focus since the conflict started and since the supply lines have become a bit strained has been to fill in the needs of our existing customer base where they may be sourcing from other sources outside the U.S. and filling those in mainly with Mt. Holly tons, but also some unpriced or unallocated tons that we came into the quarter with. So we've been able to do a good job with that, again, prioritizing our existing customers first; and second, working with new customers where we have excess metal to do that.
All in all, I'd say the market has been orderly and -- but it's really been helped by those additional Mt. Holly tons to fill in where needed. Turning to the project, our conversations with EGA around the new Oklahoma smelter, I think it's fair to say are both full go. We both remain very excited about the new project and are working hard to make it happen. So without speaking for EGA, there really has been no change as far as I can tell in our interest in the project, and we've had full engagement, and I think both parties are very committed to make that project happen.
Operator: Your next question from the line of Katja Jancic with BMO Capital Markets.
Katja Jancic: Maybe first, just on 2Q guide, the OpEx side. I think Peter you mentioned that some of that is seasonal. Does that mean that some of that will reverse in 3Q? Can you talk a bit about that, please?
Peter Trpkovski: Yes, Katja, it's Pete. That's exactly right. As I was saying, typically around this time of year, when we look across our footprint, we tend to have seasonality in our operating expenses, mainly around getting some summer help in the door and training that goes along with that. So you see those costs in our Q2 guide. And then coming out of the summer into Q3 and out of the summer months, we'll sort of reverse back to our normalized run rate of operating expenses. And that really applies to the whole footprint.
Katja Jancic: And is that -- so that means the full $15 million to $20 million would reverse?
Peter Trpkovski: No, it's not the full amount. It's probably a portion of that. We didn't break it out exactly, but it's probably half or less than that.
Jesse Gary: The rest of that, Katya, is just matched with the expanded Mt. Holly tons coming online, right? So we're going to get incremental revenues from Mt. Holly tons, but obviously, you have some incremental OpEx to produce those tons as well.
Katja Jancic: Okay. And then you talked about 2Q not fully benefiting from the current spot market plus the -- you're not going to see the full volume from Iceland and Mt. Holly. Can you provide a bit more of what the incremental potential could be in the current spot environment, assuming both of those assets are fully up and running?
Peter Trpkovski: Yes, sure, Katy. I'd be happy to. As you saw on the outlook, we tend to give what our expected realized prices are for the quarter. In Q2, we're not fully priced yet as we just here in the first week of May. So we have the balance of May to go on our revenue and obviously the balance of the quarter on some of our power prices and things like that. But if you just look at our 3 revenue components, the major revenue components, the LME global aluminum price, the U.S. Midwest premium, the European duty pay premium, all 3 today are higher than what we expect to realize in Q2.
So if you just look ahead at that page and where we are in the spot market, you can easily see an additional $400 per ton of LME improvement at spot, maybe another $75 per ton at spot for Midwest premium. And then maybe another $100 per ton in uplift in European prices. So if you just, again, traditionally, we refer to the sensitivities in the back. And if you look at those quick math, I think that's in the $70 million to $75 million range for just those 3 revenue components.
So again, if you took the Q2 guide midpoint, $325 million and you sort of mark at the spot, you can see a $400 million quarterly run rate level, but that doesn't include the full impact we will have and expect in Q3 from the full Mt. Holly uplift. So $400 million probably is a good number to take away, plus some additional uplift from the Mt. Holly restart expansion project.
Operator: Your next question comes from Matthew Key with Texas Capital.
Matthew Key: I apologize if this was addressed in your prepared remarks, but I wanted to touch on capital allocation and if there's any potential for capital returns to shareholders over the course of this year if the current market environment holds?
Jesse Gary: The simple answer to that, Matt, is yes. But if you flip to Page 21, you can see our capital allocation framework. And obviously, now, as you see on this slide, you can see that we've now met both our liquidity targets and our net debt targets. So as we said, once we reach that stage, which we're at today, we first look and prioritize sustaining CapEx and next look to our high-return organic investments that we have available to us. Of course, in Q1 and Q2, we're very pleased to be able to expand Mt. Holly to a very high-return organic investment project. And then we're also in the process of restarting Grundartangi.
There, of course, we'll ultimately recover the cash from our insurance proceeds. But as Pete said, those proceeds are trailing spend by about 1 to 2 quarters. So for Q1, Q2, it was clear to us the best allocation of our excess cash was to these 2 projects in line with our framework. We spent about $71 million of investment CapEx or restart CapEx in Q1. We expect about a similar level in Q2. We also paid down some debt this quarter. And then coming out of Q2, we should largely be done with these investments and be in a really good position to start generating more cash.
So in addition to that, just keep in mind, we'll also -- we also expect to receive our 2025 45X payment over the next few months, plus we'll catch up on any outstanding Grundartangi insurance recoveries over this period. Plus you should start to get back some of that working capital build that we've seen this past quarter from rising prices running through our AP and AR. So we think that cash generation should be looking very good going forward, and we'll continue to look for the best and best use of that cash. As you know, our priority first will be to fund more high-return organic investments. But otherwise, we'll definitely look at capital returns.
Matthew Key: Got it. That's super helpful. I appreciate that. And just as a follow-up, I wanted to ask about the $500 million DOE grant for the new Oklahoma smelter. I'm curious, does that get applied at the project level? Or does Century get 100% of that grant?
Jesse Gary: So we'll give the full detail of the capital breakdown and structure for the Oklahoma progress once we make that final investment decision. But we have worked with DOE to be sure that it will be able to work with the Oklahoma project, and we have full confirmation of that from DOE. So we're in good shape. That grant will reduce the overall cap of that project, and we'll get into further breakdown once we make that final investment decision and share that with you.
Operator: Your next question comes from John Tumazos with John Tumazos Very Independent Research.
John Tumazos: Congratulations on the all the good times. I guess, it's real hard to figure out the big picture in terms of politics in the world. So let's ask a couple outside the box kind of questions. Over the history of Century, the company hasn't always earned profits. Now that things are good, would you consider issuing 10 million shares, putting $600 million equity on the books, being ready to double the Oklahoma smelter if your partner wanted or if tariffs got abolished in 2029 under a different president, you'd have an equity cushion.
Jesse Gary: Thanks, John. Good out-of-the-box question for sure. We are very pleased with the cash -- both the performance of the business and the overall state of the balance sheet. I think we've made substantial progress on that over the past several years and the past couple of quarters. And we're really just grateful to find ourselves in a situation that we are to be looking at these very profitable investments that we have in front of us, and we're very excited about those investments. So I think to your overall question, are we interested in making sure that we'll be able to make those things happen? Of course.
But we also see our outlook, the significant cash generation that we have in front of us, and we feel pretty good about where we stand from a balance sheet perspective, especially as we continue to deliver over the next couple of quarters.
John Tumazos: So in terms of the Oklahoma project, if it's say, escalated to $5 billion because usually things cost more and your share is $2 billion and the government has helped you for $0.5 billion, would we -- should we expect something like half of the remainder to be funded by cash flow and half by debt? Or how do you think? What's your game plan for writing the checks?
Jesse Gary: Well, we'll share the final game plan as we continue to advance the project. And once we make the final investment decisions, we'll give you the full breakdown of both how we plan to finance the smelter, timeline for building the smelter, final CapEx numbers, all of that will come once we're able to make that final decision. So stay tuned for that. I guess, what I would just say to you is there are a variety of really good financing opportunities that are out there in the marketplace and available to these types of projects.
And so we're excited about the types of things we're seeing as we start to do some of that planning on how we will finance a project like this. And I think everyone will be quite pleased once we're able to share what we achieve.
Operator: Your next question from the line of Timna Tanners with Wells Fargo.
Timna Tanners: I wanted to drill down a little bit, if I could, on the power agreement for the Oklahoma smelter. As we understand that's the biggest issue for the smelter. And we also have heard that the local utility discussions are moving along nicely. Can you expand a bit more on what you're seeing there and what that might look like? And we've heard that maybe it could look like some of the other power agreements around the world that are levered to the LME. Just curious if you could give us a bit more detail on it, please.
Jesse Gary: Sure. I guess what I can say, Timna, is we've been very pleased with the great business environment that we found in Oklahoma, Governor Sit as well as the whole Oklahoma delegation. You can tell they really want to bring businesses and jobs to Oklahoma, and that's been a great incentive for us to look to locate the smelter there. And I think I can say that for both ourselves and our partners. And we have spent a lot of time negotiating with PSO, which is the local utility in Oklahoma. Those negotiations are continuing to make good progress.
And I think both sides are eager to bring those to a conclusion so that we can bring the substantial development to the state and all the jobs and all the economic impacts that will come from that. So I don't want to get ahead of ourselves and talk about what the exact structure of what that power contract might look like. But I can say we're making good progress, and we're excited to get that project moving.
Timna Tanners: Okay. Great. And then I guess just to, I guess, beat a dead horse here on the capital allocation. I mean, when you go through the many moving parts of the 45X payment and more to come, the working capital unwind, the insurance on a lag and what we know today of the big aluminum price, the massive shortfall in aluminum supply globally, I mean that does seem to set up for a pretty big cash outflow or ability to deploy capital in the second half. Should we expect more color on the use of capital on your next call? Or when might we get more detail? When should we expect that?
Jesse Gary: Yes, Timna, that's a very fair question. And I think as you laid it out, we do just find ourselves in this very dynamic time in the global market, both from -- in the aluminum markets themselves and then with Century specifically, given all of our investment projects and all the work we're doing to bring all of this additional tons online in addition to the Oklahoma project we just talked about. So we thought, given all that and especially given the sort of cash spend that we needed to do to bring those tons online, it made sense to allocate the excess cash these 2 quarters to that.
As that starts to clear up, and you laid out pretty clearly a lot of those items that should be cleared out over the next couple of months before we talk again, I think the landscape will become simpler, and we'll be able to provide more color on that next call.
Operator: There are no further questions at this time. I will now turn the call back over to Jesse Gary for closing remarks.
Jesse Gary: Thank you, everyone, for joining the call. We remain laser-focused on completing these 2 projects in South Carolina and in Iceland, as well as our progress in Jamaica and Oklahoma. And we've got a lot going on. We plan to deliver and look forward to talking to everybody in August. Thanks a lot.
Operator: This concludes today's call. Thank you for attending. You may now disconnect.

