Cleveland-Cliffs (CLF) Q1 Earnings: Revenue Beat Can’t Save Stock From Decline

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Key Takeaways

  • First-quarter adjusted EBITDA reached $95M, surpassing analyst expectations of $92M
  • Earnings per share of -$0.40 fell short of the -$0.37 consensus forecast
  • Top-line revenue of $4.92B exceeded Wall Street’s $4.84B projection
  • Shares declined approximately 1% in early trading to $9.84 following the earnings announcement
  • Steel import volumes have dropped to levels not seen since 2008-2009 due to stricter trade policies

Cleveland-Cliffs delivered a split-decision first quarter that left Wall Street underwhelmed. While the steelmaker topped estimates on the top and bottom line metrics, it stumbled on earnings — and investors hit the sell button.

$CLF – Cleveland-Cliffs Inc
Q1 2026

🟩 Revenue: $4.92B Vs. $4.81B est.
🟩 Adj EPS: -$0.4 Vs -$0.41 est. pic.twitter.com/gs01l7nLxd

— EarningsTime (@Earnings_Time) April 20, 2026

The company announced adjusted EBITDA of $95 million for the first three months of the year, narrowly beating the Street’s $92 million projection. This marks a dramatic improvement compared to last year’s same period, which saw an EBITDA loss of $174 million.

Top-line performance also exceeded expectations, with revenue reaching $4.92 billion versus the anticipated $4.84 billion. However, earnings per share of -$0.40 disappointed analysts who had forecast -$0.37.


CLF Stock Card
Cleveland-Cliffs Inc., CLF

Management highlighted an exceptional $80 million expense related to energy costs driven by severe winter weather conditions. Excluding this unusual item, the company’s operational performance appears more robust.

Volume metrics remained stable on a year-over-year basis, with shipments totaling 4.1 million tons. Pricing trends moved favorably, as CLF’s average realized price climbed to $1,048 per ton compared to $980 in the prior-year period.

Shares opened at $9.91 before sliding to approximately $9.84 in premarket activity, representing a roughly 1% decline. The current price sits significantly below the 200-day moving average of $11.80.

Heading into the week, CLF had tumbled 25% year-to-date, though the stock has gained 36% over the trailing twelve months. The 52-week trading range spans from $5.63 to $16.70.

Tariff Enforcement Reshaping Steel Markets

CEO Lourenco Goncalves offered pointed commentary on trade dynamics. “Trade enforcement in the United States is working exactly as intended, with steel imports at their lowest levels since the global financial crisis,” he stated in the company’s earnings announcement.

Hot-rolled coil pricing currently hovers near $1,100 per ton — a substantial increase from sub-$700 levels recorded before steel and aluminum tariffs took effect in early 2025.

This past April, the administration modified the tariff framework. Importers now face a uniform 25% levy on the total value of goods manufactured primarily from steel, aluminum, or copper — moving away from the previous system that assessed tariffs solely on the metal component’s value.

Management reaffirmed its full-year outlook, projecting shipments between 16.5 and 17.0 million tons alongside capital expenditures of approximately $700 million.

Wall Street and Corporate Insider Perspectives

Analyst opinions remain divided on the stock. Across 11 covering analysts, CLF maintains an average “Hold” rating, comprising two Buy recommendations, seven Hold ratings, and two Sell opinions. The consensus price target of $12.69 suggests meaningful upside from current trading levels.

Argus shifted its stance to “Hold” on April 6. Wells Fargo reduced its price objective from $12 down to $9. Citigroup lifted its target from $11 to $13. GLJ Research maintained a “Sell” rating with a $9.42 target.

Corporate Insider Transactions

Insider activity has shown divergent signals. Director Edilson Camara acquired 19,700 shares at $10.13 per share during February — boosting his holdings by 88%. Meanwhile, COO Clifford T. Smith divested 200,000 shares at $10.46 in the same timeframe, trimming his position by roughly 26%.

Institutional shareholders control 67.68% of outstanding shares. Recent quarters have seen accumulation by Focus Partners Wealth, Prudential Financial, and Invesco, which added more than 520,000 shares in the second quarter.

The company maintains a debt-to-equity ratio of 1.15, a current ratio of 1.95, and commands a market capitalization of $5.65 billion.

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