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Yara shares drop 6% as Q1 revenue lags forecast

Yara International, one of the world's biggest fertiliser makers, missed firstquarter revenue forecasts on Friday as lower costs offset greater shipments, sending its shares down around 6%.

Earnings before interest, tax, depreciation, amortisation ( EBITDA), excluding one-off items, fell about 11% year-on-year to $435 million, lagging the $509 million anticipated by experts in a company-provided survey.

Shipments in Europe increased by 37% from the same quarter in 2015 as lower energy costs made production more cost effective, permitting the company to reclaim market share from imported fertilisers, CEO Svein Tore Holsether told .

But Yara's sales in Europe still remain substantially below the levels seen before Russia's major intrusion of Ukraine in 2022.

I think that's the result of a very volatile environment where farmers have difficult choices that they require to make also in a high inflation, high interest environment, Holsether said.

They're likewise seeing substantial swings in crop prices and as a. outcome of that, they're most likely postponing their buying of. fertilisers too, he added.

Yara said gas, a major expense of production for. fertiliser makers, was expected to be $120 million and $5. million cheaper in the second and 3rd quarters, respectively,. than at the very same time a year ago.

Wet weather condition in much of continental Europe was also hampering. farmers' capability to get tractors into fields and use fertiliser,. Yara stated.

Holsether declined to offer a cost outlook.

Yara's Q1 report was on the unfavorable side with a rather. large miss on figures and not so encouraging outlook remarks. any longer, Norne Securities expert Tomas Skeivys stated in a note. to customers.

Shares in Yara were down 6.3% at 0725 GMT, lagging a flat. Oslo benchmark index. The stock has actually fallen by 28% in. the last 12 months, while Norwegian stocks usually have increased. around 13%.