Hudson Technologies reported a challenging Q3 2024, with revenue of $61.9 million, down 19% year over year, driven by weaker refrigerant prices and softer DLA contract pull-through. Gross margin fell to 26% from 40% in the year-ago quarter, reflecting lower market prices for refrigerants and a less favorable product mix. Despite margin compression, the company generated solid profits (~$7.8 million net income) and meaningful cash flow, ending the quarter with $56.5 million in cash and no debt, underpinning a robust balance sheet. Management reaffirmed the long-term thesis: as HFC phasedown progresses, virgin prices will rise and reclaimed refrigerants will become increasingly essential, supported by regulatory mandates beginning in 2029 and ongoing state-level activity.
Key strategic drivers remain intact: (1) a growing reclamation market enabled by policy tailwinds (AIM Act, EPA rules) and the clearance of 2023 reclamation data showing meaningful gains in reclaimed volumes; (2) operating leverage from Hudson’s reclamation capabilities and contracted sales/servicing platform; (3) the USA Refrigerants acquisition expanding both customer access and reclaimed-refrigerant intake, with integration proceeding “extremely well.” Hudson also expanded its share repurchase program to up to $20 million, signaling confidence in the medium-term cash generation and equity value proposition. Near-term risk centers on continued near-term pricing volatility for HFCs and the potential regulatory-shape of consumption allowances through 2028, which could impact market balance and pricing power. On balance, Hudson presents a compelling risk-adjusted long-term story anchored by a strong balance sheet, accretive acquisitions, and a rising role for reclaimed refrigerants in a low-GWP future.