Vendor Performance Tracking & News Analysis

Metals and electronics recycling firms report stronger downstream trends

Recent earnings updates from Aurubis, Umicore and Sims Limited suggest that parts of the downstream metals and electronics recycling market remain comparatively healthy heading into the remainder of 2026. The companies cited supportive precious-metal and non-ferrous pricing, strong recycling activity levels, and continued demand for high-value secondary materials, even as they warned of ongoing pressure from feedstock tightness and volatile treatment charges. Continue reading below.
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Recent disclosures from three leading metals and electronics recycling firms point to resilient earnings and generally supportive conditions in key parts of the metals and electronics recycling value chain, even as feedstock availability and certain smelting margins remain under pressure. The companies highlight different drivers, but collectively they suggest that high‑value secondary materials and related services continue to see solid demand.

Aurubis

Among the three companies tracked, Aurubis recently reported improved quarterly results and raised its 2025/26 operating EBT guidance to a range of €425 million to €525 million. The company attributed its better performance to a markedly higher metal result, supported in part by increased metal prices, especially for precious metals, slightly higher earnings from processing recycling material, and sulfuric acid revenues above an already strong prior‑year level. Aurubis reported operating EBT of €121 million for its second fiscal quarter and €226 million for the first half of 2025/26, roughly in line with the €229 million recorded in the prior‑year period. At the same time, Aurubis has continued to note pressure on treatment and refining charges for copper concentrates and tightness in certain feedstock streams.

Umicore

Likewise, Umicore’s Q1 2026 trading update described a strong start to the year at group level and a very strong performance from its Recycling business. Management pointed to high activity levels and favorable metal prices and trading conditions in Recycling, including in precious‑metals‑related activities, following scheduled maintenance in the prior period. Umicore also indicated that, assuming broadly supportive market conditions, it expects its 2026 adjusted EBITDA to be around €1 billion, with Recycling contributing alongside its other business groups.

Sims Limited

For its part, Sims’ HY26 results showed a substantial year‑over‑year increase in underlying EBIT, which the company linked to strong growth in Sims Lifecycle Services (SLS) as well as improved performance in core metal recycling businesses. In subsequent commentary on its outlook, Sims indicated that it expects FY26 underlying EBIT in a higher range than previously guided and highlighted SLS and non‑ferrous metals as important contributors to that target. Company materials and market coverage emphasize factors such as robust secondary demand for certain components, continued activity from large data‑center and cloud customers, and firmer non‑ferrous pricing.

What this says about sector conditions

Collectively, these updates indicate that downstream multimetal and electronics‑related recovery businesses are, at least for now, operating in a broadly favorable environment. Aurubis and Umicore both point to solid results in their recycling‑linked operations underpinned by supportive metal prices and healthy activity levels, even while they acknowledge headwinds such as lower copper concentrate treatment charges or scheduled maintenance. Sims adds a more ITAD‑ and electronics‑specific perspective, with its SLS segment emerging as a larger earnings driver alongside traditional metals recycling.

It is important to stress that these are three relatively large, well‑capitalized players, and their experience may not reflect conditions for every operator in the market. Their commentary does, however, provide evidence that high‑value secondary materials – particularly copper, precious metals and certain electronics‑related streams – remain in demand across refining and reuse channels.

Implications for electronics recyclers and ITAD firms

For electronics recyclers and ITAD providers, these disclosures collectively suggest that downstream outlets for complex, metal‑bearing material are, at present, willing and able to pay for quality feedstock. Stronger results and, in some cases, higher earnings outlooks at Aurubis, Umicore and Sims imply that recovered metals and components continue to find ready markets, even in the face of competition for material and evolving commodity prices.

At the same time, the companies’ own caution around feedstock tightness, treatment charge pressure and sensitivity to metal markets underlines that this is not a risk‑free environment. Smaller or less integrated firms, or those with weaker access to end‑markets, may not experience the same level of benefit. Nonetheless, taken together, the three companies’ recent communications provide a reasonable basis for viewing the downstream metals and electronics recycling segment as comparatively healthy heading into the remainder of 2026, while still exposed to shifts in pricing and material flows.

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Analyst/Author: David Daoud | Principal Analyst

David Daoud has researched the mainstream IT hardware market since 1996 and expanded into hardware disposition research in 2003. He has spearheaded the creation of IDC’s GRADE certification. Since then, David has been providing consulting and expert advice to companies looking to establish best practice in their IT equipment decommissioning and helped leading ITAD service providers assess demand, understand competition, and forecast what’s to come. David is currently the Principal Analyst at Compliance Standards, which focuses entirely on the end-of-life of IT equipment. He can be reached at 754-229-0095 or at ddaoud@compliance-standards.com

IBM’s 2025 Breach Data Puts ITAD Providers Inside the Vendor-Risk Perimeter

The global average breach cost at $4.44 million, according to IBM. Healthcare leads all industries at $7.42 million, followed by financial services at $5.56 million, industrial at $5.00 million, energy at $4.83 million, and technology at $4.79 million. Supply-chain compromise, where ITAD sists, ranks as the second-costliest attack vector at $4.91 million per incident, trailing only malicious insider incidents at $4.92 million. Phishing averages $4.80 million and stolen credentials $4.67 million. For ITAD providers, the supply-chain figure is the number that matters. Enterprise procurement teams now treat disposition vendors as part of the same risk perimeter as any other third party with access to sensitive data. Governance maturity, documentation quality, and audit readiness are becoming primary evaluation criteria, alongside processing capacity and recovery rates. Providers serving healthcare and financial services face buyers with the highest breach-cost exposure and the strongest incentive to demand governance-mature partners.

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The Euro Report 4: Germany: Europe’s Largest Electronics Market Can’t Account for Its Own E-Waste

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The Euro Report 3: The Netherlands: Investors Are Already Consolidating the Electronics Lifecycle Market

The Netherlands has become one of Europe’s most consolidated electronics lifecycle markets, organized collection, deep enterprise ITAD demand, and prime logistics access. Private equity, bank financing, and infrastructure capital are already active in the market, competing for the same fragmented mid-tier operators investors would otherwise be evaluating from scratch.

The Euro Report 2: Belgium’s Electronics Lifecycle Gateway: Logistics, Compliance, Reuse, and Data Centers Shape a Strategic ITAD Market

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The Euro Report 1: France’s Electronics Lifecycle Market where Repair and Resale Outpace Recycling

France is emerging as Europe’s clearest example of electronics value shifting from recycling toward reuse and lifecycle management: Commercial proof points are mounting — Back Market closed 2025 with $3.5 billion in GMV and its first profitable year, while Amazon’s €15 billion investment roadmap, Google’s first French data center, and SoftBank’s €45 billion campus signal a coming wave of high-value data center decommissioning. For investors looking at that market, the key takeaway is that value is migrating from shredding and smelting toward capture, repair, and remarketing, and France offers one of the clearest previews of where that shift is heading.

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