Vendor Performance Tracking & News Analysis

Raised Aurubis guidance sends positive signal for circuit board and metals recovery markets

Aurubis raised its full-year earnings outlook after stronger second-quarter results driven in part by higher returns from recycling materials and precious metals. The company’s performance and ongoing recycling-capacity expansion projects in Germany and the U.S. are being closely watched by electronics recyclers and ITAD firms as indicators of downstream demand for complex e-scrap and recovered metals. Continue reading below.
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Hamburg-based metals recycler and smelter Aurubis has raised its full-year earnings forecast after reporting stronger second-quarter and first-half results, with higher returns from recycling material and precious metals playing a central role. The company reported operating earnings before taxes (EBT) of €121 million for its second fiscal quarter, a roughly 15% increase over the prior quarter, bringing operating EBT for the first half of its 2025-26 fiscal year to about €229 million. Aurubis said the improvement was driven by a markedly higher metal result, particularly for precious metals, and higher earnings from the processing of recycling materials, alongside solid copper product demand and strong sulfuric acid revenues. It now expects operating EBT for the full 2025-26 fiscal year to land in a higher range than previously forecast.

Aurubis is one of the world’s largest copper recyclers and a key downstream outlet for complex metal-bearing material, including printed circuit boards, copper-rich fractions and precious-metal-containing scrap streams generated by electronics recyclers. The company continues to expand its multimetal recycling footprint, including its Complex Recycling Hamburg project in Germany and its Richmond, Georgia, secondary smelter in the United States. In prior project disclosures, Aurubis has said the Hamburg expansion is expected to add on the order of 30,000 metric tons of additional recycling-material processing capacity annually, while the Richmond facility is designed to handle roughly 180,000 metric tons of complex recycling materials per year once fully ramped.

The Richmond project in particular has been closely watched within the electronics recycling industry because it represents one of the largest recent investments in U.S.-based secondary copper smelting and multimetal recovery infrastructure. Aurubis has described the facility as the largest secondary copper smelter built in the U.S., positioning it as part of broader efforts to bolster domestic supply chains and improve access to critical metals recovered from scrap. Company management has also highlighted ongoing volatility in global copper and recycling markets, pointing to pressure on treatment and refining charges for copper concentrates and persistent tightness in recycling-material supply.

Those dynamics are increasingly relevant for electronics recyclers and ITAD processors as downstream demand for copper, gold, silver and other recoverable metals remains elevated, supported in part by AI-related data center build-out, broader electrification trends and grid investments. While Aurubis does not operate in front-end ITAD or device collection, its financial performance, guidance and capacity expansions are often viewed by market participants as a bellwether for downstream appetite for complex electronic scrap and industrial recycling feedstock.

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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.

M&A: Telamon acquires 21-year-old ITAD consultancy Retire-IT, retaining founder Kyle Marks

Telamon Corporation has acquired Retire-IT, with founder Kyle Marks staying on as VP of ITAD services under Telamon’s enterprise services division. The deal follows Telamon’s 2025 hire of Mark Vander Kooy, a former ITAD executive whose earlier company was acquired into what became CloudBlue — a sequence that reads as a company using an experienced operator to identify a target before buying one.

What makes this deal notable is that Retire-IT doesn’t process equipment; it’s a managed-service and tracking layer that oversees roughly three dozen certified processors on clients’ behalf, a model Marks calls “defensible IT disposition.” Marks argues the acquisition points to a broader shift in enterprise ITAD, away from processors vouching for their own compliance and toward separating execution from independent oversight, though whether that’s an industry-wide trend or one operator’s thesis remains to be seen. Full analysis, including Telamon’s revenue and customer figures, sourcing details, and the two open questions likely to matter most to clients of both firms, available to Compliance Standards subscribers.

Client Brief: Samsung Just Posted the Largest Tech Profit Yet Reported: Old Memory Now Costs More Than AI Chips

Samsung’s Q2 2026 operating profit of roughly KRW89.4 trillion (~$58.4 billion) is attributed almost entirely to its memory business. The South Korean tech giant has not yet disclosed a divisional breakdown but market expectation is that the Device Solutions (DRAM, NAND, HBM) division carried the bulk of the profit, while the consumer electronics division posted comparatively weak results due to its own rising component costs.
The mechanism behind that is directly relevant to component pricing in the ITAD channel. DRAM contract prices are up 58–63% quarter-on-quarter and NAND Flash up 70–75% QoQ. Legacy memory has been hit hardest by scarcity, with DDR4 spot pricing running above even advanced HBM3e, which is a real inversion where end-of-life memory costs more per gigabit than the chip industry’s most advanced product.

That inversion is the number to watch. It means components pulled from older, decommissioned enterprise hardware are sitting on unusually strong resale value right now. Industry commentary places relief no earlier than late 2027–2028, so this is a multi-quarter pricing environment, not a one-time spike, though it is a window, not a new floor.

Amazon as a Hardware Retailer: Reading the 2025 Sustainability Report Beyond the Data Center

Amazon’s 2025 Sustainability Report shows real strength in data center reverse logistics, but its identity as the world’s largest hardware retailer tells a different story. We break down what holds up, where marketplace-scale electronics disappear from the numbers, and what it means for ITAD companies.

Strategy: What Google’s 2026 Environmental Report Means for Your ITAD Pitch: Six Gaps Worth Selling Against

Google’s 2026 Environmental Report discloses real scale but leaves key circularity metrics undisclosed. We break down what Google gets right, where the reporting falls short, and what it means for ITAD and recycling companies pursuing hyperscaler business.

Inside Western Europe’s ITAD & Electronics Lifecycle Sectors

The four markets covered in the Euro Report series constitute a single, investable Western European ITAD and electronics-lifecycle complex: roughly 180 million people, four distinct regulatory regimes, and a combined hyperscale and AI infrastructure build-out now measured in tens of billions of euros of disclosed, committed capital. We view the region as underpriced relative to the United States on a like-for-like basis, not because the underlying asset flows are smaller, but because capital formation has been uneven across the four markets and because Germany — the largest single market in the group by a wide margin — remains structurally unconsolidated.

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

Germany is Europe’s largest electronics market by far — and by its own government’s measurement, one of the region’s weaker performers at collecting what it places on the market. That gap between size and system performance is where the opportunity sits for ITAD operators, recyclers, and investors. This report follows that gap into three places most country-level briefings skip: where “reusable” German electronics actually end up, the battery-recycling buildout tied to the auto industry, and the solar-panel waste wave Germany will hit before almost anyone else.

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

Belgium sits at the center of Western Europe, connected directly to France, Germany, the Netherlands, Luxembourg, and the United Kingdom, making its electronics lifecycle market more about the geographic position and less about size. For electronics recovery, refurbishment, resale, and data center decommissioning, that location could be important. Technology assets rarely remain confined inside national borders. Devices move through corporate refresh programs, logistics networks, refurbishers, social reuse channels, recyclers, and resale platforms.

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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