Nip Impressions logo
Wed, Feb 11, 2026 17:20
Visitor
Home
Click here for Pulp & Paper Radio International
Subscription Central
Must reads for pulp and paper industry professionals
Search
My Profile
Login
Logout
Management Side
Smurfit Westrock targets 40% increase in core profit by 2030

DUBLIN (From news reports) - Cardboard box maker Smurfit Westrock aims to grow its full-year core profit to $7 billion by 2030 from just under $5 billion last year, a goal it said on Wednesday, Feb. 11, hinged on maximizing the potential of its North American business.

The world's biggest cardboard box maker reported full-year adjusted core earnings (EBITDA) for 2025 of $4.94 billion, at the lower end of a $4.9 billion to $5.1 billion range that was revised down in October due to weak North American demand.

The Ireland-headquartered company said an 8% fall in fourth-quarter core profit in North America reflected its planned reduction in output there late last year.

It said it also cut last year over 3,000 of the around 100,000 staff employed at the end of 2024 and exceeded the $400 million pretax cost savings targeted in the 2024 $11-billion merger of European-focused Smurfit Kappa with U.S. rival WestRock.

So far in 2026, Smurfit Westrock said it saw a "generally better industry operating environment" and forecast full-year core profit rising to between $5 billion and $5.3 billion.

"We are focused on unlocking the full potential of North America, while continuing to outperform in EMEA (Europe, the Middle East and Africa) and APAC (Asia-Pacific) and delivering dynamic growth and strong margins in Latin America," CEO Tony Smurfit said on the 2030 target. The target includes boosting profits in its largest market of North America to $4.2 billion from $3 billion.

The goal - which assumes market growth of between 1.6% and 2% in North America, Europe and Latin America - should allow it to return around $5 billion to investors over the next five years via a progressive dividend policy, alongside the capacity for additional share buybacks from 2027, Smurfit Westrock said.

Smurfit added that the company had ended most of the U.S. loss-making contracts inherited from WestRock, and changed the way those sales staff can target more profitable business.

"We allow our salespeople to entertain our customers, make sure that they can buy them a drink. Nothing was allowed to be done before (at WestRock)," he told investors.

Ensure up to 50,000 Pulp and Paper professionals see your company as they search this directory.


Printer-friendly format

 





Powered by Bondware
News Publishing Software

The browser you are using is outdated!

You may not be getting all you can out of your browsing experience
and may be open to security risks!

Consider upgrading to the latest version of your browser or choose on below: