
AMG Schedule for Second Quarter 2025 Earnings Release
Please connect approximately 10 minutes prior to the beginning of the call to ensure participation. The call-in information is as follows:
Toll-free number: 1-800-830-9649
Alternate (toll) number: 1-213-992-4624
United Kingdom: 44 0800 524 4760
Netherlands: 31 20 795 2687
When prompted for the conference ID, tell the operator AMGQ22025 and you will be directed onto the call. The conference call will be available on the website www.amg-nv.com within twenty-four hours following completion of the call.
About AMG
AMG's mission is to provide critical materials and related process technologies to advance a less carbon-intensive world. To this end, AMG is focused on the production and development of energy storage materials such as lithium, vanadium, and tantalum. In addition, AMG's products include highly engineered systems to reduce CO2 in aerospace engines, as well as critical materials addressing CO2 reduction in a variety of other end use markets.
AMG's Lithium segment spans the lithium value chain, reducing the CO2 footprint of both suppliers and customers. AMG's Vanadium segment is the world's market leader in recycling vanadium from oil refining residues, spanning the Company's vanadium, titanium, and chrome businesses. AMG's Technologies segment is the established world market leader in advanced metallurgy and provides equipment engineering to the aerospace engine sector globally. It serves as the engineering home for the Company's fast-growing LIVA batteries, NewMOX SAS formed to span the nuclear fuel market, and spans AMG's mineral processing operations in graphite, antimony, and silicon metal.
With approximately 3,600 employees, AMG operates globally with production facilities in Germany, the United Kingdom, France, the United States, China, Mexico, Brazil, India, and Sri Lanka, and has sales and customer service offices in Japan ( www.amg-nv.com ).
For further information, please contact:
AMG Critical Materials N.V. +49 176 1000 73 14
Thomas Swoboda
[email protected]
Disclaimer
Certain statements in this press release are not historical facts and are 'forward looking'. Forward looking statements include statements concerning AMG's plans, expectations, projections, objectives, targets, goals, strategies, future events, future revenues or performance, capital expenditures, financing needs, plans and intentions relating to acquisitions, AMG's competitive strengths and weaknesses, plans or goals relating to forecasted production, reserves, financial position and future operations and development, AMG's business strategy and the trends AMG anticipates in the industries and the political and legal environment in which it operates and other information that is not historical information. When used in this press release, the words 'expects,' 'believes,' 'anticipates,' 'plans,' 'may,' 'will,' 'should,' and similar expressions, and the negatives thereof, are intended to identify forward looking statements. By their very nature, forward looking statements involve inherent risks and uncertainties, both general and specific, and risks exist that the predictions, forecasts, projections and other forward looking statements will not be achieved. These forward looking statements speak only as of the date of this press release. AMG expressly disclaims any obligation or undertaking to release publicly any updates or revisions to any forward looking statement contained herein to reflect any change in AMG's expectations with regard thereto or any change in events, conditions, or circumstances on which any forward looking statement is based.
Attachment
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

Associated Press
2 minutes ago
- Associated Press
Germany and allies to send major military aid package to Ukraine using new NATO supply line
BERLIN (AP) — Germany announced on Wednesday that it will work with a group of Ukraine's Western backers to supply a package of military aid to the war-ravaged country worth up to $500 million using a new NATO supply line. Earlier this month, NATO started coordinating regular deliveries of large weapons packages to Ukraine after the Netherlands said that it would provide air defense equipment, ammunition and other military aid worth 500 million euros ($582 million). Sweden announced the following day that it would contribute $275 million to a joint effort along with its Nordic neighbors Denmark and Norway to provide $500 million worth of air defenses, anti-tank weapons, ammunition and spare parts. Germany's foreign and defense ministries said the support is focused on equipment like 'critical air defense capabilities. These are urgently needed to defend against Russia's ongoing air strikes, which are killing more and more civilians throughout Ukraine.' The United Nations has said that Russia's relentless pounding of urban areas behind the front line has killed more than 12,000 Ukrainian civilians. Two deliveries of equipment, most of it bought in the United States, were scheduled for this month, although the Nordic package was more likely to arrive in September. Germany did not name the group of countries it would be working with. The equipment is supplied based on Ukraine's priority needs on the battlefield. NATO allies then locate the weapons and ammunition and send them on. Germany has delivered or pledged military support to Ukraine worth around 40 billion euros ($47 billion) since Russia launched its full-scale invasion in February 2022.


New York Times
2 minutes ago
- New York Times
Alexander Isak and the Premier League players who have tried to force a transfer
Less than a week before Newcastle United's Premier League season opener against Aston Villa, The Athletic reported that their star striker Alexander Isak is adamant he will not play for the club again. Isak, who has scored 62 goals in 109 appearances for Eddie Howe's side, views his career there as over after three years. Newcastle, though, say they have no intention of allowing him to leave, and have turned down a £110million ($149.3m at the current rate) bid this summer from Premier League champions Liverpool. Advertisement The question now is whether Isak will successfully force the club's hand or continue into the season still refusing to feature. Or maybe there will be a reconciliation — perhaps after the transfer window shuts on September 1 in what is now a World Cup year. The Athletic looks back at some similar situations, from Harry Kane's non-move from Tottenham Hotspur to Manchester City to Dimitri Payet's one-man strike at West Ham United, to get a sense of what could happen next. A problem for Isak is that being under contract at Newcastle until the end of the 2027-28 season significantly weakens his hand. It is the same obstacle fellow striker Kane faced when he tried to move from Hotspur to Manchester City this time four years ago. He wanted out after Spurs failed to secure Champions League football for the 2021-22 campaign and believed he had a 'gentleman's agreement' with chairman Daniel Levy that he could leave if they received a suitable offer from another Premier League side. However, he had another three years remaining on his contract at the time and Tottenham would not countenance a sale for anything less than £150million ($203m today). Sound familiar? In an attempt to give himself more leverage, Kane did not return for Spurs' pre-season on the date expected by the club following that summer's European Championship with England, but after receiving criticism, he posted a statement on social media insisting he 'would never, and have never, refused to train'. In the end, after City failed to meet the asking price and Levy stayed insistent that he would only sell him overseas, Kane remained at Tottenham. He went on to play a crucial role there for two more seasons before moving to Bayern Munich in summer 2023. Isak believes he made it clear last year that 2024-25 would be his final season as a Newcastle player, though some at the club deny this was expressed and believe the striker planned to discuss the situation, including the possibility of fresh contract terms, this summer once the campaign was over. Advertisement There are echoes there of 2013, when Luis Suarez became embroiled in a debate with Liverpool over whether he should be allowed to leave. He claimed their manager Brendan Rodgers had promised him he could go if Liverpool did not qualify for the 2013-14 Champions League (which they failed to do, only finishing seventh) and Arsenal submitted a bid of exactly £40,000,001 in the, incorrect, belief that Suarez had a release clause that would be triggered by any offer over £40m. Suarez was forced to train on his own in pre-season over his attempts to force a move, and it was the intervention of Liverpool's captain at the time Steven Gerrard that eventually convinced him to stay and helped broker peace between the Uruguayan and Rodgers. The following season, Suarez was named Premier League player of the year after scoring 31 goals in the competition as Liverpool came agonisingly close to winning the title. He was then sold to Barcelona in July 2014. If Isak truly has no desire to reintegrate at Newcastle, as was reported by The Athletic's David Ornstein this week, the obvious question that follows is whether he flat-out refuses to train. That nuclear approach has been employed by different footballers when seeking a transfer, though with varied success. In 1998, Nottingham Forest striker Pierre van Hooijdonk refused to return for pre-season over what he perceived to be the club's lack of investment in their squad. 'I think we all felt similar to Pierre that summer,' former Forest defender Alan Rogers told The Athletic in 2020. 'We all felt frustrated. But you don't expect one of your team-mates to go on strike like Pierre did. He just went about it completely the wrong way.' The Dutchman was not a popular figure in the dressing room when he was finally persuaded to go back to work in the November, as team-mates Dougie Freedman and Steve Chettle recounted to The Athletic in 2020. One of the most memorable and succinct quotes from the whole affair, though, was then Forest manager Dave Bassett's initial reaction to the idea of Van Hooijdonk returning: 'If he thinks we're going to offer him an olive branch, he knows where he can stick it.' Advertisement As it turned out, Van Hooijdonk was a decent player, even with a metaphorical olive branch somewhere uncomfortable. He could not save Forest from relegation but did score six goals in 19 starts and two substitute appearances in the league, a tally only bettered in the squad by fellow forward Freedman, who got nine. He then moved to Vitesse Arnhem in his homeland that summer. This was a strike that could not be reconciled. West Ham United co-owner David Sullivan hailed Payet as a 'world-class player' when he arrived at the London club in summer 2015, later describing him as 'the best player I've signed in 25 years. He's a £30million ($41m at today's exchange rate) player. He's a supreme footballer. He makes every player in our side play better. On his day, he's world class — he's unstoppable.' After an excellent debut season in which he scored 12 goals and provided 15 assists in 38 appearances across all competitions, Payet was named West Ham's player of the year. But the Frenchman's exit the following season was as explosive as he could be on the pitch. After a quieter start to Payet's second season (22 games, three goals), West Ham manager Slaven Bilic revealed in January 2017 that the player wanted to leave. The situation was that Payet was on strike over the issue, refusing to train or play. He was eventually banned from the first-team training ground and told to work with the under-23 squad at another facility. There was no way back and at the end of that month, West Ham accepted a £25million bid from Marseille and Payet returned to the club they'd bought him from for less than half that amount 18 months earlier. By Bilic's admission, the Frenchman was his team's best player. He was also contracted to West Ham until the summer of 2021. But neither of those factors stopped the move he wanted from materialising. Young forward Berahino's relationship with West Bromwich Albion, the club where he came up through the youth ranks, never recovered from 2015's summer transfer window. The 21-year-old had scored 20 goals across all competitions in 2014-15, leading Spurs' manager at that time Mauricio Pochettino to push for the north Londoners to sign him. West Brom's chairman Jeremy Peace maintained Berahino was not for sale, despite multiple Tottenham bids and a transfer request by the player. Advertisement The saga came to a head with Berahino saying he would never again play for a club run by Peace. On September 1, he posted on Twitter (now X): 'Sad how I can't say exactly how the club has treated me but I can officially say I will never play (for) Jeremy Peace.' The post was later deleted and Berahino did play for West Brom again, apologising for his threat to go on strike, but his career at the West Midlands club never recovered. In January 2017, he made the short move to Stoke City. He has since played for Sheffield Wednesday and in Belgium, Cyprus and Slovenia and had a brief spell with a team in India, but never again hit the heights of goalscoring that he reached in those early years with Albion. He only turned 32 last week and is currently without a club. 'I think 'frustrating' is the word to sum him up because he had such a high and then such a low,' James Morrison, who played with Berahino at West Brom, told The Athletic in 2020. 'But maybe we let him down. Having that Tottenham move rejected obviously affected him, and as a club we maybe could have helped him more. 'He'd worked his way up and was scoring goals in the Premier League and that chance came for him to go to Tottenham and play Champions League football. I think most players would be disappointed, and as a footballer you could see his frustration. I don't think he ever got over that.' (Top photos of Suarez, left, and Isak: Getty Images) Spot the pattern. Connect the terms Find the hidden link between sports terms Play today's puzzle


Bloomberg
2 minutes ago
- Bloomberg
Millennium-Backed Trader Explores $1 Billion External Cash Raise
Lorenzo Rossi, who manages money exclusively for Millennium Management, is preparing to open his hedge fund to external investors for the first time since taking cash from billionaire Izzy Englander's firm. London-based Kedalion Capital Management is exploring ways to potentially raise $1 billion after his exclusivity deal with Millennium expires, people familiar with the matter said. Kedalion will open to the new money next year, the people said, asking not to be identified because the details are private. The plan is at an early stage and may change, one of the people added.