Markets · Industry
—The company. Suzano is the world’s largest producer of pulp, the wood fibre that becomes paper and tissue.
—The record. It sold about twelve and a half million tonnes of pulp over the year, the most in its history.
—The shift. The Brazilian giant is moving up the value chain, from raw fibre toward branded consumer products.
—The deal. A multibillion-dollar joint venture with an American partner is set to close around the middle of the year.
—The brands. That venture sells well-known tissue names in more than seventy countries.
—The stake. Suzano is trying to escape the boom-and-bust of commodity pulp prices.
Record Suzano pulp volumes tell only half the story; the more important shift is the company’s careful climb from raw commodity toward the branded shelf.
RTAsk Rio TimesHave a question about Brazil or Latin America? Get a straight answer from our reporting.Start asking →
A commodity champion at full tilt
Suzano is the largest pulp producer on the planet, turning fast-growing eucalyptus trees in Brazil into the wood fibre that makes paper, packaging and tissue around the world.
Over the most recent twelve-month stretch it sold about twelve and a half million tonnes of pulp, the highest volume in its history, as global demand for its fibre held firm.
For a foreign reader, the scale is striking: a single Brazilian company supplies a large share of the raw material behind everyday products from books to bathroom rolls.
Why record Suzano pulp sales are not the whole story
Selling more pulp is good news, but it does not solve Suzano’s core problem. Pulp is a commodity, and its price swings sharply with global supply and demand, making profits unpredictable.
When too many producers add capacity at once, prices fall and even the most efficient companies feel the squeeze. Suzano is the lowest-cost producer, but it is still exposed to those cycles.
The strategic answer is to move up the value chain, from selling raw fibre to selling finished, branded goods that command steadier prices and loyal customers.
That is exactly what the company’s big new venture is designed to do.
Live Company IntelligenceSuzano Papel e Celulose SA ADR — the full investor dossierInside: live share price, market cap, three-year financials, valuation, ESG and peer benchmarks — plus the latest Rio Times coverage.
Rio Times · Live Ticker Intelligence
Suzano Papel e Celulose SA ADR
SUZB3 · B3 São PauloBasic MaterialsPaper & Paper Products
Share price · live
$42.93
▲ +0.80% today
Market cap
$10.4 bn
1.2 bn shares
P / E
4.8
EPS 1.77
Dividend yield
0.0%
$1.12 / share
The company
Employees
—
Headquarters
Salvador
Listed since
1996
Website
Suzano S.A. manufactures and sells pulp and paper products in Brazil and internationally. It operates in two segments, Cellulose, and Paper. The company offers coated and uncoated printing and writing papers, paperboards, tissue papers, and market and fluff pulps. It also engages in the research, development,…
Financial performance · FY · BRL
RevenueNet income
2023
R$39.8 bn
R$14.1 bn
2024
R$47.4 bn
−R$7.1 bn
2025
R$49.1 bn
R$13.1 bn
Net income declined to R$13.1 bn in 2025, from R$14.1 bn in 2023.
Valuation & returns
EBITDA margin
41.8%
Net margin
23.0%
Return on equity
26.3%
Price / book
1.10
Enterprise value
$25.2 bn
Revenue growth · YoY
-5.1%
Latest earnings
Q1 2026 — reported EPS 0.00 vs 0.20 expected
Missed −100%
Peers & comparators
KLABIN
▼ -0.29%
RANI3 · Irani
▼ -1.27%
CMPC
▼ -0.76%
From The Rio Times
Latest coverage · 1 May 2026
Suzano Q1 2026 Profit Falls 32% as Strong Real Overwhelms Record Pulp Sales
Read →
Data: EODHD Fundamentals & live feed · The Rio Times Ticker Intelligence
From raw fibre to famous brands
Suzano agreed to take majority control of a multibillion-dollar joint venture with the American consumer-goods company Kimberly-Clark, combining the two firms’ tissue assets.
The new business, expected to be completed around the middle of the year, will sell well-known tissue brands such as Kleenex and Scott across more than seventy countries.
For Suzano, the logic is to capture more of the final value of its own fibre. Instead of merely supplying the raw material, it will help make and sell the finished product to consumers.
It also builds on an earlier move, when Suzano bought its partner’s Brazilian tissue business, giving it a foothold in branded consumer goods at home before going global.
Why it matters
The transformation, if it works, would make Suzano less of a pure commodity play and more of a diversified materials and consumer company, with earnings that swing less violently.
There are risks. Branded consumer goods are a different business from bulk pulp, demanding marketing skill and tight cost control, and the venture takes on new debt and integration challenges.
Still, the direction is clear. One of Brazil’s industrial champions is trying to turn its dominance in trees into a steadier, higher-value position on the world’s store shelves.
The advantage rooted in Brazil’s soil
Suzano’s strength starts with geography. Eucalyptus trees grow far faster in Brazil’s warm, wet climate than the softwoods used by northern competitors, cutting the time from planting to harvest dramatically.
That speed translates into one of the lowest production costs in the global industry. When pulp prices fall, Suzano can keep earning while higher-cost rivals struggle, a powerful edge through the cycle.
The company has poured capital into new capacity, including large modern mills that lower its costs further and lift the record volumes it now ships to Asia, Europe and North America.
Demand for its fibre is broad. Beyond paper and packaging, the world’s appetite for tissue products keeps rising as incomes grow in developing markets, supporting long-term consumption.
By owning both the raw material and, increasingly, the branded end product, Suzano captures value at multiple points in the chain rather than just the cheapest one.
That vertical reach is the heart of its strategy: turn a natural Brazilian advantage in growing trees into a more durable, higher-margin global business.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is Suzano?
Suzano is a Brazilian company and the world’s largest producer of pulp, the wood fibre made from eucalyptus that becomes paper, packaging and tissue. Over the most recent year it sold a record volume of about twelve and a half million tonnes.
Why is Suzano moving into tissue?
Pulp is a commodity with volatile prices, so Suzano is moving up the value chain into branded consumer goods, which command steadier prices. A multibillion-dollar tissue joint venture with Kimberly-Clark, expected to close around mid-year, sells brands like Kleenex and Scott in more than seventy countries.
What are the risks?
Branded consumer goods demand marketing skill and cost discipline that differ from bulk pulp, and the venture adds new debt and integration challenges. Suzano also remains exposed to swings in global pulp prices.
The Rio Times · Power Map
See who really holds power in Latin America
Click to open the Power Map →
View original source — Rio Times ↗
