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Q1 2026 boosts Nutrien (NYSE: NTR) earnings and EBITDA

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6-K

Rhea-AI Filing Summary

Nutrien Ltd. reported stronger results for the first quarter of 2026, helped by higher fertilizer prices and record potash volumes. Sales rose to $6.05 billion, generating gross margin of $1.65 billion and net earnings of $139 million, or $0.27 per diluted share.

Adjusted EBITDA increased to $1.11 billion and adjusted diluted earnings per share climbed to $0.51, reflecting improved Retail, Potash and Nitrogen performance. The company reaffirmed its 2026 guidance, including Retail adjusted EBITDA of $1.75–$1.95 billion and potash sales volumes of 14.1–14.8 million tonnes.

Nutrien continued to invest in its asset base, with first‑quarter capital expenditures of $325 million, while returning $409 million through dividends and share repurchases. Short‑term debt increased as Nutrien relied more on commercial paper and credit facilities to fund seasonal working capital and growth.

Positive

  • None.

Negative

  • None.

Insights

Q1 2026 shows broad-based earnings recovery and stable guidance.

Nutrien delivered a notable rebound in profitability in Q1 2026. Sales rose from $5.10 billion to $6.05 billion, while adjusted EBITDA increased 30% to $1.11 billion. Adjusted diluted EPS improved to $0.51, up from $0.11, driven by stronger fertilizer benchmarks, Retail earnings and record Potash volumes.

Segment data confirm this breadth: Retail sales grew 18% with adjusted EBITDA more than doubling to $108 million. Potash adjusted EBITDA rose to $578 million as production volumes reached 3.66 million tonnes and average net selling prices increased. Nitrogen and Phosphate also posted higher gross margins despite mixed volume trends.

Management reaffirmed 2026 guidance, including Retail adjusted EBITDA of $1.75–$1.95 billion and potash volumes of 14.1–14.8 million tonnes, indicating no change to the existing outlook. Cash from operations was negative in the quarter, consistent with seasonal working capital build, while Nutrien used $409 million for dividends and buybacks. Subsequent filings and quarters will show how pricing and volumes track against these full‑year ranges.

Sales $6.05B Three months ended March 31, 2026
Net earnings $139M Three months ended March 31, 2026
Adjusted EBITDA $1.11B Three months ended March 31, 2026
Diluted EPS $0.27/share Net earnings per share, Q1 2026
Adjusted EPS $0.51/share Adjusted net earnings per share, Q1 2026
Potash production 3.66M tonnes Production volumes, Q1 2026
Capital expenditures $325M Cash used in investing activities, Q1 2026
Short-term debt $2.77B As of March 31, 2026
Adjusted EBITDA financial
"First quarter 2026 adjusted EBITDA1 was $1.11 billion and adjusted net earnings per share1 was $0.51."
Adjusted EBITDA is a way companies measure how much money they make from their core operations, like running a business, by removing certain costs or income that aren’t part of regular business activities. It helps investors see how well a company is doing without distractions from unusual expenses or gains, making it easier to compare companies or track performance over time.
non-GAAP financial measures financial
"This MD&A contains certain non-GAAP financial measures and ratios and forward-looking statements, which are described in the “Non-GAAP Financial Measures” and the “Forward-Looking Statements” sections, respectively."
Non-GAAP financial measures are numbers companies use to show their financial performance that exclude certain expenses or income. They help investors see how the company might perform without one-time costs or other unusual items, giving a different perspective from official reports. However, since they can be adjusted, they don’t always tell the full story and should be looked at alongside standard financial figures.
controllable cash cost of product manufactured per tonne financial
"Potash controllable cash cost of product manufactured per tonne 1 | | | 59 | | | | 60 |"
cash operating coverage ratio financial
"Cash operating coverage ratio | | | 62 | | | | | | | | 62 |"
asset retirement obligations financial
"asset retirement obligations (“ARO”) and accrued environmental costs (“ERL”) related to our non-operating sites"
Asset retirement obligations are a company’s recorded promise to pay for dismantling, cleaning up, or restoring property when a long-lived asset is retired — for example decommissioning a plant or removing equipment. Companies estimate the future cleanup cost today and book it as a liability (and add the cost to the asset), so it affects the balance sheet, reported profits over time, and future cash needs; investors watch it like a planned bill that can reduce cash available for returns.
 
 

UNITED STATES

SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION

Washington, D.C. 20549

 

 

Form 6-K

 

 

Report of Foreign Private Issuer

Pursuant to Rule 13a-16 or 15d-16

Under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934

For the month of May, 2026

Commission File Number: 001-38336

 

 

NUTRIEN LTD.

(Name of registrant)

 

 

Suite 1700, 211 19th Street East

Saskatoon, Saskatchewan, Canada

S7K 5R6

(Address of principal executive office)

 

 

Indicate by check mark whether the registrant files or will file annual reports under cover of Form 20-F or Form 40-F.

Form 20-F ☐   Form 40-F ☒

Exhibits 99.2 and 99.3 to this report on Form 6-K shall be incorporated by reference into the registrant’s Registration Statements on Form S-8 (File Nos. 333-222384, 333-222385 and 333-226295) and on Form F-10 (File No. 333-294761) under the Securities Act of 1933, as amended.

 

 
 


SIGNATURE

Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, the registrant has duly caused this report to be signed on its behalf by the undersigned, thereunto duly authorized.

 

    NUTRIEN LTD.
Date: May 6, 2026     By:  

/s/ Noralee Bradley

    Name:   Noralee Bradley
    Title:   Executive Vice President, External Affairs,
Chief Legal Officer and Corporate Secretary


EXHIBIT INDEX

 

Exhibit   

Description of Exhibit

99.1    News Release dated May 6, 2026
99.2    Management’s Discussion and Analysis
99.3    Interim Financial Statements and Notes

Exhibit 99.1

 

LOGO    News Release

 

TSX, NYSE: NTR

 

May 6, 2026 – all amounts are in US dollars, except as otherwise noted

 

Nutrien Reports First Quarter 2026 Results

Strong customer demand and solid operational performance in the first quarter

Strategic priorities and capital allocation approach remain unchanged

Full-year guidance ranges reaffirmed

SASKATOON, Saskatchewan - Nutrien Ltd. (TSX and NYSE: NTR) announced today its first quarter 2026 results, with net earnings of $139 million ($0.27 diluted net earnings per share). First quarter 2026 adjusted EBITDA1 was $1.11 billion and adjusted net earnings per share1 was $0.51.

“Nutrien delivered record potash sales volumes and stronger Nitrogen and Retail performance in the first quarter. We increased production from our low-cost North American assets and positioned our supply chain to reliably supply our customers amid tightening global fertilizer supply and demand fundamentals,” commented Ken Seitz, Nutrien’s President and CEO. “We continue to take purposeful steps to simplify the business, strengthen and grow our core asset base and improve capital efficiency, resulting in a more resilient portfolio and delivering structural free cash flow growth.”

Highlights2:

 

 

Retail adjusted EBITDA increased to $108 million in the first quarter of 2026 due to higher crop nutrient sales volumes and stronger proprietary products gross margins in the US and Australia. In the first quarter, we completed a tuck-in acquisition of a high-quality retail business located in the US corn belt.

 

 

Potash adjusted EBITDA increased to $578 million in the first quarter of 2026 due to higher global benchmarks and record sales volumes. We increased potash production and continued to progress mine automation, maintaining our controllable cash cost of product manufactured1 below $60 per tonne.

 

 

Nitrogen adjusted EBITDA increased to $482 million in the first quarter of 2026 primarily due to higher global benchmarks. Our low-cost North American nitrogen plants delivered an ammonia operating rate3 of 92 percent in the first quarter of 2026, consistent with our planned production and reflective of a continued focus on reliability initiatives.

 

 

Returned $409 million to shareholders in the first quarter of 2026 through dividends and share repurchases.

 

 

Progressing as planned with the review of strategic alternatives for our Phosphate business, Trinidad Nitrogen facility and Brazilian Retail business with a focus on enhancing earnings quality and free cash flow.

1 This is a non-GAAP financial measure. See the “Non-GAAP Financial Measures” section. All references to per share amounts pertain to diluted net earnings per share, unless otherwise noted.

2 Our discussion of highlights set out on this page is a comparison of the results for the three months ended March 31, 2026 to the results for the three months ended March 31, 2025, unless otherwise noted.

3 Excludes Trinidad and Joffre.

 

1


Management’s Discussion and Analysis

The following management’s discussion and analysis (“MD&A”) is the responsibility of management and is dated as of May 6, 2026. The Board of Directors (“Board”) of Nutrien carries out its responsibility for review of this disclosure principally through its Audit Committee, composed entirely of independent directors. The Audit Committee reviews and, prior to its publication, approves this disclosure pursuant to the authority delegated to it by the Board. The term “Nutrien” refers to Nutrien Ltd. and the terms “we”, “us”, “our”, “Nutrien” and “the Company” refer to Nutrien and, as applicable, Nutrien and its direct and indirect subsidiaries on a consolidated basis. Additional information relating to Nutrien (which, except as otherwise noted, is not incorporated by reference herein), including our annual report dated February 19, 2026 (“2025 Annual Report”), which includes our annual audited consolidated financial statements (“annual financial statements”) and MD&A, and our annual information form dated February 19, 2026, each for the year ended December 31, 2025, can be found on SEDAR+ at www.sedarplus.ca and on EDGAR at www.sec.gov. No update is provided to the disclosure in our 2025 annual MD&A except for material information since the date of our annual MD&A. The Company is a foreign private issuer under the rules and regulations of the US Securities and Exchange Commission (the “SEC”).

This MD&A is based on, and should be read in conjunction with, the Company’s unaudited interim condensed consolidated financial statements as at and for the three months ended March 31, 2026 (“interim financial statements”) based on International Financial Reporting Standards (“IFRS”) as issued by the International Accounting Standards Board and prepared in accordance with International Accounting Standard (“IAS”) 34 “Interim Financial Reporting”, unless otherwise noted. This MD&A contains certain non-GAAP financial measures and ratios and forward-looking statements, which are described in the “Non-GAAP Financial Measures” and the “Forward-Looking Statements” sections, respectively.

 

2


Market Outlook and Guidance

 

 

The conflict in the Middle East and related geopolitical uncertainty has disrupted global fertilizer and energy markets, with the most direct impact on nitrogen and phosphate supply from that region, as well as associated feedstock cost and availability. The outlook below reflects current market conditions and ongoing market dynamics.

Agriculture and Retail Markets

 

 

Higher global grain and oilseed production in 2025 increased stocks-to-use ratios towards historical average levels and led to significant nutrient removal from the soil. Strong demand for food, feed and biofuel is expected to drive continued need for higher global crop production and related crop inputs. Global grain and oilseed prices have strengthened in 2026 due to robust demand and the emergence of regional weather issues that could impact prospective production.

 

 

We have maintained our US crop acreage projections with corn plantings of 94 to 96 million acres and soybean plantings of 84 to 86 million acres in 2026. We have seen healthy crop input demand over the first four months of 2026 in line with our prior expectations, supported by above average planting progress and the need to replenish soil nutrients following last year’s record crop.

 

 

In Australia, favorable weather conditions across key cropping regions and strong livestock prices are supporting sales of retail products and services. In Brazil, safrinha corn planting supported crop input demand in the first quarter and growers prioritized potash purchases.

Crop Nutrient Markets

 

 

Global potash demand remains strong and we have maintained our previous forecast range for global potash shipments of 74 to 77 million tonnes in 2026. We anticipate relatively tight potash fundamentals throughout 2026 with demand trends expected to test existing global operating and supply chain capabilities.

 

 

Global nitrogen market fundamentals have tightened due to trade flow disruptions and elevated natural gas costs and LNG availability have impacted nitrogen production and costs for producers in Asia, Europe and other key regions. The outlook for the remainder of 2026 is expected to be impacted by uneven restoration of trade flows and restart of nitrogen assets, as well as uncertainty regarding Chinese urea exports and Indian urea imports.

 

 

Global phosphate supply and demand has been impacted by trade flow disruptions, lower global operating rates due to elevated feedstock costs that have pressured margins, and continued uncertainty regarding Chinese exports.

 

3


Financial and Operational Guidance

 

 

We have maintained all 2026 full year financial and operational guidance ranges.

 

 

Retail adjusted EBITDA guidance of $1.75 to $1.95 billion represents structural growth in our downstream business consistent with historical rates.

 

 

Potash sales volume guidance of 14.1 to 14.8 million tonnes is consistent with our global shipment expectation.

 

 

Nitrogen sales volume guidance of 9.2 to 9.7 million tonnes is supported by planned reliability improvements and debottlenecks.

 

 

Phosphate sales volume guidance of 2.4 to 2.6 million tonnes reflect the benefits of reliability improvement initiatives completed in 2025.

 

 

Total capital expenditures guidance of $2.0 to $2.1 billion is consistent with 2025 as we continue to optimize capital to sustain safe and reliable operations and to progress a set of targeted growth investments. The total includes approximately $400 million in investing capital expenditures focused on proprietary products, network optimization and digital capabilities in Retail, low-cost brownfield expansions and product optimization projects in Nitrogen, and mine automation in Potash.

All guidance numbers, including those noted above, are outlined in the table below. Refer to page 33 of our 2025 Annual Report for anticipated fertilizer pricing and natural gas price sensitivities relating to adjusted EBITDA (consolidated) and adjusted net earnings per share.

 

$                                         $                                         $                                        
    2026 Guidance Ranges1 as of  
    May 6, 2026     February 18, 2026  

($ billions, except as otherwise noted)

       Low          High       Low       High  

Retail adjusted EBITDA

  1.75     1.95       1.75       1.95  

Potash sales volumes (million tonnes)2

  14.1     14.8       14.1       14.8  

Nitrogen sales volumes (million tonnes)2

  9.2     9.7       9.2       9.7  

Phosphate sales volumes (million tonnes)2

  2.4     2.6       2.4       2.6  

Depreciation and amortization

  2.4     2.5       2.4       2.5  

Finance costs

  0.65     0.75       0.65       0.75  

Effective tax rate on adjusted net earnings (%)3

  24.0     26.0       24.0       26.0  

Capital expenditures4

  2.0     2.1       2.0       2.1  

1 See the “Forward-Looking Statements” section.

2 Manufactured product only.

3 This is a non-GAAP financial measure. See the “Non-GAAP Financial Measures” section.

4 Comprised of sustaining capital expenditures, investing capital expenditures and mine development and pre-stripping capital expenditures, which are supplementary financial measures. See the “Other Financial Measures” section.

 

4


Consolidated Results

 

     Three Months Ended March 31 

($ millions, except as otherwise noted)

        2026         2025        % Change  

Sales

     6,046        5,100        19   

Gross margin

     1,646       1,320       25  

Expenses

     1,286       1,094       18  

Net earnings

     139       19       n/m  

Adjusted EBITDA1

     1,105       852       30  

Diluted net earnings per share (dollars)2

     0.27       0.02       n/m  

Adjusted net earnings per share (dollars)1,2

     0.51       0.11       n/m  

1 This is a non-GAAP financial measure. See the “Non-GAAP Financial Measures” section.

2 All references to per share amounts pertain to diluted net earnings per share, unless otherwise noted.

Net earnings and adjusted EBITDA increased in the first quarter of 2026 primarily due to higher fertilizer global benchmarks, increased Retail earnings and record Potash sales volumes compared to the first quarter of 2025.

Segment Results

Our discussion of segment results set out on the following pages is a comparison of the results for the three months ended March 31, 2026 to the results for the three months ended March 31, 2025, unless otherwise noted.

 

 

 Retail

 

 

     Three Months Ended March 31 

($ millions, except as otherwise noted)

        2026         2025        % Change  

Sales

     3,640        3,090        18   

Cost of goods sold

     2,840       2,404       18  

Gross margin

     800       686       17  

Adjusted EBITDA1

     108       46       135  

1 See Note 2 to the interim financial statements.

 

 

Retail adjusted EBITDA increased in the first quarter of 2026 due to higher crop nutrient sales volumes and stronger proprietary products gross margins in the US and Australia. Expenses increased due to selling expenses related to higher sales volumes.

 

     Three Months Ended March 31 
     Sales         Gross Margin 

($ millions)

       2026         2025            2026         2025  

Crop nutrients

     1,483        1,194           250        219   

Crop protection products

     1,137       972          226       191  

Seed

     562       532          84       70  

Services and other

     175       146          144       118  

Merchandise

     223       189          36       31  

Nutrien Financial

     80       70          80       70  

Nutrien Financial elimination1

     (20     (13        (20     (13

Total

     3,640       3,090          800       686  

1 Represents elimination of the interest and service fees charged by Nutrien Financial to Retail branches.

 

 

Crop nutrients sales and gross margin increased in the first quarter of 2026 due to higher sales volumes from our core geographies, including an earlier start to field activity in the US relative to the same period in 2025.

 

 

Crop protection products sales and gross margin increased in the first quarter of 2026 due to higher sales of proprietary products, supported by earlier field activity in the US relative to the same period in 2025.

 

5


 

Seed sales and gross margin increased in the first quarter of 2026 due to higher sales volumes, including higher-margin canola seed.

 

 

Services and other sales and gross margin increased in the first quarter of 2026 due to a strong livestock market in Australia.

 

Supplemental Data    Three Months Ended March 31 
     Gross Margin         % of Product Line1

($ millions, except as otherwise noted)

       2026         2025            2026         2025  

Proprietary products

           

Crop nutrients

     80        69           32        31   

Crop protection products

     88       53          38       28  

Seed

     21       28          25       40  

Merchandise

     2       3          6       9  

Total

     191       153          24       22  

1 Represents percentage of proprietary product margins over total product line gross margin.

 

 
     Three Months Ended March 31
    

Sales Volumes 

(tonnes – thousands) 

      

 Gross Margin / Tonne 

 (dollars) 

         2026         2025            2026         2025  

Crop nutrients

           

North America

     1,600        1,464           131        130   

International

     848       826          48       34  

Total

     2,448       2,290          102       95  

 

(percentages)

      March 31, 2026          December 31, 2025  

Financial performance measures1,2

       

Cash operating coverage ratio

     62           62   

Average working capital to sales

     23          22  

1 Rolling four quarters.

2 These are non-GAAP financial measures. See the “Non-GAAP Financial Measures” section.

 

6


 

 Potash

 

 

     Three Months Ended March 31 

($ millions, except as otherwise noted)

       2026         2025        % Change  

Net sales

     926        744        24   

Cost of goods sold

     422       380       11  

Gross margin

     504       364       38  

Adjusted EBITDA1

     578       446       30  

1 See Note 2 to the interim financial statements.

 

 

Potash adjusted EBITDA increased in the first quarter of 2026 due to higher global benchmarks and record sales volumes. We increased potash production and continued to progress mine automation, maintaining our controllable cash cost of product manufactured1 below $60 per tonne.

 

Manufactured Product

    
Three Months Ended
March 31
 
 

($ per tonne, except as otherwise noted)

       2026         2025  

Sales volumes (tonnes – thousands)

    

North America

     1,285        1,312   

Offshore

     2,225       2,090  

Total sales volumes

     3,510       3,402  

Net selling price

    

North America

     287       243  

Offshore

     250       204  

Average net selling price

     264       219  

Cost of goods sold

     120       112  

Gross margin

     144       107  

Depreciation and amortization

     50       46  

Gross margin excluding depreciation and amortization1

     194       153  

1 This is a non-GAAP financial measure. See the “Non-GAAP Financial Measures” section.

 

 

Sales volumes in the first quarter of 2026 were the highest on record, supported by low inventory levels and favorable potash affordability in key offshore markets.

 

 

Net selling price per tonne increased in the first quarter of 2026 due to higher global benchmark prices.

 

 

Cost of goods sold per tonne increased in the first quarter of 2026 primarily due to higher depreciation. Controllable cash cost of product manufactured per tonne decreased in the first quarter of 2026 due to higher potash production.

 

Supplemental Data

    
Three Months Ended
March 31
 
 
         2026         2025  

Production volumes (tonnes – thousands)

     3,660        3,289   

Potash controllable cash cost of product manufactured per tonne1

     59       60  

Canpotex sales by market (percentage of sales volumes)2

    

Latin America

     41       31  

Other Asian markets3

     30       32  

China

     17       17  

India

     1       4  

Other markets

     11       16  

Total

     100       100  

1 This is a non-GAAP financial measure. See the “Non-GAAP Financial Measures” section.

2 See Note 8 to the interim financial statements.

3 All Asian markets except China and India.

 

7


 

 Nitrogen

 

 

     Three Months Ended March 31 

($ millions, except as otherwise noted)

       2026         20251,2        % Change  

Net sales

     1,014        885        15   

Cost of goods sold

     647       598       8  

Gross margin

     367       287       28  

Adjusted EBITDA2

     482       405       19  

1 Comparative figures have been reclassified for our Purchase for Resale business from Nitrogen to the Corporate and Others segment.

2 See Note 2 to the interim financial statements.

 

 

Nitrogen adjusted EBITDA increased in the first quarter of 2026 primarily due to higher global benchmarks. Our low-cost North American nitrogen plants delivered an ammonia operating rate2 of 92 percent in the first quarter of 2026, consistent with our planned production and reflective of a continued focus on reliability initiatives.

 

Manufactured Product

    
Three Months Ended
March 31
 
 

($ per tonne, except as otherwise noted)

       2026         2025  

Sales volumes (tonnes – thousands)

    

Ammonia

     298        496   

Urea and ESN®

     748       795  

Solutions, nitrates and sulfates

     1,295       1,178  

Total sales volumes

     2,341       2,469  

Net selling price

    

Ammonia

     479       418  

Urea and ESN®

     515       438  

Solutions, nitrates and sulfates

     282       236  

Average net selling price

     381       337  

Cost of goods sold

     225       224  

Gross margin

     156       113  

Depreciation and amortization

     65       58  

Gross margin excluding depreciation and amortization1

     221       171  

1 This is a non-GAAP financial measure. See the “Non-GAAP Financial Measures” section.

 

 

Sales volumes decreased in the first quarter of 2026, reflecting no production from the Trinidad and New Madrid facilities4, partially offset by higher solutions, nitrates and sulfates sales volumes supported by reliability and debottleneck initiatives.

 

 

Net selling price per tonne was higher in the first quarter of 2026 for all major nitrogen products due to stronger global benchmark prices.

 

 

Cost of goods sold per tonne was flat in the first quarter of 2026, as lower overall natural gas costs were offset by higher depreciation and other variable costs. The lower overall natural gas cost reflects a higher proportion of production from our low-cost North American nitrogen plants compared to the same period of 2025.

 

Supplemental Data

    
Three Months Ended
March 31
 
 
         2026         2025  

Sales volumes (tonnes – thousands)

    

Fertilizer

     1,409        1,389   

Industrial and feed

     932       1,080  

Production volumes (tonnes – thousands)

    

Ammonia production – total1

     1,122       1,543  

Ammonia production – adjusted1,2

     1,019       1,076  

Ammonia operating rate (%)2

     92       98  

Natural gas costs (dollars per MMBtu)

    

Overall natural gas cost excluding realized derivative impact

     3.28       3.91  

Realized derivative impact3

     -       -  

Overall natural gas cost

     3.28       3.91  

1 All figures are provided on a gross production basis in thousands of product tonnes.

2 Excludes Trinidad and Joffre.

3 Includes realized derivative impacts recorded as part of cost of goods sold or other income and expenses.

4 As previously disclosed, on October 23, 2025, the Trinidad nitrogen facility completed a controlled shutdown and we ceased production at our New Madrid nitrogen upgrade facility at year-end 2025.

 

8


 

 Phosphate

 

 

     Three Months Ended March 31 

($ millions, except as otherwise noted)

       2026         2025        % Change  

Net sales

     485       360       35  

Cost of goods sold

     489       361       35  

Gross margin

     (4     (1     n/m  

Adjusted EBITDA1

     57       61       (7

1 See Note 2 to the interim financial statements.

 

 

Phosphate adjusted EBITDA decreased in the first quarter of 2026 due to higher sulfur input costs, partially offset by higher global benchmarks and sales volumes compared to the same period of 2025.

 

Manufactured Product

    
Three Months Ended
March 31
 
 

($ per tonne, except as otherwise noted)

       2026         2025  

Sales volumes (tonnes – thousands)

    

Fertilizer

     468        332   

Industrial and feed

     190       168  

Total sales volumes

     658       500  

Net selling price

    

Fertilizer

     668       656  

Industrial and feed

     883       817  

Average net selling price

     730       710  

Cost of goods sold

     726       700  

Gross margin

     4       10  

Depreciation and amortization

     109       144  

Gross margin excluding depreciation and amortization1

     113       154  

1 This is a non-GAAP financial measure. See the “Non-GAAP Financial Measures” section.

 

 

Sales volumes were higher in the first quarter of 2026 due to higher production volumes from reliability improvements compared to the same period of 2025.

 

 

Net selling price per tonne increased in the first quarter of 2026 due to stronger global benchmark prices.

 

 

Cost of goods sold per tonne increased in the first quarter of 2026 primarily due to higher sulfur input costs, more than offsetting higher production volumes that improved cost absorption and lowered depreciation per tonne compared to the same period of 2025.

 

Supplemental Data

    
Three Months Ended
March 31
 
 
         2026         2025  

Production volumes (P2O5 tonnes – thousands)

     337        282   

P2O5 operating rate (%)

     80       67  

 

9


 

 Corporate and Others and Eliminations

 

 

     Three Months Ended March 31

($ millions, except as otherwise noted)

       2026         20251,2        % Change  

Corporate and Others

      

Gross margin2

     14       14       -  

Selling recovery

     (3     (3     -  

General and administrative expenses

     111       99       12  

Share-based compensation expense

     116       42       176  

Foreign exchange loss, net of related derivatives

     5       7       (29

Other expenses

     10       18       (44

Adjusted EBITDA2

     (84     (78     8  

Eliminations

      

Gross margin

     (35     (30     17  

Adjusted EBITDA2

     (36     (28     29  

1 Comparative figures have been reclassified for our Purchase for Resale business from Nitrogen to the Corporate and Others segment.

2 See Note 2 to the interim financial statements.

 

 

Share-based compensation expense was higher in the first quarter of 2026 due to an increase in the fair value of our share-based awards. The fair value of our share-based awards takes into consideration several factors, such as our share price movement, our performance relative to our peer group and our return on invested capital.

Finance Costs, Income Taxes and Other Comprehensive (Loss) Income

 

     Three Months Ended March 31

($ millions, except as otherwise noted)

       2026         2025        % Change  

Finance costs

     176        179        (2 )  

Income taxes

      

Income tax expense

     45       28       61  

Actual effective tax rate including discrete items (%)

     24       60       (60

Other comprehensive income

     66       25       164  

 

 

Income tax expense increased in the first quarter of 2026 mainly due to higher earnings. The actual effective tax rate including discrete items decreased due to a change in the proportion of earnings (loss) between tax jurisdictions.

 

10


Liquidity and Capital Resources

Sources and uses of liquidity

We continued to manage our capital in accordance with our capital allocation strategy. We believe that our internally generated cash flow, supplemented by available borrowings under new or existing financing sources, if necessary, will be sufficient to meet our anticipated capital expenditures, planned growth and development activities, and other cash requirements for the foreseeable future. Refer to the “Capital Structure and Management” section for details on our existing long-term debt and credit facilities.

Sources and uses of cash

 

     Three Months Ended March 31 

($ millions, except as otherwise noted)

       2026         2025        % Change  

Cash used in operating activities

     (851     (1,082     (21

Cash used in investing activities

     (487     (243     100  

Cash provided by financing activities

     1,426       1,365       4  

Cash used for dividends and share repurchases1

     (409     (413     (1

1 This is a supplementary financial measure. See the “Other Financial Measures” section.

 

   
Cash used in operating activities   

Cash used in operating activities in the first quarter of 2026 was lower compared to the same period in 2025 primarily due to higher fertilizer global benchmarks, increased Retail earnings and record Potash sales volumes.

Cash used in investing activities   

Cash used in investing activities in the first quarter of 2026 was higher compared to the same period in 2025 due to higher cash used on business acquisitions in 2026. The 2025 comparative period included proceeds from the disposal of our investment in Sinofert Holdings Limited.

Cash provided by financing activities   

Cash provided by financing activities in the first quarter of 2026 was higher compared to the same period in 2025 due to higher commercial paper issuances in 2026. Additionally, in 2025, we issued $1.0 billion of senior notes. We had no issuances of senior notes in the first quarter of 2026.

Cash used for dividends and share repurchases

 

  

Cash used for dividends and share repurchases was consistent in the first quarter of 2026 compared to the same period in 2025.

 

11


Financial Condition Review

The following is a comparison of balance sheet categories that are considered material:

 

    As at            

($ millions, except as otherwise noted)

    March 31, 2026       December 31, 2025     $  Change       % Change  

Assets

       

Cash and cash equivalents

    777       701       76       11  

Receivables

    6,284       5,675       609       11  

Inventories

    8,681       6,977       1,704       24  

Prepaid expenses and other current assets

    733       1,396       (663     (47

Property, plant and equipment

    22,659       22,747       (88     -  

Liabilities and Shareholders’ Equity

       

Short-term debt

    2,766       873       1,893       217  

Trade, other payables and accrued liabilities

    9,137       9,309       (172     (2

Long-term debt, including current portion

    9,861       9,863       (2     -  

Share capital

    13,515       13,519       (4     -  

Retained earnings

    11,853       12,076       (223     (2

 

 

Explanations for changes in Cash and cash equivalents are in the “Liquidity and Capital Resources - Sources and uses of cash” section.

 

 

Receivables increased due to higher fertilizer global benchmarks and the seasonality of our Retail segment, resulting in higher receivables with customers and vendor rebates, partially offset by improved collection of receivables in North America. Receivables also increased from record Potash sales volumes.

 

 

Inventories increased due to the seasonality of our Retail segment. Our North American inventory levels generally increase at year-end, peak in the first quarter of the year in preparation for the planting and application seasons, and are drawn down in the succeeding quarters.

 

 

Prepaid expenses and other current assets decreased due to Retail taking delivery of prepaid inventories in preparation for the spring planting and applications season in North America.

 

 

Short-term debt increased due to higher commercial paper issuances to support working capital requirements driven by the seasonality of our business.

 

 

Trade, other payables and accrued liabilities decreased due to the settlement in the first quarter of 2026 of our Retail supplier financing arrangement obligations that were entered into in the fourth quarter of 2025. This was partially offset by higher Retail customer prepayments received in the first quarter of 2026 in anticipation of crop input price increases.

 

12


Capital Structure and Management

Principal debt instruments

As part of the normal course of business, we closely monitor our liquidity position. We use a combination of cash generated from operations and short-term and long-term debt to finance our operations. We continually evaluate various financing arrangements and may seek to engage in transactions from time to time when market and other conditions are favorable. We were in compliance with our debt covenants and did not have any changes to our credit ratings for the three months ended March 31, 2026.

Capital structure (debt and equity)

 

($ millions)

       March 31, 2026          December 31, 2025  

Short-term debt

     2,766        873  

Current portion of long-term debt

     1,036        513  

Current portion of lease liabilities

     362        346  

Long-term debt

     8,825        9,350  

Lease liabilities

     957        937  

Shareholders’ equity

     25,192        25,365  

Commercial paper, credit facilities and other debt

We have a total facility limit of approximately $7,426 million comprised of several credit facilities available in the jurisdictions where we operate. In North America, we have a commercial paper program, which is limited to the undrawn amount under our $4,500 million unsecured revolving term credit facility and excess cash invested in highly liquid securities.

As at March 31, 2026, we utilized $2,780 million of our total facility limit, which includes $2,421 million of commercial paper outstanding. In the first quarter of 2026, we extended the maturity of our accounts receivable purchase facility from March 6, 2026 to March 31, 2028 and entered into a $69 million uncommitted revolving demand facility.

As at March 31, 2026, $234 million in letters of credit were outstanding and committed, with $352 million of remaining credit available under our letter of credit facilities.

Our long-term debt consists primarily of notes and debentures. See the “Capital Structure and Management” section of our 2025 Annual Report for information on balances, rates and maturities for our notes and debentures.

Outstanding share data

 

      As at May 5, 2026  

Common shares

     480,023,548  

Options to purchase common shares

     1,921,277  

For more information on our capital management, see Note 4 to the annual financial statements in our 2025 Annual Report.

 

13


Quarterly Results

 

 ($ millions, except as otherwise noted)    Q1 2026      Q4 2025      Q3 2025      Q2 2025      Q1 2025      Q4 2024      Q3 2024      Q2 2024  

Sales

     6,046        5,340        6,007        10,438        5,100        5,079        5,348        10,156  

Net earnings

     139        580        469        1,229        19        118        25        392  

Net earnings attributable to equity holders
of Nutrien

     131        571        464        1,221        11        113        18        385  

Net earnings per share attributable to equity
holders of Nutrien

                       

Basic

     0.27        1.18        0.96        2.51        0.02        0.23        0.04        0.78  

Diluted

     0.27        1.18        0.96        2.50        0.02        0.23        0.04        0.78  

Our quarterly earnings are significantly affected by the seasonality of our business, fertilizer benchmark prices, global demand-supply conditions, grower affordability and weather. See Note 2 to the interim financial statements.

Accounting Policies and New IFRS Standards

Significant accounting policies are disclosed in our 2025 Annual Report and have been consistently applied for the three months ended March 31, 2026, except as described below.

Amendments to IFRS 9 and IFRS 7, Amendments to the Classification and Measurement of Financial Instruments

Amendments to IFRS 9 and IFRS 7, Amendments to the Classification and Measurement of Financial Instruments, were adopted effective January 1, 2026, the required adoption date. The impact was not material. On initial adoption, there was an adjustment of $(13) million to opening cash and cash equivalents as at January 1, 2026, which has been reflected in the condensed consolidated statement of cash flows for the three months ended March 31, 2026.

Critical Accounting Estimates

The preparation of financial statements in accordance with IFRS requires management to make estimates and judgments that affect reported assets, liabilities, revenues and expenses. We have discussed the development, selection and application of our key accounting policies, and the critical accounting estimates and assumptions they involve, with the Audit Committee of the Board.

Our critical accounting estimates are discussed on pages 64 to 65 of our 2025 Annual Report. There were no material changes to our critical accounting estimates for the three months ended March 31, 2026.

Controls and Procedures

Management is responsible for establishing and maintaining adequate internal control over financial reporting (“ICFR”), as defined in Rules 13a-15(f) and 15d-15(f) under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended, and National Instrument 52-109 Certification of Disclosure in Issuers’ Annual and Interim Filings. ICFR is designed to provide reasonable assurance regarding the reliability of financial reporting and preparation of financial statements for external purposes in accordance with IFRS. Any system of ICFR, no matter how well designed, has inherent limitations. Therefore, even those systems determined to be effective can provide only reasonable assurance with respect to financial statement preparation and presentation.

There has been no change in our ICFR during the three months ended March 31, 2026, that has materially affected, or is reasonably likely to materially affect, our ICFR.

 

14


Forward-Looking Statements

Certain statements and other information included in this document, including within the “Market Outlook and Guidance” section, constitute “forward-looking information” or “forward-looking statements” (collectively, “forward-looking statements”) under applicable securities laws (such statements are often accompanied by words such as “anticipate”, “forecast”, “expect”, “believe”, “may”, “will”, “should”, “estimate”, “project”, “intend” or other similar words). All statements in this document, other than those relating to historical information or current conditions, are forward-looking statements, including, but not limited to: Nutrien’s business strategies, plans, prospects and opportunities; Nutrien’s 2026 full-year guidance, including expectations regarding Retail adjusted EBITDA, Potash sales volumes, Nitrogen sales volumes, Phosphate sales volumes, depreciation and amortization, finance costs, effective tax rate on adjusted net earnings and capital expenditures, including the assumptions and expectations stated therein; expectations regarding the review of strategic alternatives for our Phosphate business, Trinidad Nitrogen facility and Brazilian Retail business and associated outcomes; expectations regarding structural growth in our downstream business; expectations regarding our capital allocation approach and strategies, including our intentions with respect to our strategic actions and the expected timing thereof; our expectations regarding Nutrien’s strategic priorities and our ability to advance and achieve such strategic priorities in 2026 and beyond; expectations regarding various performance targets in 2026 and beyond and our ability to achieve such targets; capital spending expectations for 2026 and beyond; expectations regarding performance of our operating segments in 2026 and beyond; the expectation that internally generated cash flow, supplemented by available borrowings, if necessary, will be sufficient to meet our anticipated capital expenditures, planned growth and development activities, and other cash requirements; expectations regarding payment of dividends and share repurchases; our operating segment market outlooks and our expectations for market conditions and fundamentals, and the anticipated supply and demand for our products and services, crop input demand, expected market, industry and growing conditions with respect to crop nutrient application rates, planted acres, farmer crop investment, crop mix and the need to replenish soil nutrient levels, input costs, production volumes and expenses, shipments, natural gas costs and availability, consumption, prices, operating rates, the impact of seasonality, import and export volumes, tariffs, trade or export restrictions, economic sanctions and restrictions, geopolitical disruptions, including the ongoing conflict in the Middle East, inventories, crop development, and natural gas curtailments; the negotiation of sales contracts; acquisitions and divestitures and the anticipated benefits thereof; and expectations in connection with our ability to generate free cash flow, enhance earnings quality, and deliver long-term returns to shareholders.

These forward-looking statements are subject to a number of assumptions, risks and uncertainties, many of which are beyond our control, which could cause actual results to differ materially from such forward-looking statements. As such, undue reliance should not be placed on these forward-looking statements.

All of the forward-looking statements are qualified by the assumptions that are stated or inherent in such forward-looking statements, including the assumptions referred to below and elsewhere in this document. Although we believe that these assumptions are reasonable, having regard to our experience and our perception of historical trends, this list is not exhaustive of the factors that may affect any of the forward-looking statements and the reader should not place undue reliance on these assumptions and such forward-looking statements. Current conditions, economic and otherwise, render assumptions, although reasonable when made, subject to greater uncertainty.

The additional key assumptions that have been made in relation to the operation of our business as currently planned and our ability to achieve our business objectives include, among other things, assumptions with respect to: our ability to successfully implement our business strategies, growth and capital allocation investments and initiatives; that we will conduct our operations and achieve results of operations as anticipated; growth in crop nutrient sales volumes and gross margins; our ability to successfully complete, integrate and realize the anticipated benefits of our already completed and future acquisitions and divestitures, and that we will be able to implement our standards, controls, procedures and policies in respect of any acquired businesses and realize the expected synergies on the anticipated timeline or at all; increased proprietary products gross margin; successful execution of the review of strategic alternatives for our Phosphate business, Trinidad Nitrogen facility and Brazilian Retail business, within the anticipated timing and parameters, and realization of the expected benefits therefrom; continued reliability improvements; that future business, regulatory and industry conditions will be within the parameters expected by us, including with respect to prices, expenses, margins, operating rates, demand, supply, product availability, shipments, consumption, weather conditions, supplier agreements, product distribution agreements, inventory levels, exports, tariffs, including general or retaliatory tariffs, trade restrictions, international trade arrangements, government support, crop development and cost of labor and interest, exchange and effective tax rates; global economic conditions and the accuracy of our market outlook expectations for 2026 and in the future; assumptions related to our assessment of recoverable amount estimates of our assets; our intention to complete share repurchases under our normal course issuer bid programs, the funding of such share repurchases, existing and future market conditions, including with respect to the price of our common shares, capital allocation priorities and compliance with respect to applicable limitations under securities laws and regulations and stock exchange policies and assumptions related to our ability to fund our dividends at the current level; our expectations regarding the impacts, direct and indirect, of certain geopolitical conflicts, including the ongoing conflict in the Middle East, on, among other things, global supply and demand, including for crop nutrients, energy and commodity prices, global interest rates, supply chains and the global macroeconomic environment, including inflation; the adequacy of our cash generated from operations and our ability to access our credit facilities or capital markets for additional sources of financing; our ability to identify suitable candidates for acquisitions and divestitures and negotiate acceptable terms; the availability of investment opportunities that align with our strategic priorities and growth strategy; our ability to maintain investment grade ratings and achieve our performance targets; and our ability to successfully negotiate sales and other contracts and our ability to successfully implement new initiatives and programs.

 

15


Events or circumstances that could cause actual results to differ materially from those in the forward-looking statements include, but are not limited to: general global economic, market and business conditions; failure to achieve expected results of our business strategy, capital allocation initiatives, results of operations or targets; failure to complete announced and future strategic and asset optimization initiatives, acquisitions or divestitures at all or on the expected terms and within the expected timeline; seasonality of our business; climate change and weather conditions, including impacts from regional flooding and/or drought conditions; crop planted acreage, yield and prices; the supply and demand and price levels for our products; governmental and regulatory requirements and actions by governmental authorities, including changes in government policy (including general or retaliatory tariffs, trade restrictions, or other changes to international trade arrangements) and regulatory investigations; current and future litigation proceedings; the results of our review of strategic alternatives for our Phosphate business, Trinidad Nitrogen facility and Brazilian Retail business, including the process and the timing thereof, and whether the review will result in Nutrien undertaking a transaction, including the terms and timing relating thereto, the completion thereof and the benefits to be realized therefrom; the effects of current and future multinational trade agreements or other developments affecting the level of trade or export restrictions; government ownership requirements, changes in environmental, tax, antitrust and other laws or regulations and the interpretation thereof; political or military risks, including civil unrest, actions by armed groups or conflict and malicious acts, including terrorism and industrial espionage; our ability to access sufficient, cost-effective and timely transportation, distribution and storage of products (including potential rail transportation and port disruptions due to labor strikes and/or work stoppages or other similar actions); the occurrence of a major environmental or safety incident or becoming subject to legal or regulatory proceedings; innovation and cybersecurity risks related to our systems, including our costs of addressing or mitigating such risks; counterparty and sovereign risk; delays in completion of turnarounds at our major facilities or challenges related to our major facilities that are out of our control; interruptions of or constraints in availability of key inputs, including natural gas and sulfur; any significant impairment of the carrying amount of certain assets; the risk that rising interest rates and/or deteriorated business operating results may result in the further impairment of assets or goodwill attributed to certain of our cash generating units; risks related to reputational loss; certain complications that may arise in our mining processes; the ability to attract, engage and retain skilled employees and strikes or other forms of work stoppages; geopolitical conflicts, including the ongoing conflict in the Middle East, and their potential impact on, among other things, global market conditions and supply and demand, including for crop nutrients, energy and commodity prices, interest rates, supply chains and the global economy generally; our ability to execute on our strategies related to environmental, social and governance matters, and achieve related expectations, targets and commitments, including risks associated with disclosure thereof; and other risk factors detailed from time to time in Nutrien reports filed with the Canadian securities regulators and the SEC.

The purpose of our Retail adjusted EBITDA, depreciation and amortization, finance costs, effective tax rate and capital expenditures guidance ranges are to assist readers in understanding our expected and targeted financial results, and this information may not be appropriate for other purposes.

The forward-looking statements in this document are made as of the date hereof and Nutrien disclaims any intention or obligation to update or revise any forward-looking statements in this document as a result of new information or future events, except as may be required under applicable Canadian securities legislation or applicable US federal securities laws.

Terms and Definitions

For the definitions of certain financial and non-financial terms used in this document, as well as a list of abbreviated company names and sources, see the “Terms and definitions” section of our 2025 Annual Report. All references to per share amounts pertain to diluted net earnings (loss) per share, “n/m” indicates information that is not meaningful, and all financial amounts are stated in millions of US dollars, unless otherwise noted.

 

16


About Nutrien

Nutrien is a leading global provider of crop inputs and services. We operate a world-class network of production, distribution and ag retail facilities that positions us to efficiently serve farmers. Our vision is to be the leading global agricultural solutions provider, delivering superior shareholder value through safe and sustainable operations. To achieve this vision, our strategy is anchored in three priorities: simplify and focus, operational excellence and a disciplined and intentional approach to capital allocation. This strategy is designed to create low-risk, structural free cash flow growth by leveraging our core competencies and to deliver reliable, growing cash returns to shareholders.

For Further Information:

Investor Contact:

Jeff Holzman

Senior Vice President, Investor Relations and FP&A

(306) 933-8545 – investors@nutrien.com

Media Contact:

Simon Scott

Vice President, Global Communications

(403) 225-7213 – media@nutrien.com

More information about Nutrien can be found at www.nutrien.com.

Selected financial data for download can be found in our data tool at https://www.nutrien.com/investors/interactive-data-tool Such data is not incorporated by reference herein.

 

 

Nutrien will host a Conference Call on Thursday, May 7, 2026 at 10:00 a.m. Eastern Time.

Telephone conference dial-in numbers:

 

 

From Canada and the US: 1-800-990-2777

 
 

International: 1-416-855-9085

 
 

Conference ID: 89180. Please dial in 15 minutes prior to ensure you are placed on the call in a timely manner.

 

Live Audio Webcast: Visit https://www.nutrien.com/news/events/2026-q1-earnings-conference-call

 

17


Non-GAAP Financial Measures

We use both IFRS measures and certain non-GAAP financial measures to assess performance. Non-GAAP financial measures are financial measures disclosed by the Company that: (a) depict historical or expected future financial performance, financial position or cash flow of the Company; (b) with respect to their composition, exclude amounts that are included in, or include amounts that are excluded from, the composition of the most directly comparable financial measure disclosed in the primary financial statements of the Company; (c) are not disclosed in the financial statements of the Company; and (d) are not a ratio, fraction, percentage or similar representation. Non-GAAP ratios are financial measures disclosed by the Company that are in the form of a ratio, fraction, percentage or similar representation that has a non-GAAP financial measure as one or more of its components, and that are not disclosed in the financial statements of the Company.

These non-GAAP financial measures and non-GAAP ratios are not standardized financial measures under IFRS and, therefore, are unlikely to be comparable to similar financial measures presented by other companies. Management believes these non-GAAP financial measures and non-GAAP ratios provide transparent and useful supplemental information to help investors evaluate our financial performance, financial condition and liquidity using the same measures as management. These non-GAAP financial measures and non-GAAP ratios should not be considered as a substitute for, or superior to, measures of financial performance prepared in accordance with IFRS.

The following section outlines our non-GAAP financial measures and non-GAAP ratios, their compositions, and why management uses each measure. It also includes reconciliations to the most directly comparable IFRS measures. Except as otherwise described herein, our non-GAAP financial measures and non-GAAP ratios are calculated on a consistent basis from period to period and are adjusted for specific items in each period, as applicable. As additional non-recurring or unusual items arise in the future, we generally exclude these items in our calculations.

Adjusted EBITDA (Consolidated)

Most directly comparable IFRS financial measure: Net earnings (loss).

Definition: Adjusted EBITDA is calculated as net earnings (loss) before finance costs, income taxes, depreciation and amortization, share-based compensation and foreign exchange gain/loss (net of related derivatives). We also adjust this measure for the following other income and expenses that are excluded when management evaluates the performance of our day-to-day operations: certain integration and restructuring related costs, impairment or reversal of impairment of assets, gain or loss on sale of certain businesses and investments, asset retirement obligations (“ARO”) and accrued environmental costs (“ERL”) related to our non-operating sites, and loss related to financial instruments in Argentina.

Why we use the measure and why it is useful to investors: It is not impacted by long-term investment and financing decisions, but rather focuses on the performance of our day-to-day operations. It provides a measure of our ability to service debt and to meet other payment obligations and as a component of employee remuneration calculations.

 

    

Three Months Ended March 31 

($ millions)

         2026           2025  

Net earnings

     139        19   

Finance costs

     176       179  

Income tax expense

     45       28  

Depreciation and amortization

     606       571  

EBITDA1

     966       797  

Adjustments:

    

Share-based compensation expense

     116       42  

Foreign exchange loss, net of related derivatives

     5       7  

ARO/ERL related (income) expenses for non-operating sites

     (28     5  

Restructuring costs

     16       1  

Impairment of assets recorded in other income and expenses

     30       -  

Adjusted EBITDA

     1,105       852  

1 EBITDA is calculated as net earnings before finance costs, income taxes, and depreciation and amortization.

 

18


Adjusted Net Earnings and Adjusted Net Earnings Per Share

Most directly comparable IFRS financial measure: Net earnings (loss) and diluted net earnings (loss) per share.

Definition: Adjusted net earnings and related per share information are calculated as net earnings (loss) before share-based compensation and foreign exchange gain/loss (net of related derivatives), net of tax. We also adjust this measure for the following other income and expenses (net of tax) that are excluded when management evaluates the performance of our day-to-day operations: certain integration and restructuring related costs, impairment or reversal of impairment of assets, gain or loss on sale of certain businesses and investments, gain or loss on early extinguishment of debt or on settlement of derivatives due to discontinuance of hedge accounting, asset retirement obligations and accrued environmental costs related to our non-operating sites, loss related to financial instruments in Argentina, change in recognition of tax losses and deductible temporary differences related to impairments and certain changes to tax declarations. We generally apply the annual forecasted effective tax rate to specific adjustments during the year, and at year-end, we apply the actual effective tax rate.

Why we use the measure and why it is useful to investors: Focuses on the performance of our day-to-day operations and is used as a component of employee remuneration calculations.

 

    

Three Months Ended

March 31, 2026

 

($ millions, except as otherwise noted)

    
Increases
(Decreases)
 
 
    Post-Tax      

Per
Diluted
Share
 
 
 

Net earnings attributable to equity holders of
Nutrien

             131       0.27  

Adjustments:

      

Share-based compensation expense

     116       88       0.18  

Foreign exchange loss, net of related derivatives

     5       10       0.02  

Restructuring costs

     16       16       0.03  

Impairment of assets recorded in other income and expenses

     30       22       0.05  

ARO/ERL related (income) for non-operating sites

     (28     (22     (0.04

Sub-total adjustments

     139       114       0.24  

Adjusted net earnings

             245       0.51  
    

Three Months Ended

March 31, 2025

 

($ millions, except as otherwise noted)

    
Increases
(Decreases)
 
 
    Post-Tax      

Per
Diluted
Share
 
 
 

Net earnings attributable to equity holders of
Nutrien

             11       0.02  

Adjustments:

      

Share-based compensation expense

     42       31       0.06  

Foreign exchange loss, net of related derivatives

     7       6       0.01  

Restructuring costs

     1       1       -  

ARO/ERL related expenses for non-operating sites

     5       4       0.02  

Sub-total adjustments

     55       42       0.09  

Adjusted net earnings

             53       0.11  

 

19


Effective Tax Rate on Adjusted Net Earnings

Effective tax rate on adjusted net earnings guidance is a forward-looking non-GAAP financial measure as it includes adjusted net earnings, which is a non-GAAP financial measure. It is provided to assist readers in understanding our expected financial results. Effective tax rate on adjusted net earnings guidance excludes certain items that management is aware of that permit management to focus on the performance of our operations (see the Adjusted Net Earnings and Adjusted Net Earnings Per Share section for items generally adjusted). We do not provide a reconciliation of this forward-looking measure to the most directly comparable financial measures calculated and presented in accordance with IFRS because a meaningful or accurate calculation of reconciling items and the information is not available without unreasonable effort due to unknown variables, including the timing and amount of certain reconciling items, and the uncertainty related to future results. These unknown variables may include unpredictable transactions of significant value that may be inherently difficult to determine without unreasonable efforts. The probable significance of such unavailable information, which could be material to future results, cannot be addressed.

Gross Margin Excluding Depreciation and Amortization Per Tonne – Manufactured Product

Most directly comparable IFRS financial measure: Gross margin.

Definition: Gross margin per tonne less depreciation and amortization per tonne for manufactured products. Reconciliations are provided in the “Segment Results” section.

Why we use the measure and why it is useful to investors: Focuses on the performance of our day-to-day operations, which excludes the effects of items that primarily reflect the impact of long-term investment and financing decisions.

Potash Controllable Cash Cost of Product Manufactured (“COPM”) Per Tonne

Most directly comparable IFRS financial measure: Cost of goods sold (“COGS”) for the Potash segment.

Definition: Total Potash COGS excluding depreciation and amortization expense included in COPM, royalties, natural gas costs and carbon taxes, change in inventory, and other adjustments, divided by potash production tonnes.

Why we use the measure and why it is useful to investors: To assess operational performance. Potash controllable cash COPM excludes the effects of production from other periods and the impacts of our long-term investment decisions, supporting a focus on the performance of our day-to-day operations. Potash controllable cash COPM also excludes royalties and natural gas costs and carbon taxes, which management does not consider controllable, as they are primarily driven by regulatory and market conditions.

 

    

Three Months Ended March 31 

($ millions, except as otherwise noted)

         2026           2025  

Total COGS – Potash

     422        380   

Change in inventory

     8       7  

Other adjustments1

     (5     (13

COPM

     425       374  

Depreciation and amortization in COPM

     (171     (145

Royalties in COPM

     (26     (19

Natural gas costs and carbon taxes in COPM

     (13     (12

Controllable cash COPM

     215       198  

Production volumes (tonnes – thousands)

     3,660       3,289  

Potash controllable cash COPM per tonne

     59       60  

1 Other adjustments include unallocated production overhead that is recognized as part of cost of goods sold but is not included in the measurement of inventory and changes in inventory balances.

 

20


Retail Cash Operating Coverage Ratio

Definition: Retail selling, general and administrative, and other expenses (income), excluding depreciation and amortization expense, divided by Retail gross margin excluding depreciation and amortization expense in cost of goods sold, for the last four rolling quarters.

Why we use the measure and why it is useful to investors: To understand the costs and underlying economics of our Retail operations and to assess our Retail operating performance and ability to generate cash flow.

 

$                          $                          $                          $                         
    Rolling Four Quarters Ended March 31, 2026

($ millions, except as otherwise noted)

    Q2 2025       Q3 2025       Q4 2025       Q1 2026     Total  

Selling expenses

    948       792       811       798     3,349  

General and administrative expenses

    44       44       40       44     172  

Other expenses

    54       40       4       36     134  

Operating expenses

    1,046       876       855       878     3,655  

Depreciation and amortization in operating expenses

    (172     (179     (184     (179   (714) 

Operating expenses excluding depreciation and amortization

    874       697       671       699     2,941  

Gross margin

    2,018       922       977       800     4,717  

Depreciation and amortization in cost of goods sold

    5       5       5       5     20  

Gross margin excluding depreciation and amortization

    2,023       927       982       805     4,737  

Cash operating coverage ratio (%)

                                  62  
    Rolling Four Quarters Ended December 31, 2025

($ millions, except as otherwise noted)

    Q1 2025       Q2 2025       Q3 2025       Q4 2025     Total  

Selling expenses

    755       948       792       811     3,306  

General and administrative expenses

    44       44       44       40     172  

Other expenses

    25       54       40       4     123  

Operating expenses

    824       1,046       876       855     3,601  

Depreciation and amortization in operating expenses

    (179     (172     (179     (184   (714) 

Operating expenses excluding depreciation and amortization

    645       874       697       671     2,887  

Gross margin

    686       2,018       922       977     4,603  

Depreciation and amortization in cost of goods sold

    5       5       5       5     20  

Gross margin excluding depreciation and amortization

    691       2,023       927       982     4,623  

Cash operating coverage ratio (%)

                                  62  

Retail Average Working Capital to Sales

Definition: Retail average working capital divided by Retail sales for the last four rolling quarters.

Why we use the measure and why it is useful to investors: To evaluate operational efficiency. A lower or higher percentage represents increased or decreased efficiency, respectively.

 

$                             $                             $                             $                            
    Rolling Four Quarters Ended March 31, 2026

($ millions, except as otherwise noted)

    Q2 2025       Q3 2025       Q4 2025       Q1 2026     Average/Total  

Current assets

    11,442       10,823       11,185       12,558    

Current liabilities

    (8,051     (5,348     (8,275     (7,799    

Working capital

    3,391       5,475       2,910       4,759     4,134  
                                     

Sales

    7,959       3,427       3,144       3,640     18,170  

Average working capital to sales (%)

                                  23  
    Rolling Four Quarters Ended December 31, 2025

($ millions, except as otherwise noted)

    Q1 2025       Q2 2025       Q3 2025       Q4 2025     Average/Total  

Current assets

    11,510       11,442       10,823       11,185    

Current liabilities

    (7,561     (8,051     (5,348     (8,275    

Working capital

    3,949       3,391       5,475       2,910     3,931  
                                     

Sales

    3,090       7,959       3,427       3,144     17,620  

Average working capital to sales (%)

                                  22  

 

21


Other Financial Measures

Selected Additional Financial Data

 

Nutrien Financial Aging

 

 

As at March 31, 2026

 

   

As at

December 31, 2025

 

 

($ millions)

    Current      

<31 Days

past due

 

 

   

31–90
Days

past due

 
 

 

   

>90 Days

past due

 

 

   
Gross
receivables
 
 
    Allowance1       
Net
receivables2
 
 
   

Net

receivables

 

 

North America

    1,566       89       223       196       2,074       (55      2,019        2,332  

International

    879       64       53       26       1,022       (6      1,016       774  

Nutrien Financial
receivables

    2,445       153       276       222       3,096       (61      3,035       3,106  

1 Bad debt expense on the above receivables for the three months ended March 31, 2026 was $9 million, in the Retail segment.

2 In 2026, we assume a debt-to-equity ratio of 9:1 (2025 – 9:1) in funding Nutrien Financial receivables, based on the underlying credit quality of the assets.

 

Nutrien Financial Net Receivables

  Rolling Four Quarters Ended March 31, 2026

($ millions, except as otherwise noted)

  Q2 2025   Q3 2025   Q4 2025     Q1 2026     Average/Total 

Average Nutrien Financial net receivables

  4,645   4,452   3,106   3,035    3,810 

Supplementary Financial Measures

Supplementary financial measures are financial measures disclosed by the Company that (a) are, or are intended to be, disclosed on a periodic basis to depict the historical or expected future financial performance, financial position or cash flow of the Company, (b) are not disclosed in the financial statements of the Company, (c) are not non-GAAP financial measures, and (d) are not non-GAAP ratios.

The following section provides an explanation of the composition of those supplementary financial measures, if not previously provided.

Sustaining capital expenditures: Represents capital expenditures that are required to sustain operations at existing levels and include major repairs and maintenance and plant turnarounds.

Investing capital expenditures: Represents capital expenditures related to significant expansions of current operations or to create cost savings (synergies). Investing capital expenditures exclude capital outlays for business acquisitions and equity-accounted investees.

Mine development and pre-stripping capital expenditures: Represents capital expenditures that are required for activities to open new areas underground and/or develop a mine or ore body to allow for future production mining and activities required to prepare and/or access the ore, i.e., removal of an overburden that allows access to the ore.

Cash used for dividends and share repurchases: Calculated as dividends paid to Nutrien’s shareholders plus repurchase of common shares as reflected in the unaudited condensed consolidated statements of cash flows. This measure is useful as it represents return of cash to shareholders.

 

22


Unaudited

 

Condensed Consolidated Financial Statements

Condensed Consolidated Statements of Earnings

 

          

Three Months Ended
March 31

 
 ($ millions, except as otherwise noted)    Note     2026     2025  

Sales

     2, 8       6,046       5,100  

Freight, transportation and distribution

       244       226  

Cost of goods sold

             4,156       3,554  

Gross Margin

       1,646       1,320  

Selling expenses

       799       757  

General and administrative expenses

       164       152  

Provincial mining taxes

       90       68  

Share-based compensation expense

       116       42  

Foreign exchange loss, net of related derivatives

       3       7  

Other expenses

     3       114       68  

Earnings Before Finance Costs and Income Taxes

 

    360       226  

Finance costs

             176       179  

Earnings Before Income Taxes

       184       47  

Income tax expense

     4       45       28  

Net Earnings

             139       19  

Attributable to

      

Equity holders of Nutrien

       131       11  

Non-controlling interest

             8       8  

Net Earnings

             139       19  

Net Earnings Per Share Attributable to Equity Holders of Nutrien (“EPS”)

 

Basic

       0.27       0.02  

Diluted

             0.27       0.02  

Weighted average shares outstanding for basic EPS

       481,260,000       489,397,000  

Weighted average shares outstanding for diluted EPS

              481,647,000        489,540,000  
Condensed Consolidated Statements of Comprehensive Income

 

          

Three Months Ended
March 31

 
 ($ millions, net of related income taxes)           2026     2025  

Net Earnings

       139       19  

Other comprehensive income

      

Items that will not be reclassified to net earnings:

      

Net fair value loss on investments

       -       (18

Items that have been or may be subsequently reclassified to net earnings:

      

Gain on currency translation of foreign operations

       72       39  

Other

             (6     4  

Other Comprehensive Income

             66       25  

Comprehensive Income

             205       44  

Attributable to

      

Equity holders of Nutrien

       196       36  

Non-controlling interest

             9       8  

Comprehensive Income

             205       44  

(See Notes to the Condensed Consolidated Financial Statements)

 

23


Unaudited

 

Condensed Consolidated Statements of Cash Flows

 

          

Three Months Ended
March 31

 
 ($ millions)    Note     2026     2025  

Operating Activities

      

Net earnings

       139       19  

Adjustments for:

      

Depreciation and amortization

       606       571  

Share-based compensation expense

       116       42  

Provision for deferred income tax

       41       80  

Net undistributed earnings of equity-accounted investees

       (1     (5

Long-term income tax receivables and payables

       (15     (38

Other long-term assets, liabilities and miscellaneous

             27       5  

Cash from operations before working capital changes

       913       674  

Changes in non-cash operating working capital:

      

Receivables

       (530     (143

Inventories and prepaid expenses and other current assets

       (991     (1,274

Trade, other payables and accrued liabilities

             (243     (339

Cash Used in Operating Activities

             (851     (1,082

Investing Activities

      

Capital expenditures1

       (325     (300

Business acquisitions, net of cash acquired

       (50     (11

Purchase of investments, held within three months, net

       (8     (16

Purchase of investments

       -       (2

Proceeds from sale of investments

       -       183  

Net changes in non-cash working capital

       (94     (88

Other

             (10     (9

Cash Used in Investing Activities

             (487     (243

Financing Activities

      

Proceeds from debt, maturing within three months, net

       1,921       912  

Proceeds from debt

       -       998  

Repayment of debt

       (9     (4

Repayment of principal portion of lease liabilities

       (100     (110

Dividends paid to Nutrien’s shareholders

     7       (262     (265

Repurchase of common shares

     7       (147     (148

Issuance of common shares

       45       3  

Other

             (22     (21

Cash Provided by Financing Activities

             1,426       1,365  

Effect of Exchange Rate Changes on Cash and Cash Equivalents

             1       2  

Increase in Cash and Cash Equivalents

             89       42  

January 1, 2026 opening balance prior to restatement for amendments to IFRS 9

     9       701       -  

Adjustment on initial application of amendments to IFRS 9 on January 1, 2026

     9       (13     -  

Cash and Cash Equivalents – Beginning of Period

             688       853  

Cash and Cash Equivalents – End of Period

             777       895  

Cash and cash equivalents is composed of:

      

Cash

               712               828  

Short-term investments

             65       67  
               777       895  

Supplemental Cash Flows Information

      

Interest paid

       148       132  

Income taxes paid

       37       7  

Total cash outflow for leases

             137       150  

1 Includes additions to property, plant and equipment, and intangible assets for the three months ended March 31, 2026 of $299 million and $26 million (2025 – $279 million and $21 million).

(See Notes to the Condensed Consolidated Financial Statements)

 

24


Unaudited

Condensed Consolidated Statements of Changes in Shareholders’ Equity

 

                     

Accumulated other comprehensive

(loss) income (“AOCI”)

                         

 ($ millions, inclusive of related tax, except as otherwise

 noted)

  Number of
common
shares
    Share
capital
    Contributed
surplus
    (Loss) gain
on currency
translation
of foreign
operations
    Other     Total
AOCI
    Retained
earnings
    Equity
holders
of
Nutrien
    Non-
controlling
interest
    Total
equity
 
             

Balance – December 31, 2024

    491,025,446       13,748       68       (537     22       (515     11,106       24,407       35       24,442  
             

Net earnings

    -       -       -       -       -       -       11       11       8       19  
             

Other comprehensive income (loss)

    -       -       -       39       (14       25       -       25       -       25  
             

Shares repurchased for cancellation (Note 7)

    (2,862,814     (80     -       -       -       -       (69     (149     -       (149
             

Dividends declared1

    -       -       -       -       -       -       (266     (266     -       (266
             

Non-controlling interest transactions

    -       -       -       -       -       -       -       -       (11     (11
             

Effect of share-based compensation including
issuance of common shares

    59,751       3       1       -       -       -       -       4       -       4  
             

Transfer of net gain on sale of investment

    -       -       -       -       (27     (27     27       -       -       -  
             

Transfer of net loss on cash flow hedges

    -       -       -       -       6       6       -       6       -       6  
             

Balance – March 31, 2025

    488,222,383       13,671       69       (498     (13     (511     10,809       24,038       32       24,070  
             

Balance – December 31, 2025

    481,962,233       13,519       57       (329     -       (329     12,076       25,323       42       25,365  
             

Net earnings

    -       -       -       -       -       -       131       131       8       139  
             

Other comprehensive income (loss)

    -       -       -       71       (6     65       -       65       1       66  
             

Shares repurchased for cancellation (Note 7)

    (2,081,503     (58     -       -       -       -       (90     (148     -       (148
             

Dividends declared1

    -       -       -       -       -       -       (264     (264     -       (264
             

Non-controlling interest transactions

    -       -       -       -       -       -       -       -       (13     (13
             

Effect of share-based compensation including
issuance of common shares

    876,975       54       (8     -       -       -       -       46       -       46  
           

Transfer of net loss on cash flow hedges

    -       -       -       -       1       1       -       1       -       1  
           

Balance – March 31, 2026

    480,757,705       13,515       49       (258     (5     (263     11,853       25,154       38       25,192  

1 During the three months ended March 31, 2026, we declared dividends of $0.55 per share (2025 - $0.545 per share).

(See Notes to the Condensed Consolidated Financial Statements)

 

25


Unaudited

 

Condensed Consolidated Balance Sheets

 

         

As at March 31

          As at
December 31
 
 ($ millions)   

Note

       2026          2025                2025  

Assets

              

Current assets

              

Cash and cash equivalents

        777        895           701  

Receivables

  

8

     6,284        5,612           5,675  

Inventories

        8,681        7,992           6,977  

Prepaid expenses and other current assets

          733        863             1,396  
        16,475        15,362           14,749  

Non-current assets

              

Property, plant and equipment

        22,659        22,488           22,747  

Goodwill

        12,176        12,058           12,136  

Intangible assets

        1,621        1,791           1,667  

Investments

        146        495           144  

Other assets

          846        875             858  

Total Assets

          53,923        53,069             52,301  

Liabilities

              

Current liabilities

              

Short-term debt

  

6

     2,766        2,437           873  

Current portion of long-term debt

        1,036        1,038           513  

Current portion of lease liabilities

        362        364           346  

Trade, other payables and accrued liabilities

  

8

     9,137        8,752             9,309  
        13,301        12,591           11,041  

Non-current liabilities

              

Long-term debt

        8,825        9,870           9,350  

Lease liabilities

        957        998           937  

Deferred income tax liabilities

        3,701        3,591           3,666  

Pension and other post-retirement benefit liabilities

        218        225           221  

Asset retirement obligations and accrued environmental costs

        1,478        1,528           1,468  

Other non-current liabilities

          251        196             253  

Total Liabilities

          28,731        28,999             26,936  

Shareholders’ Equity

              

Share capital

  

7

     13,515        13,671           13,519  

Contributed surplus

        49        69           57  

Accumulated other comprehensive loss

        (263      (511         (329

Retained earnings

          11,853        10,809             12,076  

Equity holders of Nutrien

        25,154        24,038           25,323  

Non-controlling interest

          38        32             42  

Total Shareholders’ Equity

          25,192        24,070             25,365  

Total Liabilities and Shareholders’ Equity

          53,923        53,069             52,301  

(See Notes to the Condensed Consolidated Financial Statements)

 

26


Unaudited

 

Notes to the Condensed Consolidated Financial Statements

As at and for the Three Months Ended March 31, 2026

Note 1 Basis of presentation

Nutrien Ltd. (collectively with its subsidiaries, “Nutrien”, “we”, “us”, “our” or “the Company”) is a leading global provider of crop inputs and services. We operate a world-class network of production, distribution and ag retail facilities that positions us to efficiently serve the needs of farmers.

These unaudited interim condensed consolidated financial statements (“interim financial statements”) are based on International Financial Reporting Standards (“IFRS”) as issued by the International Accounting Standards Board and have been prepared in accordance with IAS 34, “Interim Financial Reporting”. The accounting policies and methods of computation used in preparing these interim financial statements are materially consistent with those used in the preparation of our 2025 annual audited consolidated financial statements with the exception of the amendments to IFRS 9 and IFRS 7, Amendments to the Classification and Measurement of Financial Instruments, which were adopted effective January 1, 2026 (refer to Note 9). These interim financial statements include the accounts of Nutrien and its subsidiaries; however, they do not include all disclosures normally provided in annual audited consolidated financial statements and should be read in conjunction with our 2025 annual audited consolidated financial statements. These interim financial statements are presented in millions of US dollars, unless otherwise indicated, which is the functional currency of Nutrien and the majority of its subsidiaries.

Certain immaterial 2025 figures have been reclassified in Note 2 Segment information.

In management’s opinion, the interim financial statements include all adjustments necessary to fairly present such information in all material respects. Interim results are not necessarily indicative of the results expected for any other interim period or the fiscal year.

These interim financial statements were authorized by the Audit Committee of the Board of Directors for issue on May 6, 2026.

Note 2 Segment information

We have four reportable operating segments: Retail, Potash, Nitrogen and Phosphate. Our downstream Retail segment distributes crop nutrients, crop protection products, seed and merchandise, and provides agronomic application services and solutions, including the services offered through Nutrien Financial. Retail also manufactures and distributes proprietary products and provides services directly to farmers through a network of retail locations in North America, Australia and South America. Our upstream Potash, Nitrogen and Phosphate segments are differentiated by the chemical nutrient contained in the products that each segment produces and are supported by midstream activities, which include the global sales, freight, transportation and distribution of our products, which are reported within these segments, respectively. Potash freight, transportation and distribution costs only apply to our North American potash sales volumes. Sales reported under our Corporate and Others segment relates to our non-core businesses. EBITDA presented in the succeeding tables is calculated as net earnings (loss) before finance costs, income taxes, and depreciation and amortization.

Seasonality in our business results from increased demand for products during planting season. Crop input sales are generally higher in the spring and fall application seasons. Crop input inventories are normally accumulated leading up to each application season. Our cash collections generally occur after the application season is complete, while customer prepayments made to us are typically concentrated in December and January and inventory prepayments paid to our suppliers are typically concentrated in the period from November to January. Feed and industrial sales are more evenly distributed throughout the year.

 

27


Unaudited

 

In the fourth quarter of 2025, the Chief Operating Decision Maker (“CODM”) reassessed our product groupings and determined that the performance of our Purchase for Resale business should be evaluated as part of the Corporate and Others segment. It had previously been presented in our Nitrogen segment. The Purchase for Resale business focuses primarily on sales to international customers. Purchased product that remains in upstream is primarily purchases of inventory to satisfy sales contracts that we cannot fulfill with our manufactured products. The CODM concluded this change was appropriate based on the nature and strategic alignment of purchase for resale activities. Comparative amounts for the Corporate and Others and Nitrogen segments were reclassified. As a result of the reclassification, the Corporate and Others segment reflected the following increases and the Nitrogen segment reflected the corresponding decreases for the three months ended March 31, 2025.

 

($ millions)

    
Three Months Ended
March 31, 2025
 
 

Sales

     70  

Gross Margin

     4  

EBITDA

     3  

 

    Three Months Ended March 31, 2026  
    Downstream           Upstream and Midstream                    
($ millions)   Retail            Potash     Nitrogen     Phosphate     Corporate
and Others
    Eliminations     Consolidated  

Sales  – third party

    3,640         966       884       478       78       -       6,046  

       – intersegment

    -               75       247       69       -       (391     -  

Sales  – total

    3,640         1,041       1,131       547       78       (391     6,046  

Freight, transportation and distribution1

    -               115       117       62       -       (50     244  

Net sales

    3,640         926       1,014       485       78       (341     5,802  

Cost of goods sold

    2,840               422       647       489       64       (306     4,156  

Gross margin

    800         504       367       (4     14       (35     1,646  

Selling expenses (recovery)

    798         3       6       2       (3     (7     799  

General and administrative expenses

    44         3       4       2       111       -       164  

Provincial mining taxes

    -         90       -       -       -       -       90  

Share-based compensation expense

    -         -       -       -       116       -       116  

Foreign exchange (gain) loss, net of related derivatives

    (2       -       -       -       5       -       3  

Other expenses

    36               26       27       7       10       8       114  

Earnings (loss) before finance costs and income taxes

    (76       382       330       (15     (225     (36     360  

Depreciation and amortization

    184               175       152       72       23       -       606  

EBITDA

    108         557       482       57       (202     (36     966  

Restructuring costs (Note 3)

    -         -       -       -       16       -       16  

Share-based compensation expense

    -         -       -       -       116       -       116  

Impairment of assets recorded in other income and expenses (Note 3)

    -         21       -       -       9       -       30  

ARO/ERL related income for non-operating sites2 (Note 3) 

    -         -       -       -       (28     -       (28

Foreign exchange loss, net of related derivatives

    -               -       -       -       5       -       5  

Adjusted EBITDA

    108               578       482       57       (84     (36     1,105  

1 Potash freight, transportation and distribution costs only apply to our North American potash sales volumes.

2 ARO/ERL refers to asset retirement obligations and accrued environmental costs.

 

28


Unaudited

 

    Three Months Ended March 31, 2025  
    Downstream           Upstream and Midstream                    
($ millions)   Retail            Potash     Nitrogen1     Phosphate     Corporate
and Others1
    Eliminations     Consolidated  

Sales  – third party

    3,090         766       822       338       84       -       5,100  

       – intersegment

    -               95       182       67       -       (344     -  

Sales  – total

    3,090         861       1,004       405       84       (344     5,100  

Freight, transportation and distribution2

    -               117       119       45       1       (56     226  

Net sales

    3,090         744       885       360       83       (288     4,874  

Cost of goods sold

    2,404               380       598       361       69       (258     3,554  

Gross margin

    686         364       287       (1     14       (30     1,320  

Selling expenses (recovery)

    755         3       7       2       (3     (7     757  

General and administrative expenses

    44         2       5       2       99       -       152  

Provincial mining taxes

    -         68       -       -       -       -       68  

Share-based compensation expense

    -         -       -       -       42       -       42  

Foreign exchange loss, net of related derivatives

    -         -       -       -       7       -       7  

Other expenses

    25               2       12       6       18       5       68  

Earnings (loss) before finance costs and income taxes

    (138       289       263       (11     (149     (28     226  

Depreciation and amortization

    184               157       142       72       16       -       571  

EBITDA

    46         446       405       61       (133     (28     797  

Restructuring costs (Note 3)

    -         -       -       -       1       -       1  

Share-based compensation expense

    -         -       -       -       42       -       42  

ARO/ERL related expenses for non-operating sites (Note 3)

    -         -       -       -       5       -       5  

Foreign exchange loss, net of related derivatives

    -               -       -       -       7       -       7  

Adjusted EBITDA

    46               446       405       61       (78     (28     852  

1 Comparative figures have been reclassified for our Purchase for Resale business from Nitrogen to the Corporate and Others segment.

2 Potash freight, transportation and distribution costs only apply to our North American potash sales volumes.

 

29


Unaudited

 

   

Three Months Ended

March 31

 
($ millions)   2026     2025  

Retail sales by product line

   

Crop nutrients

    1,483       1,194  

Crop protection products

    1,137       972  

Seed

    562       532  

Services and other

    175       146  

Merchandise

    223       189  

Nutrien Financial

    80       70  

Nutrien Financial elimination1

    (20     (13
      3,640       3,090  

Potash sales by geography

   

Manufactured product

   

North America

    484       434  

Offshore2

    557       426  

Other potash and purchased products

    -       1  
      1,041       861  

Nitrogen sales by product line

   

Manufactured product

   

Ammonia

    167       240  

Urea and ESN®

    416       382  

Solutions, nitrates and sulfates

    416       321  

Other nitrogen and purchased products3

    132       61  
      1,131       1,004  

Phosphate sales by product line

   

Manufactured product

   

Fertilizer

    359       249  

Industrial and feed

    183       151  

Other phosphate and purchased products

    5       5  
      547       405  

1 Represents elimination of the interest and service fees charged by Nutrien Financial to Retail branches.

2 Relates to Canpotex Limited (“Canpotex”) (see Note 8) and includes provisional pricing adjustments for the three months ended March 31, 2026 of $(3) million (2025 – $31 million).

3 Comparative figures have been reclassified for our Purchase for Resale business from Nitrogen to the Corporate and Others segment.

Note 3 Other expenses (income)

 

   

Three Months Ended

March 31

 
($ millions)       2026         2025  

Restructuring costs

    16       1  

Earnings of equity-accounted investees

    (2     (5

Bad debt expense

    15       19  

Project feasibility costs

    18       15  

Customer prepayment costs

    19       18  

Legal expenses

    5       5  

ARO/ERL related (income) expenses for non-operating sites

    (28     5  

Impairment of assets

    30       -  

Other expenses

    41       10  
      114       68  

 

30


Unaudited

 

Note 4 Income taxes

 

   

Three Months Ended

March 31

 
($ millions, except as otherwise noted)       2026         2025  

Actual effective tax rate on earnings (%)

    29       49  

Actual effective tax rate including discrete items (%)

    24       60  

Discrete tax adjustments that impacted the tax rate1

    (8     5  

1 Discrete tax adjustments arise from specific, significant or unusual events that are recognized in the period in which the event occurs, rather than being allocated across the year through the annual effective tax rate.

Note 5 Financial instruments

During the three months ended March 31, 2026, we entered into interest rate derivative contracts to manage exposure to changes in variable interest rates on certain long-term debt instruments.

The following table presents the Company’s interest rate derivatives outstanding as at March 31, 2026:

 

    As at March 31, 2026   
($ millions, except as otherwise noted)   Notional1     Maturities
(year)
    Average fixed
interest rate (%)
    Fair value of
assets2
 

Interest rate derivatives - 5-year

    250       2026       3.6473       3  

Interest rate derivatives - 10-year

    350       2026       4.0774       8  

1 Notional amounts represent the gross contractual amount outstanding.

2 Fair value of interest rate derivatives are based on a discounted cash flow model using observable market inputs which are classified as Level 2.

Our financial instruments carrying amounts are a reasonable approximation of their fair values, except for our long-term debt, including current portion, that has a carrying value of $9,861 million and fair value of $9,372 million as at March 31, 2026. There were no transfers between levels for financial instruments measured at fair value on a recurring basis.

Note 6 Debt

On March 3, 2026, we entered into a $69 million uncommitted revolving demand facility. As at March 31, 2026, there were no borrowings outstanding under this facility.

During the three months ended March 31, 2026, we extended the maturity of our accounts receivable purchase facility from March 6, 2026 to March 31, 2028.

Note 7 Share capital

Share repurchase programs

The following table summarizes our share repurchase activities during the periods indicated below:

 

   

Three Months Ended

March 31

 
($ millions, except as otherwise noted)   2026     2025  

Number of common shares repurchased for cancellation

    2,081,503       2,862,814  

Average price per share (US dollars)

    70.97       51.08  

Total cost, inclusive of tax

    148       149  

Subsequent to March 31, 2026, as of May 5, 2026, an additional 865,577 common shares were repurchased for cancellation at a cost of $66 million and an average price per share of $73.71.

Dividends declared

We declared a dividend per share of $0.55 (2025 – $0.545) during the three months ended March 31, 2026, payable on April 16, 2026 to shareholders of record on March 31, 2026.

 

31


Unaudited

 

Note 8 Related party transactions

We sell potash outside Canada and the US exclusively through Canpotex. Our total revenue is recognized, at the time product is loaded for shipping, at the amount received from Canpotex representing proceeds from their sale of potash, less net costs of Canpotex. The receivable outstanding from Canpotex arose from sale transactions described above. It is unsecured and bears no interest. Any credit losses held against this receivable are expected to be negligible. Canpotex sells potash to buyers, including Nutrien, in export markets pursuant to term and spot contracts at agreed-upon prices. Purchases from Canpotex for the three months ended March 31, 2026 were $64 million (2025 – $57 million).

 

($ millions)   As at
March 31, 2026
    As at
December 31, 2025
 

Receivables from Canpotex

    293       279  

Payables to Canpotex

    74       63  

Note 9 Accounting policies, estimates and judgments

Amendments to IFRS 9 and IFRS 7, Amendments to the Classification and Measurement of Financial Instruments

Amendments to IFRS 9 and IFRS 7, Amendments to the Classification and Measurement of Financial Instruments, were adopted effective January 1, 2026, the required adoption date. The amendments clarified the timing of recognition and derecognition of financial assets and financial liabilities. The adoption resulted in a change in the accounting policy relating to the timing of the derecognition of certain financial assets and financial liabilities, such that derecognition now occurs upon settlement.

The amendments were applied retrospectively without restatement of prior periods in accordance with the transitional provisions other than, on initial adoption, there was an adjustment of $(13) million to opening cash and cash equivalents as at January 1, 2026, which has been reflected in the condensed consolidated statement of cash flows for the three months ended March 31, 2026.

 

32

Exhibit 99.2

 

 

 

LOGO

NUTRIEN LTD.

MANAGEMENT’S DISCUSSION AND ANALYSIS

AS AT AND FOR THE THREE MONTHS ENDED

MARCH 31, 2026

 

 

 


Management’s Discussion and Analysis

The following management’s discussion and analysis (“MD&A”) is the responsibility of management and is dated as of May 6, 2026. The Board of Directors (“Board”) of Nutrien carries out its responsibility for review of this disclosure principally through its Audit Committee, composed entirely of independent directors. The Audit Committee reviews and, prior to its publication, approves this disclosure pursuant to the authority delegated to it by the Board. The term “Nutrien” refers to Nutrien Ltd. and the terms “we”, “us”, “our”, “Nutrien” and “the Company” refer to Nutrien and, as applicable, Nutrien and its direct and indirect subsidiaries on a consolidated basis. Additional information relating to Nutrien (which, except as otherwise noted, is not incorporated by reference herein), including our annual report dated February 19, 2026 (“2025 Annual Report”), which includes our annual audited consolidated financial statements (“annual financial statements”) and MD&A, and our annual information form dated February 19, 2026, each for the year ended December 31, 2025, can be found on SEDAR+ at www.sedarplus.ca and on EDGAR at www.sec.gov. No update is provided to the disclosure in our 2025 annual MD&A except for material information since the date of our annual MD&A. The Company is a foreign private issuer under the rules and regulations of the US Securities and Exchange Commission (the “SEC”).

This MD&A is based on, and should be read in conjunction with, the Company’s unaudited interim condensed consolidated financial statements as at and for the three months ended March 31, 2026 (“interim financial statements”) based on International Financial Reporting Standards (“IFRS”) as issued by the International Accounting Standards Board and prepared in accordance with International Accounting Standard (“IAS”) 34 “Interim Financial Reporting”, unless otherwise noted. This MD&A contains certain non-GAAP financial measures and ratios and forward-looking statements, which are described in the “Non-GAAP Financial Measures” and the “Forward-Looking Statements” sections, respectively.

 

2


Market Outlook and Guidance

 

 

The conflict in the Middle East and related geopolitical uncertainty has disrupted global fertilizer and energy markets, with the most direct impact on nitrogen and phosphate supply from that region, as well as associated feedstock cost and availability. The outlook below reflects current market conditions and ongoing market dynamics.

Agriculture and Retail Markets

 

 

Higher global grain and oilseed production in 2025 increased stocks-to-use ratios towards historical average levels and led to significant nutrient removal from the soil. Strong demand for food, feed and biofuel is expected to drive continued need for higher global crop production and related crop inputs. Global grain and oilseed prices have strengthened in 2026 due to robust demand and the emergence of regional weather issues that could impact prospective production.

 

 

We have maintained our US crop acreage projections with corn plantings of 94 to 96 million acres and soybean plantings of 84 to 86 million acres in 2026. We have seen healthy crop input demand over the first four months of 2026 in line with our prior expectations, supported by above average planting progress and the need to replenish soil nutrients following last year’s record crop.

 

 

In Australia, favorable weather conditions across key cropping regions and strong livestock prices are supporting sales of retail products and services. In Brazil, safrinha corn planting supported crop input demand in the first quarter and growers prioritized potash purchases.

Crop Nutrient Markets

 

 

Global potash demand remains strong and we have maintained our previous forecast range for global potash shipments of 74 to 77 million tonnes in 2026. We anticipate relatively tight potash fundamentals throughout 2026 with demand trends expected to test existing global operating and supply chain capabilities.

 

 

Global nitrogen market fundamentals have tightened due to trade flow disruptions and elevated natural gas costs and LNG availability have impacted nitrogen production and costs for producers in Asia, Europe and other key regions. The outlook for the remainder of 2026 is expected to be impacted by uneven restoration of trade flows and restart of nitrogen assets, as well as uncertainty regarding Chinese urea exports and Indian urea imports.

 

 

Global phosphate supply and demand has been impacted by trade flow disruptions, lower global operating rates due to elevated feedstock costs that have pressured margins, and continued uncertainty regarding Chinese exports.

 

3


Financial and Operational Guidance

 

 

We have maintained all 2026 full year financial and operational guidance ranges.

 

 

Retail adjusted EBITDA guidance of $1.75 to $1.95 billion represents structural growth in our downstream business consistent with historical rates.

 

 

Potash sales volume guidance of 14.1 to 14.8 million tonnes is consistent with our global shipment expectation.

 

 

Nitrogen sales volume guidance of 9.2 to 9.7 million tonnes is supported by planned reliability improvements and debottlenecks.

 

 

Phosphate sales volume guidance of 2.4 to 2.6 million tonnes reflect the benefits of reliability improvement initiatives completed in 2025.

 

 

Total capital expenditures guidance of $2.0 to $2.1 billion is consistent with 2025 as we continue to optimize capital to sustain safe and reliable operations and to progress a set of targeted growth investments. The total includes approximately $400 million in investing capital expenditures focused on proprietary products, network optimization and digital capabilities in Retail, low-cost brownfield expansions and product optimization projects in Nitrogen, and mine automation in Potash.

All guidance numbers, including those noted above, are outlined in the table below. Refer to page 33 of our 2025 Annual Report for anticipated fertilizer pricing and natural gas price sensitivities relating to adjusted EBITDA (consolidated) and adjusted net earnings per share.

 

$                                         $                                         $                                        
    2026 Guidance Ranges1 as of  
    May 6, 2026     February 18, 2026  

($ billions, except as otherwise noted)

       Low          High       Low       High  

Retail adjusted EBITDA

  1.75     1.95       1.75       1.95  

Potash sales volumes (million tonnes)2

  14.1     14.8       14.1       14.8  

Nitrogen sales volumes (million tonnes)2

  9.2     9.7       9.2       9.7  

Phosphate sales volumes (million tonnes)2

  2.4     2.6       2.4       2.6  

Depreciation and amortization

  2.4     2.5       2.4       2.5  

Finance costs

  0.65     0.75       0.65       0.75  

Effective tax rate on adjusted net earnings (%)3

  24.0     26.0       24.0       26.0  

Capital expenditures4

  2.0     2.1       2.0       2.1  

1 See the “Forward-Looking Statements” section.

2 Manufactured product only.

3 This is a non-GAAP financial measure. See the “Non-GAAP Financial Measures” section.

4 Comprised of sustaining capital expenditures, investing capital expenditures and mine development and pre-stripping capital expenditures, which are supplementary financial measures. See the “Other Financial Measures” section.

 

4


Consolidated Results

 

     Three Months Ended March 31 

($ millions, except as otherwise noted)

        2026         2025        % Change  

Sales

     6,046        5,100        19   

Gross margin

     1,646       1,320       25  

Expenses

     1,286       1,094       18  

Net earnings

     139       19       n/m  

Adjusted EBITDA1

     1,105       852       30  

Diluted net earnings per share (dollars)2

     0.27       0.02       n/m  

Adjusted net earnings per share (dollars)1,2

     0.51       0.11       n/m  

1 This is a non-GAAP financial measure. See the “Non-GAAP Financial Measures” section.

2 All references to per share amounts pertain to diluted net earnings per share, unless otherwise noted.

Net earnings and adjusted EBITDA increased in the first quarter of 2026 primarily due to higher fertilizer global benchmarks, increased Retail earnings and record Potash sales volumes compared to the first quarter of 2025.

Segment Results

Our discussion of segment results set out on the following pages is a comparison of the results for the three months ended March 31, 2026 to the results for the three months ended March 31, 2025, unless otherwise noted.

 

 

 Retail

 

 

     Three Months Ended March 31 

($ millions, except as otherwise noted)

        2026         2025        % Change  

Sales

     3,640        3,090        18   

Cost of goods sold

     2,840       2,404       18  

Gross margin

     800       686       17  

Adjusted EBITDA1

     108       46       135  

1 See Note 2 to the interim financial statements.

 

 

Retail adjusted EBITDA increased in the first quarter of 2026 due to higher crop nutrient sales volumes and stronger proprietary products gross margins in the US and Australia. Expenses increased due to selling expenses related to higher sales volumes.

 

     Three Months Ended March 31 
     Sales         Gross Margin 

($ millions)

       2026         2025            2026         2025  

Crop nutrients

     1,483        1,194           250        219   

Crop protection products

     1,137       972          226       191  

Seed

     562       532          84       70  

Services and other

     175       146          144       118  

Merchandise

     223       189          36       31  

Nutrien Financial

     80       70          80       70  

Nutrien Financial elimination1

     (20     (13        (20     (13

Total

     3,640       3,090          800       686  

1 Represents elimination of the interest and service fees charged by Nutrien Financial to Retail branches.

 

 

Crop nutrients sales and gross margin increased in the first quarter of 2026 due to higher sales volumes from our core geographies, including an earlier start to field activity in the US relative to the same period in 2025.

 

 

Crop protection products sales and gross margin increased in the first quarter of 2026 due to higher sales of proprietary products, supported by earlier field activity in the US relative to the same period in 2025.

 

5


 

Seed sales and gross margin increased in the first quarter of 2026 due to higher sales volumes, including higher-margin canola seed.

 

 

Services and other sales and gross margin increased in the first quarter of 2026 due to a strong livestock market in Australia.

 

Supplemental Data    Three Months Ended March 31 
     Gross Margin         % of Product Line1

($ millions, except as otherwise noted)

       2026         2025            2026         2025  

Proprietary products

           

Crop nutrients

     80        69           32        31   

Crop protection products

     88       53          38       28  

Seed

     21       28          25       40  

Merchandise

     2       3          6       9  

Total

     191       153          24       22  

1 Represents percentage of proprietary product margins over total product line gross margin.

 

 
     Three Months Ended March 31
    

Sales Volumes 

(tonnes – thousands) 

      

 Gross Margin / Tonne 

 (dollars) 

         2026         2025            2026         2025  

Crop nutrients

           

North America

     1,600        1,464           131        130   

International

     848       826          48       34  

Total

     2,448       2,290          102       95  

 

(percentages)

      March 31, 2026          December 31, 2025  

Financial performance measures1,2

       

Cash operating coverage ratio

     62           62   

Average working capital to sales

     23          22  

1 Rolling four quarters.

2 These are non-GAAP financial measures. See the “Non-GAAP Financial Measures” section.

 

6


 

 Potash

 

 

     Three Months Ended March 31 

($ millions, except as otherwise noted)

       2026         2025        % Change  

Net sales

     926        744        24   

Cost of goods sold

     422       380       11  

Gross margin

     504       364       38  

Adjusted EBITDA1

     578       446       30  

1 See Note 2 to the interim financial statements.

 

 

Potash adjusted EBITDA increased in the first quarter of 2026 due to higher global benchmarks and record sales volumes. We increased potash production and continued to progress mine automation, maintaining our controllable cash cost of product manufactured1 below $60 per tonne.

 

Manufactured Product

    
Three Months Ended
March 31
 
 

($ per tonne, except as otherwise noted)

       2026         2025  

Sales volumes (tonnes – thousands)

    

North America

     1,285        1,312   

Offshore

     2,225       2,090  

Total sales volumes

     3,510       3,402  

Net selling price

    

North America

     287       243  

Offshore

     250       204  

Average net selling price

     264       219  

Cost of goods sold

     120       112  

Gross margin

     144       107  

Depreciation and amortization

     50       46  

Gross margin excluding depreciation and amortization1

     194       153  

1 This is a non-GAAP financial measure. See the “Non-GAAP Financial Measures” section.

 

 

Sales volumes in the first quarter of 2026 were the highest on record, supported by low inventory levels and favorable potash affordability in key offshore markets.

 

 

Net selling price per tonne increased in the first quarter of 2026 due to higher global benchmark prices.

 

 

Cost of goods sold per tonne increased in the first quarter of 2026 primarily due to higher depreciation. Controllable cash cost of product manufactured per tonne decreased in the first quarter of 2026 due to higher potash production.

 

Supplemental Data

    
Three Months Ended
March 31
 
 
         2026         2025  

Production volumes (tonnes – thousands)

     3,660        3,289   

Potash controllable cash cost of product manufactured per tonne1

     59       60  

Canpotex sales by market (percentage of sales volumes)2

    

Latin America

     41       31  

Other Asian markets3

     30       32  

China

     17       17  

India

     1       4  

Other markets

     11       16  

Total

     100       100  

1 This is a non-GAAP financial measure. See the “Non-GAAP Financial Measures” section.

2 See Note 8 to the interim financial statements.

3 All Asian markets except China and India.

 

7


 

 Nitrogen

 

 

     Three Months Ended March 31 

($ millions, except as otherwise noted)

       2026         20251,2        % Change  

Net sales

     1,014        885        15   

Cost of goods sold

     647       598       8  

Gross margin

     367       287       28  

Adjusted EBITDA2

     482       405       19  

1 Comparative figures have been reclassified for our Purchase for Resale business from Nitrogen to the Corporate and Others segment.

2 See Note 2 to the interim financial statements.

 

 

Nitrogen adjusted EBITDA increased in the first quarter of 2026 primarily due to higher global benchmarks. Our low-cost North American nitrogen plants delivered an ammonia operating rate2 of 92 percent in the first quarter of 2026, consistent with our planned production and reflective of a continued focus on reliability initiatives.

 

Manufactured Product

    
Three Months Ended
March 31
 
 

($ per tonne, except as otherwise noted)

       2026         2025  

Sales volumes (tonnes – thousands)

    

Ammonia

     298        496   

Urea and ESN®

     748       795  

Solutions, nitrates and sulfates

     1,295       1,178  

Total sales volumes

     2,341       2,469  

Net selling price

    

Ammonia

     479       418  

Urea and ESN®

     515       438  

Solutions, nitrates and sulfates

     282       236  

Average net selling price

     381       337  

Cost of goods sold

     225       224  

Gross margin

     156       113  

Depreciation and amortization

     65       58  

Gross margin excluding depreciation and amortization1

     221       171  

1 This is a non-GAAP financial measure. See the “Non-GAAP Financial Measures” section.

 

 

Sales volumes decreased in the first quarter of 2026, reflecting no production from the Trinidad and New Madrid facilities4, partially offset by higher solutions, nitrates and sulfates sales volumes supported by reliability and debottleneck initiatives.

 

 

Net selling price per tonne was higher in the first quarter of 2026 for all major nitrogen products due to stronger global benchmark prices.

 

 

Cost of goods sold per tonne was flat in the first quarter of 2026, as lower overall natural gas costs were offset by higher depreciation and other variable costs. The lower overall natural gas cost reflects a higher proportion of production from our low-cost North American nitrogen plants compared to the same period of 2025.

 

Supplemental Data

    
Three Months Ended
March 31
 
 
         2026         2025  

Sales volumes (tonnes – thousands)

    

Fertilizer

     1,409        1,389   

Industrial and feed

     932       1,080  

Production volumes (tonnes – thousands)

    

Ammonia production – total1

     1,122       1,543  

Ammonia production – adjusted1,2

     1,019       1,076  

Ammonia operating rate (%)2

     92       98  

Natural gas costs (dollars per MMBtu)

    

Overall natural gas cost excluding realized derivative impact

     3.28       3.91  

Realized derivative impact3

     -       -  

Overall natural gas cost

     3.28       3.91  

1 All figures are provided on a gross production basis in thousands of product tonnes.

2 Excludes Trinidad and Joffre.

3 Includes realized derivative impacts recorded as part of cost of goods sold or other income and expenses.

4 As previously disclosed, on October 23, 2025, the Trinidad nitrogen facility completed a controlled shutdown and we ceased production at our New Madrid nitrogen upgrade facility at year-end 2025.

 

8


 

 Phosphate

 

 

     Three Months Ended March 31 

($ millions, except as otherwise noted)

       2026         2025        % Change  

Net sales

     485       360       35  

Cost of goods sold

     489       361       35  

Gross margin

     (4     (1     n/m  

Adjusted EBITDA1

     57       61       (7

1 See Note 2 to the interim financial statements.

 

 

Phosphate adjusted EBITDA decreased in the first quarter of 2026 due to higher sulfur input costs, partially offset by higher global benchmarks and sales volumes compared to the same period of 2025.

 

Manufactured Product

    
Three Months Ended
March 31
 
 

($ per tonne, except as otherwise noted)

       2026         2025  

Sales volumes (tonnes – thousands)

    

Fertilizer

     468        332   

Industrial and feed

     190       168  

Total sales volumes

     658       500  

Net selling price

    

Fertilizer

     668       656  

Industrial and feed

     883       817  

Average net selling price

     730       710  

Cost of goods sold

     726       700  

Gross margin

     4       10  

Depreciation and amortization

     109       144  

Gross margin excluding depreciation and amortization1

     113       154  

1 This is a non-GAAP financial measure. See the “Non-GAAP Financial Measures” section.

 

 

Sales volumes were higher in the first quarter of 2026 due to higher production volumes from reliability improvements compared to the same period of 2025.

 

 

Net selling price per tonne increased in the first quarter of 2026 due to stronger global benchmark prices.

 

 

Cost of goods sold per tonne increased in the first quarter of 2026 primarily due to higher sulfur input costs, more than offsetting higher production volumes that improved cost absorption and lowered depreciation per tonne compared to the same period of 2025.

 

Supplemental Data

    
Three Months Ended
March 31
 
 
         2026         2025  

Production volumes (P2O5 tonnes – thousands)

     337        282   

P2O5 operating rate (%)

     80       67  

 

9


 

 Corporate and Others and Eliminations

 

 

     Three Months Ended March 31

($ millions, except as otherwise noted)

       2026         20251,2        % Change  

Corporate and Others

      

Gross margin2

     14       14       -  

Selling recovery

     (3     (3     -  

General and administrative expenses

     111       99       12  

Share-based compensation expense

     116       42       176  

Foreign exchange loss, net of related derivatives

     5       7       (29

Other expenses

     10       18       (44

Adjusted EBITDA2

     (84     (78     8  

Eliminations

      

Gross margin

     (35     (30     17  

Adjusted EBITDA2

     (36     (28     29  

1 Comparative figures have been reclassified for our Purchase for Resale business from Nitrogen to the Corporate and Others segment.

2 See Note 2 to the interim financial statements.

 

 

Share-based compensation expense was higher in the first quarter of 2026 due to an increase in the fair value of our share-based awards. The fair value of our share-based awards takes into consideration several factors, such as our share price movement, our performance relative to our peer group and our return on invested capital.

Finance Costs, Income Taxes and Other Comprehensive (Loss) Income

 

     Three Months Ended March 31

($ millions, except as otherwise noted)

       2026         2025        % Change  

Finance costs

     176        179        (2 )  

Income taxes

      

Income tax expense

     45       28       61  

Actual effective tax rate including discrete items (%)

     24       60       (60

Other comprehensive income

     66       25       164  

 

 

Income tax expense increased in the first quarter of 2026 mainly due to higher earnings. The actual effective tax rate including discrete items decreased due to a change in the proportion of earnings (loss) between tax jurisdictions.

 

10


Liquidity and Capital Resources

Sources and uses of liquidity

We continued to manage our capital in accordance with our capital allocation strategy. We believe that our internally generated cash flow, supplemented by available borrowings under new or existing financing sources, if necessary, will be sufficient to meet our anticipated capital expenditures, planned growth and development activities, and other cash requirements for the foreseeable future. Refer to the “Capital Structure and Management” section for details on our existing long-term debt and credit facilities.

Sources and uses of cash

 

     Three Months Ended March 31 

($ millions, except as otherwise noted)

       2026         2025        % Change  

Cash used in operating activities

     (851     (1,082     (21

Cash used in investing activities

     (487     (243     100  

Cash provided by financing activities

     1,426       1,365       4  

Cash used for dividends and share repurchases1

     (409     (413     (1

1 This is a supplementary financial measure. See the “Other Financial Measures” section.

 

   
Cash used in operating activities   

Cash used in operating activities in the first quarter of 2026 was lower compared to the same period in 2025 primarily due to higher fertilizer global benchmarks, increased Retail earnings and record Potash sales volumes.

Cash used in investing activities   

Cash used in investing activities in the first quarter of 2026 was higher compared to the same period in 2025 due to higher cash used on business acquisitions in 2026. The 2025 comparative period included proceeds from the disposal of our investment in Sinofert Holdings Limited.

Cash provided by financing activities   

Cash provided by financing activities in the first quarter of 2026 was higher compared to the same period in 2025 due to higher commercial paper issuances in 2026. Additionally, in 2025, we issued $1.0 billion of senior notes. We had no issuances of senior notes in the first quarter of 2026.

Cash used for dividends and share repurchases

 

  

Cash used for dividends and share repurchases was consistent in the first quarter of 2026 compared to the same period in 2025.

 

11


Financial Condition Review

The following is a comparison of balance sheet categories that are considered material:

 

    As at            

($ millions, except as otherwise noted)

    March 31, 2026       December 31, 2025     $  Change       % Change  

Assets

       

Cash and cash equivalents

    777       701       76       11  

Receivables

    6,284       5,675       609       11  

Inventories

    8,681       6,977       1,704       24  

Prepaid expenses and other current assets

    733       1,396       (663     (47

Property, plant and equipment

    22,659       22,747       (88     -  

Liabilities and Shareholders’ Equity

       

Short-term debt

    2,766       873       1,893       217  

Trade, other payables and accrued liabilities

    9,137       9,309       (172     (2

Long-term debt, including current portion

    9,861       9,863       (2     -  

Share capital

    13,515       13,519       (4     -  

Retained earnings

    11,853       12,076       (223     (2

 

 

Explanations for changes in Cash and cash equivalents are in the “Liquidity and Capital Resources - Sources and uses of cash” section.

 

 

Receivables increased due to higher fertilizer global benchmarks and the seasonality of our Retail segment, resulting in higher receivables with customers and vendor rebates, partially offset by improved collection of receivables in North America. Receivables also increased from record Potash sales volumes.

 

 

Inventories increased due to the seasonality of our Retail segment. Our North American inventory levels generally increase at year-end, peak in the first quarter of the year in preparation for the planting and application seasons, and are drawn down in the succeeding quarters.

 

 

Prepaid expenses and other current assets decreased due to Retail taking delivery of prepaid inventories in preparation for the spring planting and applications season in North America.

 

 

Short-term debt increased due to higher commercial paper issuances to support working capital requirements driven by the seasonality of our business.

 

 

Trade, other payables and accrued liabilities decreased due to the settlement in the first quarter of 2026 of our Retail supplier financing arrangement obligations that were entered into in the fourth quarter of 2025. This was partially offset by higher Retail customer prepayments received in the first quarter of 2026 in anticipation of crop input price increases.

 

12


Capital Structure and Management

Principal debt instruments

As part of the normal course of business, we closely monitor our liquidity position. We use a combination of cash generated from operations and short-term and long-term debt to finance our operations. We continually evaluate various financing arrangements and may seek to engage in transactions from time to time when market and other conditions are favorable. We were in compliance with our debt covenants and did not have any changes to our credit ratings for the three months ended March 31, 2026.

Capital structure (debt and equity)

 

($ millions)

       March 31, 2026          December 31, 2025  

Short-term debt

     2,766        873  

Current portion of long-term debt

     1,036        513  

Current portion of lease liabilities

     362        346  

Long-term debt

     8,825        9,350  

Lease liabilities

     957        937  

Shareholders’ equity

     25,192        25,365  

Commercial paper, credit facilities and other debt

We have a total facility limit of approximately $7,426 million comprised of several credit facilities available in the jurisdictions where we operate. In North America, we have a commercial paper program, which is limited to the undrawn amount under our $4,500 million unsecured revolving term credit facility and excess cash invested in highly liquid securities.

As at March 31, 2026, we utilized $2,780 million of our total facility limit, which includes $2,421 million of commercial paper outstanding. In the first quarter of 2026, we extended the maturity of our accounts receivable purchase facility from March 6, 2026 to March 31, 2028 and entered into a $69 million uncommitted revolving demand facility.

As at March 31, 2026, $234 million in letters of credit were outstanding and committed, with $352 million of remaining credit available under our letter of credit facilities.

Our long-term debt consists primarily of notes and debentures. See the “Capital Structure and Management” section of our 2025 Annual Report for information on balances, rates and maturities for our notes and debentures.

Outstanding share data

 

      As at May 5, 2026  

Common shares

     480,023,548  

Options to purchase common shares

     1,921,277  

For more information on our capital management, see Note 4 to the annual financial statements in our 2025 Annual Report.

 

13


Quarterly Results

 

 ($ millions, except as otherwise noted)    Q1 2026      Q4 2025      Q3 2025      Q2 2025      Q1 2025      Q4 2024      Q3 2024      Q2 2024  

Sales

     6,046        5,340        6,007        10,438        5,100        5,079        5,348        10,156  

Net earnings

     139        580        469        1,229        19        118        25        392  

Net earnings attributable to equity holders
of Nutrien

     131        571        464        1,221        11        113        18        385  

Net earnings per share attributable to equity
holders of Nutrien

                       

Basic

     0.27        1.18        0.96        2.51        0.02        0.23        0.04        0.78  

Diluted

     0.27        1.18        0.96        2.50        0.02        0.23        0.04        0.78  

Our quarterly earnings are significantly affected by the seasonality of our business, fertilizer benchmark prices, global demand-supply conditions, grower affordability and weather. See Note 2 to the interim financial statements.

Accounting Policies and New IFRS Standards

Significant accounting policies are disclosed in our 2025 Annual Report and have been consistently applied for the three months ended March 31, 2026, except as described below.

Amendments to IFRS 9 and IFRS 7, Amendments to the Classification and Measurement of Financial Instruments

Amendments to IFRS 9 and IFRS 7, Amendments to the Classification and Measurement of Financial Instruments, were adopted effective January 1, 2026, the required adoption date. The impact was not material. On initial adoption, there was an adjustment of $(13) million to opening cash and cash equivalents as at January 1, 2026, which has been reflected in the condensed consolidated statement of cash flows for the three months ended March 31, 2026.

Critical Accounting Estimates

The preparation of financial statements in accordance with IFRS requires management to make estimates and judgments that affect reported assets, liabilities, revenues and expenses. We have discussed the development, selection and application of our key accounting policies, and the critical accounting estimates and assumptions they involve, with the Audit Committee of the Board.

Our critical accounting estimates are discussed on pages 64 to 65 of our 2025 Annual Report. There were no material changes to our critical accounting estimates for the three months ended March 31, 2026.

Controls and Procedures

Management is responsible for establishing and maintaining adequate internal control over financial reporting (“ICFR”), as defined in Rules 13a-15(f) and 15d-15(f) under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended, and National Instrument 52-109 Certification of Disclosure in Issuers’ Annual and Interim Filings. ICFR is designed to provide reasonable assurance regarding the reliability of financial reporting and preparation of financial statements for external purposes in accordance with IFRS. Any system of ICFR, no matter how well designed, has inherent limitations. Therefore, even those systems determined to be effective can provide only reasonable assurance with respect to financial statement preparation and presentation.

There has been no change in our ICFR during the three months ended March 31, 2026, that has materially affected, or is reasonably likely to materially affect, our ICFR.

 

14


Forward-Looking Statements

Certain statements and other information included in this document, including within the “Market Outlook and Guidance” section, constitute “forward-looking information” or “forward-looking statements” (collectively, “forward-looking statements”) under applicable securities laws (such statements are often accompanied by words such as “anticipate”, “forecast”, “expect”, “believe”, “may”, “will”, “should”, “estimate”, “project”, “intend” or other similar words). All statements in this document, other than those relating to historical information or current conditions, are forward-looking statements, including, but not limited to: Nutrien’s business strategies, plans, prospects and opportunities; Nutrien’s 2026 full-year guidance, including expectations regarding Retail adjusted EBITDA, Potash sales volumes, Nitrogen sales volumes, Phosphate sales volumes, depreciation and amortization, finance costs, effective tax rate on adjusted net earnings and capital expenditures, including the assumptions and expectations stated therein; expectations regarding the review of strategic alternatives for our Phosphate business, Trinidad Nitrogen facility and Brazilian Retail business and associated outcomes; expectations regarding structural growth in our downstream business; expectations regarding our capital allocation approach and strategies, including our intentions with respect to our strategic actions and the expected timing thereof; our expectations regarding Nutrien’s strategic priorities and our ability to advance and achieve such strategic priorities in 2026 and beyond; expectations regarding various performance targets in 2026 and beyond and our ability to achieve such targets; capital spending expectations for 2026 and beyond; expectations regarding performance of our operating segments in 2026 and beyond; the expectation that internally generated cash flow, supplemented by available borrowings, if necessary, will be sufficient to meet our anticipated capital expenditures, planned growth and development activities, and other cash requirements; expectations regarding payment of dividends and share repurchases; our operating segment market outlooks and our expectations for market conditions and fundamentals, and the anticipated supply and demand for our products and services, crop input demand, expected market, industry and growing conditions with respect to crop nutrient application rates, planted acres, farmer crop investment, crop mix and the need to replenish soil nutrient levels, input costs, production volumes and expenses, shipments, natural gas costs and availability, consumption, prices, operating rates, the impact of seasonality, import and export volumes, tariffs, trade or export restrictions, economic sanctions and restrictions, geopolitical disruptions, including the ongoing conflict in the Middle East, inventories, crop development, and natural gas curtailments; the negotiation of sales contracts; acquisitions and divestitures and the anticipated benefits thereof; and expectations in connection with our ability to generate free cash flow, enhance earnings quality, and deliver long-term returns to shareholders.

These forward-looking statements are subject to a number of assumptions, risks and uncertainties, many of which are beyond our control, which could cause actual results to differ materially from such forward-looking statements. As such, undue reliance should not be placed on these forward-looking statements.

All of the forward-looking statements are qualified by the assumptions that are stated or inherent in such forward-looking statements, including the assumptions referred to below and elsewhere in this document. Although we believe that these assumptions are reasonable, having regard to our experience and our perception of historical trends, this list is not exhaustive of the factors that may affect any of the forward-looking statements and the reader should not place undue reliance on these assumptions and such forward-looking statements. Current conditions, economic and otherwise, render assumptions, although reasonable when made, subject to greater uncertainty.

The additional key assumptions that have been made in relation to the operation of our business as currently planned and our ability to achieve our business objectives include, among other things, assumptions with respect to: our ability to successfully implement our business strategies, growth and capital allocation investments and initiatives; that we will conduct our operations and achieve results of operations as anticipated; growth in crop nutrient sales volumes and gross margins; our ability to successfully complete, integrate and realize the anticipated benefits of our already completed and future acquisitions and divestitures, and that we will be able to implement our standards, controls, procedures and policies in respect of any acquired businesses and realize the expected synergies on the anticipated timeline or at all; increased proprietary products gross margin; successful execution of the review of strategic alternatives for our Phosphate business, Trinidad Nitrogen facility and Brazilian Retail business, within the anticipated timing and parameters, and realization of the expected benefits therefrom; continued reliability improvements; that future business, regulatory and industry conditions will be within the parameters expected by us, including with respect to prices, expenses, margins, operating rates, demand, supply, product availability, shipments, consumption, weather conditions, supplier agreements, product distribution agreements, inventory levels, exports, tariffs, including general or retaliatory tariffs, trade restrictions, international trade arrangements, government support, crop development and cost of labor and interest, exchange and effective tax rates; global economic conditions and the accuracy of our market outlook expectations for 2026 and in the future; assumptions related to our assessment of recoverable amount estimates of our assets; our intention to complete share repurchases under our normal course issuer bid programs, the funding of such share repurchases, existing and future market conditions, including with respect to the price of our common shares, capital allocation priorities and compliance with respect to applicable limitations under securities laws and regulations and stock exchange policies and assumptions related to our ability to fund our dividends at the current level; our expectations regarding the impacts, direct and indirect, of certain geopolitical conflicts, including the ongoing conflict in the Middle East, on, among other things, global supply and demand, including for crop nutrients, energy and commodity prices, global interest rates, supply chains and the global macroeconomic environment, including inflation; the adequacy of our cash generated from operations and our ability to access our credit facilities or capital markets for additional sources of financing; our ability to identify suitable candidates for acquisitions and divestitures and negotiate acceptable terms; the availability of investment opportunities that align with our strategic priorities and growth strategy; our ability to maintain investment grade ratings and achieve our performance targets; and our ability to successfully negotiate sales and other contracts and our ability to successfully implement new initiatives and programs.

 

15


Events or circumstances that could cause actual results to differ materially from those in the forward-looking statements include, but are not limited to: general global economic, market and business conditions; failure to achieve expected results of our business strategy, capital allocation initiatives, results of operations or targets; failure to complete announced and future strategic and asset optimization initiatives, acquisitions or divestitures at all or on the expected terms and within the expected timeline; seasonality of our business; climate change and weather conditions, including impacts from regional flooding and/or drought conditions; crop planted acreage, yield and prices; the supply and demand and price levels for our products; governmental and regulatory requirements and actions by governmental authorities, including changes in government policy (including general or retaliatory tariffs, trade restrictions, or other changes to international trade arrangements) and regulatory investigations; current and future litigation proceedings; the results of our review of strategic alternatives for our Phosphate business, Trinidad Nitrogen facility and Brazilian Retail business, including the process and the timing thereof, and whether the review will result in Nutrien undertaking a transaction, including the terms and timing relating thereto, the completion thereof and the benefits to be realized therefrom; the effects of current and future multinational trade agreements or other developments affecting the level of trade or export restrictions; government ownership requirements, changes in environmental, tax, antitrust and other laws or regulations and the interpretation thereof; political or military risks, including civil unrest, actions by armed groups or conflict and malicious acts, including terrorism and industrial espionage; our ability to access sufficient, cost-effective and timely transportation, distribution and storage of products (including potential rail transportation and port disruptions due to labor strikes and/or work stoppages or other similar actions); the occurrence of a major environmental or safety incident or becoming subject to legal or regulatory proceedings; innovation and cybersecurity risks related to our systems, including our costs of addressing or mitigating such risks; counterparty and sovereign risk; delays in completion of turnarounds at our major facilities or challenges related to our major facilities that are out of our control; interruptions of or constraints in availability of key inputs, including natural gas and sulfur; any significant impairment of the carrying amount of certain assets; the risk that rising interest rates and/or deteriorated business operating results may result in the further impairment of assets or goodwill attributed to certain of our cash generating units; risks related to reputational loss; certain complications that may arise in our mining processes; the ability to attract, engage and retain skilled employees and strikes or other forms of work stoppages; geopolitical conflicts, including the ongoing conflict in the Middle East, and their potential impact on, among other things, global market conditions and supply and demand, including for crop nutrients, energy and commodity prices, interest rates, supply chains and the global economy generally; our ability to execute on our strategies related to environmental, social and governance matters, and achieve related expectations, targets and commitments, including risks associated with disclosure thereof; and other risk factors detailed from time to time in Nutrien reports filed with the Canadian securities regulators and the SEC.

The purpose of our Retail adjusted EBITDA, depreciation and amortization, finance costs, effective tax rate and capital expenditures guidance ranges are to assist readers in understanding our expected and targeted financial results, and this information may not be appropriate for other purposes.

The forward-looking statements in this document are made as of the date hereof and Nutrien disclaims any intention or obligation to update or revise any forward-looking statements in this document as a result of new information or future events, except as may be required under applicable Canadian securities legislation or applicable US federal securities laws.

Terms and Definitions

For the definitions of certain financial and non-financial terms used in this document, as well as a list of abbreviated company names and sources, see the “Terms and definitions” section of our 2025 Annual Report. All references to per share amounts pertain to diluted net earnings (loss) per share, “n/m” indicates information that is not meaningful, and all financial amounts are stated in millions of US dollars, unless otherwise noted.

 

16


Non-GAAP Financial Measures

We use both IFRS measures and certain non-GAAP financial measures to assess performance. Non-GAAP financial measures are financial measures disclosed by the Company that: (a) depict historical or expected future financial performance, financial position or cash flow of the Company; (b) with respect to their composition, exclude amounts that are included in, or include amounts that are excluded from, the composition of the most directly comparable financial measure disclosed in the primary financial statements of the Company; (c) are not disclosed in the financial statements of the Company; and (d) are not a ratio, fraction, percentage or similar representation. Non-GAAP ratios are financial measures disclosed by the Company that are in the form of a ratio, fraction, percentage or similar representation that has a non-GAAP financial measure as one or more of its components, and that are not disclosed in the financial statements of the Company.

These non-GAAP financial measures and non-GAAP ratios are not standardized financial measures under IFRS and, therefore, are unlikely to be comparable to similar financial measures presented by other companies. Management believes these non-GAAP financial measures and non-GAAP ratios provide transparent and useful supplemental information to help investors evaluate our financial performance, financial condition and liquidity using the same measures as management. These non-GAAP financial measures and non-GAAP ratios should not be considered as a substitute for, or superior to, measures of financial performance prepared in accordance with IFRS.

The following section outlines our non-GAAP financial measures and non-GAAP ratios, their compositions, and why management uses each measure. It also includes reconciliations to the most directly comparable IFRS measures. Except as otherwise described herein, our non-GAAP financial measures and non-GAAP ratios are calculated on a consistent basis from period to period and are adjusted for specific items in each period, as applicable. As additional non-recurring or unusual items arise in the future, we generally exclude these items in our calculations.

Adjusted EBITDA (Consolidated)

Most directly comparable IFRS financial measure: Net earnings (loss).

Definition: Adjusted EBITDA is calculated as net earnings (loss) before finance costs, income taxes, depreciation and amortization, share-based compensation and foreign exchange gain/loss (net of related derivatives). We also adjust this measure for the following other income and expenses that are excluded when management evaluates the performance of our day-to-day operations: certain integration and restructuring related costs, impairment or reversal of impairment of assets, gain or loss on sale of certain businesses and investments, asset retirement obligations (“ARO”) and accrued environmental costs (“ERL”) related to our non-operating sites, and loss related to financial instruments in Argentina.

Why we use the measure and why it is useful to investors: It is not impacted by long-term investment and financing decisions, but rather focuses on the performance of our day-to-day operations. It provides a measure of our ability to service debt and to meet other payment obligations and as a component of employee remuneration calculations.

 

    

Three Months Ended March 31 

($ millions)

         2026           2025  

Net earnings

     139        19   

Finance costs

     176       179  

Income tax expense

     45       28  

Depreciation and amortization

     606       571  

EBITDA1

     966       797  

Adjustments:

    

Share-based compensation expense

     116       42  

Foreign exchange loss, net of related derivatives

     5       7  

ARO/ERL related (income) expenses for non-operating sites

     (28     5  

Restructuring costs

     16       1  

Impairment of assets recorded in other income and expenses

     30       -  

Adjusted EBITDA

     1,105       852  

1 EBITDA is calculated as net earnings before finance costs, income taxes, and depreciation and amortization.

 

18


Adjusted Net Earnings and Adjusted Net Earnings Per Share

Most directly comparable IFRS financial measure: Net earnings (loss) and diluted net earnings (loss) per share.

Definition: Adjusted net earnings and related per share information are calculated as net earnings (loss) before share-based compensation and foreign exchange gain/loss (net of related derivatives), net of tax. We also adjust this measure for the following other income and expenses (net of tax) that are excluded when management evaluates the performance of our day-to-day operations: certain integration and restructuring related costs, impairment or reversal of impairment of assets, gain or loss on sale of certain businesses and investments, gain or loss on early extinguishment of debt or on settlement of derivatives due to discontinuance of hedge accounting, asset retirement obligations and accrued environmental costs related to our non-operating sites, loss related to financial instruments in Argentina, change in recognition of tax losses and deductible temporary differences related to impairments and certain changes to tax declarations. We generally apply the annual forecasted effective tax rate to specific adjustments during the year, and at year-end, we apply the actual effective tax rate.

Why we use the measure and why it is useful to investors: Focuses on the performance of our day-to-day operations and is used as a component of employee remuneration calculations.

 

    

Three Months Ended

March 31, 2026

 

($ millions, except as otherwise noted)

    
Increases
(Decreases)
 
 
    Post-Tax      

Per
Diluted
Share
 
 
 

Net earnings attributable to equity holders of
Nutrien

             131       0.27  

Adjustments:

      

Share-based compensation expense

     116       88       0.18  

Foreign exchange loss, net of related derivatives

     5       10       0.02  

Restructuring costs

     16       16       0.03  

Impairment of assets recorded in other income and expenses

     30       22       0.05  

ARO/ERL related (income) for non-operating sites

     (28     (22     (0.04

Sub-total adjustments

     139       114       0.24  

Adjusted net earnings

             245       0.51  
    

Three Months Ended

March 31, 2025

 

($ millions, except as otherwise noted)

    
Increases
(Decreases)
 
 
    Post-Tax      

Per
Diluted
Share
 
 
 

Net earnings attributable to equity holders of
Nutrien

             11       0.02  

Adjustments:

      

Share-based compensation expense

     42       31       0.06  

Foreign exchange loss, net of related derivatives

     7       6       0.01  

Restructuring costs

     1       1       -  

ARO/ERL related expenses for non-operating sites

     5       4       0.02  

Sub-total adjustments

     55       42       0.09  

Adjusted net earnings

             53       0.11  

 

19


Effective Tax Rate on Adjusted Net Earnings

Effective tax rate on adjusted net earnings guidance is a forward-looking non-GAAP financial measure as it includes adjusted net earnings, which is a non-GAAP financial measure. It is provided to assist readers in understanding our expected financial results. Effective tax rate on adjusted net earnings guidance excludes certain items that management is aware of that permit management to focus on the performance of our operations (see the Adjusted Net Earnings and Adjusted Net Earnings Per Share section for items generally adjusted). We do not provide a reconciliation of this forward-looking measure to the most directly comparable financial measures calculated and presented in accordance with IFRS because a meaningful or accurate calculation of reconciling items and the information is not available without unreasonable effort due to unknown variables, including the timing and amount of certain reconciling items, and the uncertainty related to future results. These unknown variables may include unpredictable transactions of significant value that may be inherently difficult to determine without unreasonable efforts. The probable significance of such unavailable information, which could be material to future results, cannot be addressed.

Gross Margin Excluding Depreciation and Amortization Per Tonne – Manufactured Product

Most directly comparable IFRS financial measure: Gross margin.

Definition: Gross margin per tonne less depreciation and amortization per tonne for manufactured products. Reconciliations are provided in the “Segment Results” section.

Why we use the measure and why it is useful to investors: Focuses on the performance of our day-to-day operations, which excludes the effects of items that primarily reflect the impact of long-term investment and financing decisions.

Potash Controllable Cash Cost of Product Manufactured (“COPM”) Per Tonne

Most directly comparable IFRS financial measure: Cost of goods sold (“COGS”) for the Potash segment.

Definition: Total Potash COGS excluding depreciation and amortization expense included in COPM, royalties, natural gas costs and carbon taxes, change in inventory, and other adjustments, divided by potash production tonnes.

Why we use the measure and why it is useful to investors: To assess operational performance. Potash controllable cash COPM excludes the effects of production from other periods and the impacts of our long-term investment decisions, supporting a focus on the performance of our day-to-day operations. Potash controllable cash COPM also excludes royalties and natural gas costs and carbon taxes, which management does not consider controllable, as they are primarily driven by regulatory and market conditions.

 

    

Three Months Ended March 31 

($ millions, except as otherwise noted)

         2026           2025  

Total COGS – Potash

     422        380   

Change in inventory

     8       7  

Other adjustments1

     (5     (13

COPM

     425       374  

Depreciation and amortization in COPM

     (171     (145

Royalties in COPM

     (26     (19

Natural gas costs and carbon taxes in COPM

     (13     (12

Controllable cash COPM

     215       198  

Production volumes (tonnes – thousands)

     3,660       3,289  

Potash controllable cash COPM per tonne

     59       60  

1 Other adjustments include unallocated production overhead that is recognized as part of cost of goods sold but is not included in the measurement of inventory and changes in inventory balances.

 

20


Retail Cash Operating Coverage Ratio

Definition: Retail selling, general and administrative, and other expenses (income), excluding depreciation and amortization expense, divided by Retail gross margin excluding depreciation and amortization expense in cost of goods sold, for the last four rolling quarters.

Why we use the measure and why it is useful to investors: To understand the costs and underlying economics of our Retail operations and to assess our Retail operating performance and ability to generate cash flow.

 

$                          $                          $                          $                         
    Rolling Four Quarters Ended March 31, 2026

($ millions, except as otherwise noted)

    Q2 2025       Q3 2025       Q4 2025       Q1 2026     Total  

Selling expenses

    948       792       811       798     3,349  

General and administrative expenses

    44       44       40       44     172  

Other expenses

    54       40       4       36     134  

Operating expenses

    1,046       876       855       878     3,655  

Depreciation and amortization in operating expenses

    (172     (179     (184     (179   (714) 

Operating expenses excluding depreciation and amortization

    874       697       671       699     2,941  

Gross margin

    2,018       922       977       800     4,717  

Depreciation and amortization in cost of goods sold

    5       5       5       5     20  

Gross margin excluding depreciation and amortization

    2,023       927       982       805     4,737  

Cash operating coverage ratio (%)

                                  62  
    Rolling Four Quarters Ended December 31, 2025

($ millions, except as otherwise noted)

    Q1 2025       Q2 2025       Q3 2025       Q4 2025     Total  

Selling expenses

    755       948       792       811     3,306  

General and administrative expenses

    44       44       44       40     172  

Other expenses

    25       54       40       4     123  

Operating expenses

    824       1,046       876       855     3,601  

Depreciation and amortization in operating expenses

    (179     (172     (179     (184   (714) 

Operating expenses excluding depreciation and amortization

    645       874       697       671     2,887  

Gross margin

    686       2,018       922       977     4,603  

Depreciation and amortization in cost of goods sold

    5       5       5       5     20  

Gross margin excluding depreciation and amortization

    691       2,023       927       982     4,623  

Cash operating coverage ratio (%)

                                  62  

Retail Average Working Capital to Sales

Definition: Retail average working capital divided by Retail sales for the last four rolling quarters.

Why we use the measure and why it is useful to investors: To evaluate operational efficiency. A lower or higher percentage represents increased or decreased efficiency, respectively.

 

$                             $                             $                             $                            
    Rolling Four Quarters Ended March 31, 2026

($ millions, except as otherwise noted)

    Q2 2025       Q3 2025       Q4 2025       Q1 2026     Average/Total  

Current assets

    11,442       10,823       11,185       12,558    

Current liabilities

    (8,051     (5,348     (8,275     (7,799    

Working capital

    3,391       5,475       2,910       4,759     4,134  
                                     

Sales

    7,959       3,427       3,144       3,640     18,170  

Average working capital to sales (%)

                                  23  
    Rolling Four Quarters Ended December 31, 2025

($ millions, except as otherwise noted)

    Q1 2025       Q2 2025       Q3 2025       Q4 2025     Average/Total  

Current assets

    11,510       11,442       10,823       11,185    

Current liabilities

    (7,561     (8,051     (5,348     (8,275    

Working capital

    3,949       3,391       5,475       2,910     3,931  
                                     

Sales

    3,090       7,959       3,427       3,144     17,620  

Average working capital to sales (%)

                                  22  

 

21


Other Financial Measures

Selected Additional Financial Data

 

Nutrien Financial Aging

 

 

As at March 31, 2026

 

   

As at

December 31, 2025

 

 

($ millions)

    Current      

<31 Days

past due

 

 

   

31–90
Days

past due

 
 

 

   

>90 Days

past due

 

 

   
Gross
receivables
 
 
    Allowance1       
Net
receivables2
 
 
   

Net

receivables

 

 

North America

    1,566       89       223       196       2,074       (55      2,019        2,332  

International

    879       64       53       26       1,022       (6      1,016       774  

Nutrien Financial
receivables

    2,445       153       276       222       3,096       (61      3,035       3,106  

1 Bad debt expense on the above receivables for the three months ended March 31, 2026 was $9 million, in the Retail segment.

2 In 2026, we assume a debt-to-equity ratio of 9:1 (2025 – 9:1) in funding Nutrien Financial receivables, based on the underlying credit quality of the assets.

 

Nutrien Financial Net Receivables

  Rolling Four Quarters Ended March 31, 2026

($ millions, except as otherwise noted)

  Q2 2025   Q3 2025   Q4 2025     Q1 2026     Average/Total 

Average Nutrien Financial net receivables

  4,645   4,452   3,106   3,035    3,810 

Supplementary Financial Measures

Supplementary financial measures are financial measures disclosed by the Company that (a) are, or are intended to be, disclosed on a periodic basis to depict the historical or expected future financial performance, financial position or cash flow of the Company, (b) are not disclosed in the financial statements of the Company, (c) are not non-GAAP financial measures, and (d) are not non-GAAP ratios.

The following section provides an explanation of the composition of those supplementary financial measures, if not previously provided.

Sustaining capital expenditures: Represents capital expenditures that are required to sustain operations at existing levels and include major repairs and maintenance and plant turnarounds.

Investing capital expenditures: Represents capital expenditures related to significant expansions of current operations or to create cost savings (synergies). Investing capital expenditures exclude capital outlays for business acquisitions and equity-accounted investees.

Mine development and pre-stripping capital expenditures: Represents capital expenditures that are required for activities to open new areas underground and/or develop a mine or ore body to allow for future production mining and activities required to prepare and/or access the ore, i.e., removal of an overburden that allows access to the ore.

Cash used for dividends and share repurchases: Calculated as dividends paid to Nutrien’s shareholders plus repurchase of common shares as reflected in the unaudited condensed consolidated statements of cash flows. This measure is useful as it represents return of cash to shareholders.

 

22

Exhibit 99.3

 

 

LOGO

NUTRIEN LTD.

INTERIM FINANCIAL STATEMENTS AND NOTES

AS AT AND FOR THE THREE MONTHS ENDED

MARCH 31, 2026

 

 

 

 


Unaudited

 

Condensed Consolidated Financial Statements

Condensed Consolidated Statements of Earnings

 

          

Three Months Ended
March 31

 
 ($ millions, except as otherwise noted)    Note     2026     2025  

Sales

     2, 8       6,046       5,100  

Freight, transportation and distribution

       244       226  

Cost of goods sold

             4,156       3,554  

Gross Margin

       1,646       1,320  

Selling expenses

       799       757  

General and administrative expenses

       164       152  

Provincial mining taxes

       90       68  

Share-based compensation expense

       116       42  

Foreign exchange loss, net of related derivatives

       3       7  

Other expenses

     3       114       68  

Earnings Before Finance Costs and Income Taxes

 

    360       226  

Finance costs

             176       179  

Earnings Before Income Taxes

       184       47  

Income tax expense

     4       45       28  

Net Earnings

             139       19  

Attributable to

      

Equity holders of Nutrien

       131       11  

Non-controlling interest

             8       8  

Net Earnings

             139       19  

Net Earnings Per Share Attributable to Equity Holders of Nutrien (“EPS”)

 

Basic

       0.27       0.02  

Diluted

             0.27       0.02  

Weighted average shares outstanding for basic EPS

       481,260,000       489,397,000  

Weighted average shares outstanding for diluted EPS

              481,647,000        489,540,000  
Condensed Consolidated Statements of Comprehensive Income

 

          

Three Months Ended
March 31

 
 ($ millions, net of related income taxes)           2026     2025  

Net Earnings

       139       19  

Other comprehensive income

      

Items that will not be reclassified to net earnings:

      

Net fair value loss on investments

       -       (18

Items that have been or may be subsequently reclassified to net earnings:

      

Gain on currency translation of foreign operations

       72       39  

Other

             (6     4  

Other Comprehensive Income

             66       25  

Comprehensive Income

             205       44  

Attributable to

      

Equity holders of Nutrien

       196       36  

Non-controlling interest

             9       8  

Comprehensive Income

             205       44  

(See Notes to the Condensed Consolidated Financial Statements)

 

23


Unaudited

 

Condensed Consolidated Statements of Cash Flows

 

          

Three Months Ended
March 31

 
 ($ millions)    Note     2026     2025  

Operating Activities

      

Net earnings

       139       19  

Adjustments for:

      

Depreciation and amortization

       606       571  

Share-based compensation expense

       116       42  

Provision for deferred income tax

       41       80  

Net undistributed earnings of equity-accounted investees

       (1     (5

Long-term income tax receivables and payables

       (15     (38

Other long-term assets, liabilities and miscellaneous

             27       5  

Cash from operations before working capital changes

       913       674  

Changes in non-cash operating working capital:

      

Receivables

       (530     (143

Inventories and prepaid expenses and other current assets

       (991     (1,274

Trade, other payables and accrued liabilities

             (243     (339

Cash Used in Operating Activities

             (851     (1,082

Investing Activities

      

Capital expenditures1

       (325     (300

Business acquisitions, net of cash acquired

       (50     (11

Purchase of investments, held within three months, net

       (8     (16

Purchase of investments

       -       (2

Proceeds from sale of investments

       -       183  

Net changes in non-cash working capital

       (94     (88

Other

             (10     (9

Cash Used in Investing Activities

             (487     (243

Financing Activities

      

Proceeds from debt, maturing within three months, net

       1,921       912  

Proceeds from debt

       -       998  

Repayment of debt

       (9     (4

Repayment of principal portion of lease liabilities

       (100     (110

Dividends paid to Nutrien’s shareholders

     7       (262     (265

Repurchase of common shares

     7       (147     (148

Issuance of common shares

       45       3  

Other

             (22     (21

Cash Provided by Financing Activities

             1,426       1,365  

Effect of Exchange Rate Changes on Cash and Cash Equivalents

             1       2  

Increase in Cash and Cash Equivalents

             89       42  

January 1, 2026 opening balance prior to restatement for amendments to IFRS 9

     9       701       -  

Adjustment on initial application of amendments to IFRS 9 on January 1, 2026

     9       (13     -  

Cash and Cash Equivalents – Beginning of Period

             688       853  

Cash and Cash Equivalents – End of Period

             777       895  

Cash and cash equivalents is composed of:

      

Cash

               712               828  

Short-term investments

             65       67  
               777       895  

Supplemental Cash Flows Information

      

Interest paid

       148       132  

Income taxes paid

       37       7  

Total cash outflow for leases

             137       150  

1 Includes additions to property, plant and equipment, and intangible assets for the three months ended March 31, 2026 of $299 million and $26 million (2025 – $279 million and $21 million).

(See Notes to the Condensed Consolidated Financial Statements)

 

24


Unaudited

Condensed Consolidated Statements of Changes in Shareholders’ Equity

 

                     

Accumulated other comprehensive

(loss) income (“AOCI”)

                         

 ($ millions, inclusive of related tax, except as otherwise

 noted)

  Number of
common
shares
    Share
capital
    Contributed
surplus
    (Loss) gain
on currency
translation
of foreign
operations
    Other     Total
AOCI
    Retained
earnings
    Equity
holders
of
Nutrien
    Non-
controlling
interest
    Total
equity
 
             

Balance – December 31, 2024

    491,025,446       13,748       68       (537     22       (515     11,106       24,407       35       24,442  
             

Net earnings

    -       -       -       -       -       -       11       11       8       19  
             

Other comprehensive income (loss)

    -       -       -       39       (14       25       -       25       -       25  
             

Shares repurchased for cancellation (Note 7)

    (2,862,814     (80     -       -       -       -       (69     (149     -       (149
             

Dividends declared1

    -       -       -       -       -       -       (266     (266     -       (266
             

Non-controlling interest transactions

    -       -       -       -       -       -       -       -       (11     (11
             

Effect of share-based compensation including
issuance of common shares

    59,751       3       1       -       -       -       -       4       -       4  
             

Transfer of net gain on sale of investment

    -       -       -       -       (27     (27     27       -       -       -  
             

Transfer of net loss on cash flow hedges

    -       -       -       -       6       6       -       6       -       6  
             

Balance – March 31, 2025

    488,222,383       13,671       69       (498     (13     (511     10,809       24,038       32       24,070  
             

Balance – December 31, 2025

    481,962,233       13,519       57       (329     -       (329     12,076       25,323       42       25,365  
             

Net earnings

    -       -       -       -       -       -       131       131       8       139  
             

Other comprehensive income (loss)

    -       -       -       71       (6     65       -       65       1       66  
             

Shares repurchased for cancellation (Note 7)

    (2,081,503     (58     -       -       -       -       (90     (148     -       (148
             

Dividends declared1

    -       -       -       -       -       -       (264     (264     -       (264
             

Non-controlling interest transactions

    -       -       -       -       -       -       -       -       (13     (13
             

Effect of share-based compensation including
issuance of common shares

    876,975       54       (8     -       -       -       -       46       -       46  
           

Transfer of net loss on cash flow hedges

    -       -       -       -       1       1       -       1       -       1  
           

Balance – March 31, 2026

    480,757,705       13,515       49       (258     (5     (263     11,853       25,154       38       25,192  

1 During the three months ended March 31, 2026, we declared dividends of $0.55 per share (2025 - $0.545 per share).

(See Notes to the Condensed Consolidated Financial Statements)

 

25


Unaudited

 

Condensed Consolidated Balance Sheets

 

         

As at March 31

          As at
December 31
 
 ($ millions)   

Note

       2026          2025                2025  

Assets

              

Current assets

              

Cash and cash equivalents

        777        895           701  

Receivables

  

8

     6,284        5,612           5,675  

Inventories

        8,681        7,992           6,977  

Prepaid expenses and other current assets

          733        863             1,396  
        16,475        15,362           14,749  

Non-current assets

              

Property, plant and equipment

        22,659        22,488           22,747  

Goodwill

        12,176        12,058           12,136  

Intangible assets

        1,621        1,791           1,667  

Investments

        146        495           144  

Other assets

          846        875             858  

Total Assets

          53,923        53,069             52,301  

Liabilities

              

Current liabilities

              

Short-term debt

  

6

     2,766        2,437           873  

Current portion of long-term debt

        1,036        1,038           513  

Current portion of lease liabilities

        362        364           346  

Trade, other payables and accrued liabilities

  

8

     9,137        8,752             9,309  
        13,301        12,591           11,041  

Non-current liabilities

              

Long-term debt

        8,825        9,870           9,350  

Lease liabilities

        957        998           937  

Deferred income tax liabilities

        3,701        3,591           3,666  

Pension and other post-retirement benefit liabilities

        218        225           221  

Asset retirement obligations and accrued environmental costs

        1,478        1,528           1,468  

Other non-current liabilities

          251        196             253  

Total Liabilities

          28,731        28,999             26,936  

Shareholders’ Equity

              

Share capital

  

7

     13,515        13,671           13,519  

Contributed surplus

        49        69           57  

Accumulated other comprehensive loss

        (263      (511         (329

Retained earnings

          11,853        10,809             12,076  

Equity holders of Nutrien

        25,154        24,038           25,323  

Non-controlling interest

          38        32             42  

Total Shareholders’ Equity

          25,192        24,070             25,365  

Total Liabilities and Shareholders’ Equity

          53,923        53,069             52,301  

(See Notes to the Condensed Consolidated Financial Statements)

 

26


Unaudited

 

Notes to the Condensed Consolidated Financial Statements

As at and for the Three Months Ended March 31, 2026

Note 1 Basis of presentation

Nutrien Ltd. (collectively with its subsidiaries, “Nutrien”, “we”, “us”, “our” or “the Company”) is a leading global provider of crop inputs and services. We operate a world-class network of production, distribution and ag retail facilities that positions us to efficiently serve the needs of farmers.

These unaudited interim condensed consolidated financial statements (“interim financial statements”) are based on International Financial Reporting Standards (“IFRS”) as issued by the International Accounting Standards Board and have been prepared in accordance with IAS 34, “Interim Financial Reporting”. The accounting policies and methods of computation used in preparing these interim financial statements are materially consistent with those used in the preparation of our 2025 annual audited consolidated financial statements with the exception of the amendments to IFRS 9 and IFRS 7, Amendments to the Classification and Measurement of Financial Instruments, which were adopted effective January 1, 2026 (refer to Note 9). These interim financial statements include the accounts of Nutrien and its subsidiaries; however, they do not include all disclosures normally provided in annual audited consolidated financial statements and should be read in conjunction with our 2025 annual audited consolidated financial statements. These interim financial statements are presented in millions of US dollars, unless otherwise indicated, which is the functional currency of Nutrien and the majority of its subsidiaries.

Certain immaterial 2025 figures have been reclassified in Note 2 Segment information.

In management’s opinion, the interim financial statements include all adjustments necessary to fairly present such information in all material respects. Interim results are not necessarily indicative of the results expected for any other interim period or the fiscal year.

These interim financial statements were authorized by the Audit Committee of the Board of Directors for issue on May 6, 2026.

Note 2 Segment information

We have four reportable operating segments: Retail, Potash, Nitrogen and Phosphate. Our downstream Retail segment distributes crop nutrients, crop protection products, seed and merchandise, and provides agronomic application services and solutions, including the services offered through Nutrien Financial. Retail also manufactures and distributes proprietary products and provides services directly to farmers through a network of retail locations in North America, Australia and South America. Our upstream Potash, Nitrogen and Phosphate segments are differentiated by the chemical nutrient contained in the products that each segment produces and are supported by midstream activities, which include the global sales, freight, transportation and distribution of our products, which are reported within these segments, respectively. Potash freight, transportation and distribution costs only apply to our North American potash sales volumes. Sales reported under our Corporate and Others segment relates to our non-core businesses. EBITDA presented in the succeeding tables is calculated as net earnings (loss) before finance costs, income taxes, and depreciation and amortization.

Seasonality in our business results from increased demand for products during planting season. Crop input sales are generally higher in the spring and fall application seasons. Crop input inventories are normally accumulated leading up to each application season. Our cash collections generally occur after the application season is complete, while customer prepayments made to us are typically concentrated in December and January and inventory prepayments paid to our suppliers are typically concentrated in the period from November to January. Feed and industrial sales are more evenly distributed throughout the year.

 

27


Unaudited

 

In the fourth quarter of 2025, the Chief Operating Decision Maker (“CODM”) reassessed our product groupings and determined that the performance of our Purchase for Resale business should be evaluated as part of the Corporate and Others segment. It had previously been presented in our Nitrogen segment. The Purchase for Resale business focuses primarily on sales to international customers. Purchased product that remains in upstream is primarily purchases of inventory to satisfy sales contracts that we cannot fulfill with our manufactured products. The CODM concluded this change was appropriate based on the nature and strategic alignment of purchase for resale activities. Comparative amounts for the Corporate and Others and Nitrogen segments were reclassified. As a result of the reclassification, the Corporate and Others segment reflected the following increases and the Nitrogen segment reflected the corresponding decreases for the three months ended March 31, 2025.

 

($ millions)

    
Three Months Ended
March 31, 2025
 
 

Sales

     70  

Gross Margin

     4  

EBITDA

     3  

 

    Three Months Ended March 31, 2026  
    Downstream           Upstream and Midstream                    
($ millions)   Retail            Potash     Nitrogen     Phosphate     Corporate
and Others
    Eliminations     Consolidated  

Sales  – third party

    3,640         966       884       478       78       -       6,046  

       – intersegment

    -               75       247       69       -       (391     -  

Sales  – total

    3,640         1,041       1,131       547       78       (391     6,046  

Freight, transportation and distribution1

    -               115       117       62       -       (50     244  

Net sales

    3,640         926       1,014       485       78       (341     5,802  

Cost of goods sold

    2,840               422       647       489       64       (306     4,156  

Gross margin

    800         504       367       (4     14       (35     1,646  

Selling expenses (recovery)

    798         3       6       2       (3     (7     799  

General and administrative expenses

    44         3       4       2       111       -       164  

Provincial mining taxes

    -         90       -       -       -       -       90  

Share-based compensation expense

    -         -       -       -       116       -       116  

Foreign exchange (gain) loss, net of related derivatives

    (2       -       -       -       5       -       3  

Other expenses

    36               26       27       7       10       8       114  

Earnings (loss) before finance costs and income taxes

    (76       382       330       (15     (225     (36     360  

Depreciation and amortization

    184               175       152       72       23       -       606  

EBITDA

    108         557       482       57       (202     (36     966  

Restructuring costs (Note 3)

    -         -       -       -       16       -       16  

Share-based compensation expense

    -         -       -       -       116       -       116  

Impairment of assets recorded in other income and expenses (Note 3)

    -         21       -       -       9       -       30  

ARO/ERL related income for non-operating sites2 (Note 3) 

    -         -       -       -       (28     -       (28

Foreign exchange loss, net of related derivatives

    -               -       -       -       5       -       5  

Adjusted EBITDA

    108               578       482       57       (84     (36     1,105  

1 Potash freight, transportation and distribution costs only apply to our North American potash sales volumes.

2 ARO/ERL refers to asset retirement obligations and accrued environmental costs.

 

28


Unaudited

 

    Three Months Ended March 31, 2025  
    Downstream           Upstream and Midstream                    
($ millions)   Retail            Potash     Nitrogen1     Phosphate     Corporate
and Others1
    Eliminations     Consolidated  

Sales  – third party

    3,090         766       822       338       84       -       5,100  

       – intersegment

    -               95       182       67       -       (344     -  

Sales  – total

    3,090         861       1,004       405       84       (344     5,100  

Freight, transportation and distribution2

    -               117       119       45       1       (56     226  

Net sales

    3,090         744       885       360       83       (288     4,874  

Cost of goods sold

    2,404               380       598       361       69       (258     3,554  

Gross margin

    686         364       287       (1     14       (30     1,320  

Selling expenses (recovery)

    755         3       7       2       (3     (7     757  

General and administrative expenses

    44         2       5       2       99       -       152  

Provincial mining taxes

    -         68       -       -       -       -       68  

Share-based compensation expense

    -         -       -       -       42       -       42  

Foreign exchange loss, net of related derivatives

    -         -       -       -       7       -       7  

Other expenses

    25               2       12       6       18       5       68  

Earnings (loss) before finance costs and income taxes

    (138       289       263       (11     (149     (28     226  

Depreciation and amortization

    184               157       142       72       16       -       571  

EBITDA

    46         446       405       61       (133     (28     797  

Restructuring costs (Note 3)

    -         -       -       -       1       -       1  

Share-based compensation expense

    -         -       -       -       42       -       42  

ARO/ERL related expenses for non-operating sites (Note 3)

    -         -       -       -       5       -       5  

Foreign exchange loss, net of related derivatives

    -               -       -       -       7       -       7  

Adjusted EBITDA

    46               446       405       61       (78     (28     852  

1 Comparative figures have been reclassified for our Purchase for Resale business from Nitrogen to the Corporate and Others segment.

2 Potash freight, transportation and distribution costs only apply to our North American potash sales volumes.

 

29


Unaudited

 

   

Three Months Ended

March 31

 
($ millions)   2026     2025  

Retail sales by product line

   

Crop nutrients

    1,483       1,194  

Crop protection products

    1,137       972  

Seed

    562       532  

Services and other

    175       146  

Merchandise

    223       189  

Nutrien Financial

    80       70  

Nutrien Financial elimination1

    (20     (13
      3,640       3,090  

Potash sales by geography

   

Manufactured product

   

North America

    484       434  

Offshore2

    557       426  

Other potash and purchased products

    -       1  
      1,041       861  

Nitrogen sales by product line

   

Manufactured product

   

Ammonia

    167       240  

Urea and ESN®

    416       382  

Solutions, nitrates and sulfates

    416       321  

Other nitrogen and purchased products3

    132       61  
      1,131       1,004  

Phosphate sales by product line

   

Manufactured product

   

Fertilizer

    359       249  

Industrial and feed

    183       151  

Other phosphate and purchased products

    5       5  
      547       405  

1 Represents elimination of the interest and service fees charged by Nutrien Financial to Retail branches.

2 Relates to Canpotex Limited (“Canpotex”) (see Note 8) and includes provisional pricing adjustments for the three months ended March 31, 2026 of $(3) million (2025 – $31 million).

3 Comparative figures have been reclassified for our Purchase for Resale business from Nitrogen to the Corporate and Others segment.

Note 3 Other expenses (income)

 

   

Three Months Ended

March 31

 
($ millions)       2026         2025  

Restructuring costs

    16       1  

Earnings of equity-accounted investees

    (2     (5

Bad debt expense

    15       19  

Project feasibility costs

    18       15  

Customer prepayment costs

    19       18  

Legal expenses

    5       5  

ARO/ERL related (income) expenses for non-operating sites

    (28     5  

Impairment of assets

    30       -  

Other expenses

    41       10  
      114       68  

 

30


Unaudited

 

Note 4 Income taxes

 

   

Three Months Ended

March 31

 
($ millions, except as otherwise noted)       2026         2025  

Actual effective tax rate on earnings (%)

    29       49  

Actual effective tax rate including discrete items (%)

    24       60  

Discrete tax adjustments that impacted the tax rate1

    (8     5  

1 Discrete tax adjustments arise from specific, significant or unusual events that are recognized in the period in which the event occurs, rather than being allocated across the year through the annual effective tax rate.

Note 5 Financial instruments

During the three months ended March 31, 2026, we entered into interest rate derivative contracts to manage exposure to changes in variable interest rates on certain long-term debt instruments.

The following table presents the Company’s interest rate derivatives outstanding as at March 31, 2026:

 

    As at March 31, 2026   
($ millions, except as otherwise noted)   Notional1     Maturities
(year)
    Average fixed
interest rate (%)
    Fair value of
assets2
 

Interest rate derivatives - 5-year

    250       2026       3.6473       3  

Interest rate derivatives - 10-year

    350       2026       4.0774       8  

1 Notional amounts represent the gross contractual amount outstanding.

2 Fair value of interest rate derivatives are based on a discounted cash flow model using observable market inputs which are classified as Level 2.

Our financial instruments carrying amounts are a reasonable approximation of their fair values, except for our long-term debt, including current portion, that has a carrying value of $9,861 million and fair value of $9,372 million as at March 31, 2026. There were no transfers between levels for financial instruments measured at fair value on a recurring basis.

Note 6 Debt

On March 3, 2026, we entered into a $69 million uncommitted revolving demand facility. As at March 31, 2026, there were no borrowings outstanding under this facility.

During the three months ended March 31, 2026, we extended the maturity of our accounts receivable purchase facility from March 6, 2026 to March 31, 2028.

Note 7 Share capital

Share repurchase programs

The following table summarizes our share repurchase activities during the periods indicated below:

 

   

Three Months Ended

March 31

 
($ millions, except as otherwise noted)   2026     2025  

Number of common shares repurchased for cancellation

    2,081,503       2,862,814  

Average price per share (US dollars)

    70.97       51.08  

Total cost, inclusive of tax

    148       149  

Subsequent to March 31, 2026, as of May 5, 2026, an additional 865,577 common shares were repurchased for cancellation at a cost of $66 million and an average price per share of $73.71.

Dividends declared

We declared a dividend per share of $0.55 (2025 – $0.545) during the three months ended March 31, 2026, payable on April 16, 2026 to shareholders of record on March 31, 2026.

 

31


Unaudited

 

Note 8 Related party transactions

We sell potash outside Canada and the US exclusively through Canpotex. Our total revenue is recognized, at the time product is loaded for shipping, at the amount received from Canpotex representing proceeds from their sale of potash, less net costs of Canpotex. The receivable outstanding from Canpotex arose from sale transactions described above. It is unsecured and bears no interest. Any credit losses held against this receivable are expected to be negligible. Canpotex sells potash to buyers, including Nutrien, in export markets pursuant to term and spot contracts at agreed-upon prices. Purchases from Canpotex for the three months ended March 31, 2026 were $64 million (2025 – $57 million).

 

($ millions)   As at
March 31, 2026
    As at
December 31, 2025
 

Receivables from Canpotex

    293       279  

Payables to Canpotex

    74       63  

Note 9 Accounting policies, estimates and judgments

Amendments to IFRS 9 and IFRS 7, Amendments to the Classification and Measurement of Financial Instruments

Amendments to IFRS 9 and IFRS 7, Amendments to the Classification and Measurement of Financial Instruments, were adopted effective January 1, 2026, the required adoption date. The amendments clarified the timing of recognition and derecognition of financial assets and financial liabilities. The adoption resulted in a change in the accounting policy relating to the timing of the derecognition of certain financial assets and financial liabilities, such that derecognition now occurs upon settlement.

The amendments were applied retrospectively without restatement of prior periods in accordance with the transitional provisions other than, on initial adoption, there was an adjustment of $(13) million to opening cash and cash equivalents as at January 1, 2026, which has been reflected in the condensed consolidated statement of cash flows for the three months ended March 31, 2026.

 

32

FAQ

How did Nutrien (NTR) perform financially in Q1 2026?

Nutrien posted stronger Q1 2026 results, with sales of $6.05 billion and net earnings of $139 million. Adjusted EBITDA rose to $1.11 billion and adjusted diluted EPS reached $0.51, reflecting higher fertilizer benchmarks and improved Retail and Potash performance.

What were Nutrien (NTR) earnings per share for the first quarter of 2026?

Diluted net earnings per share were $0.27 in Q1 2026, up from $0.02 a year earlier. Adjusted diluted EPS, which removes specified items, increased to $0.51 from $0.11, highlighting the underlying improvement in operating profitability across key segments.

Did Nutrien (NTR) change its 2026 guidance with this 6-K filing?

Nutrien reaffirmed its 2026 full-year guidance ranges. Targets include Retail adjusted EBITDA of $1.75–$1.95 billion, potash sales volumes of 14.1–14.8 million tonnes, nitrogen volumes of 9.2–9.7 million tonnes, and capital expenditures of $2.0–$2.1 billion for the year.

How did Nutrien’s potash business perform in Q1 2026?

The potash segment delivered record sales volumes of 3.51 million tonnes of manufactured product and higher prices. Net sales rose to $926 million, gross margin increased to $504 million, and adjusted EBITDA reached $578 million, supported by low controllable cash costs of $59 per tonne.

What was Nutrien’s cash flow and capital allocation in Q1 2026?

Operating activities used $851 million of cash in Q1 2026 due to seasonal working capital needs, while investing activities used $487 million, largely for $325 million of capital expenditures. Financing provided $1.43 billion, and the company returned $409 million through dividends and share repurchases.

How much debt and cash does Nutrien (NTR) have after Q1 2026?

As of March 31, 2026, Nutrien held $777 million in cash and cash equivalents. Short‑term debt was $2.77 billion, mainly commercial paper, and long-term debt including current portion totaled $9.86 billion, with shareholders’ equity of $25.19 billion supporting the capital structure.

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