Tenneco Inc.’s revenue slumped and the company swung to an adjusted net loss in the first quarter as automakers suspended production because of the coronavirus pandemic, the supplier said Friday.

The maker of ride control and emissions systems said first-quarter revenue fell 14 percent to $3.84 billion. The company estimates the COVID-19 crisis affected value-add revenue by $340 million.

Tenneco’s first-quarter net loss widened to $839 million from a loss of $117 million last year. The net loss included noncash impairments of $854 million.

Its adjusted net loss was $26 million, compared with income of $42 million in the year-earlier period. Adjusted earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization dropped 27 percent to $239 million.

Shares of Tenneco were up 15 percent to $5.21 in early trading Friday . Tenneco joins several other major suppliers, including Aptiv, Adient, BorgWarner and Magna, in reporting quarterly earnings this week.

“Tenneco responded quickly to the COVID-19 crisis to protect our team members’ health and safety while taking aggressive actions to mitigate the financial impact of the pandemic on the company,” CEO Brian Kesseler said in a statement. “We expanded on the structural cost reductions introduced last quarter, and implemented a range of temporary cost reductions including plant closures, deferment of discretionary spending and the reduction of capital expenditures.”

The company said about 75 percent of its plants and distribution centers worldwide are operating at various levels of production as of the first week of May, up from a low of 47 percent during the first week of April.

Like other suppliers, Tenneco withdrew is 2020 outlook and said Friday it won’t provide full-year guidance because of uncertainty related to the virus pandemic.

As of March 31, Tenneco had liquidity of $1.57 billion, made up of $770 million cash and $800 million undrawn on its revolving credit facility. The company said it has drawn the remaining amount available.

The company said it believes it has adequate liquidity to weather the downturn.

Tenneco, whose biggest shareholder is activist investor Carl Icahn, plans to split into two publicly traded companies — one from its aftermarket and ride-performance business DRiV and a new Tenneco, based on its powertrain technology. But it has struggled to separate since the plan was announced in 2018.

The company said previously that market conditions could affect its ability to complete a separation in the midyear 2020 time range.

Tenneco ranks No. 26 on the Automotive News list of the top 100 global suppliers, with worldwide sales to automakers of $10 billion in 2018.

Reuters contributed to this report.

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