20181231 FY 10K_Taxonomy2018



UNITED STATES

SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION

WASHINGTON, D.C. 20549

FORM 10-K

6

 

ANNUAL REPORT PURSUANT TO SECTION 13 OR 15(d) OF THE SECURITIES EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934 FOR THE FISCAL YEAR ENDED DECEMBER 31, 2018

TRANSITION REPORT PURSUANT TO SECTION 13 OR 15(d) OF THE SECURITIES EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934

Commission File Number 0-21719

Steel Dynamics, Inc.

(Exact name of registrant as specified in its charter)



 

Indiana
(State or other jurisdiction of incorporation or organization)

35-1929476
(IRS Employer Identification No.)

7575 West Jefferson Blvd, Fort Wayne, IN
(Address of principal executive offices)

46804
(Zip Code)

Registrant’s telephone number, including area code: (260) 969-3500

Securities registered pursuant to Section 12(b) of the Act:                  



 

Title of each class

Name of each exchange on which registered

Common Stock, $.0025 par value

Nasdaq Global Select Stock Market

Securities registered pursuant to Section 12(g) of the Act: None

Indicate by check mark if the registrant is a well-known seasoned issuer, as defined in Rule 405 of the Securities Act. Yes  No 

Indicate by check mark if the registrant is not required to file reports pursuant to Section 13 or Section 15(d) of the Act. Yes   No 

Indicate by check mark whether the registrant (1) has filed all reports required to be filed by Section 13 or 15(d) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 during the preceding 12 months (or for such shorter period that the registrant was required to file such reports), and (2) has been subject to such filing requirements for the past 90 days. Yes  No 

Indicate by check mark whether the registrant has submitted electronically every Interactive Data File required to be submitted pursuant to Rule 405 of Regulation S-T (§ 232.405 of this chapter) during the preceding 12 months (or for such shorter period that the registrant was required to submit such files). Yes  No 

Indicate by check mark if disclosure of delinquent filers pursuant to Item 405 of Regulation S-K (§229.405 of this chapter) is not contained herein, and will not be contained, to the best of registrant’s knowledge, in definitive proxy or information statements incorporated by reference in Part III of this Form 10-K or any amendment to this Form 10-K. 

Indicate by check mark whether the registrant is a large accelerated filer, an accelerated filer, a non-accelerated filer, a smaller reporting company, or an emerging growth company. See the definitions of “large accelerated filer,” “accelerated filer,” “smaller reporting company,” and “emerging growth company” in Rule 12b-2 of the Exchange Act.



 

 

 

Large accelerated filer 

Accelerated file 

Non-accelerated filer 

Smaller reporting company 

Emerging growth company 

 

If an emerging growth company, indicate by check mark if the registrant has elected not to use the extended transition period for

complying with any new or revised financial accounting standards provided pursuant to Section 13(a) of the Exchange Act.   

Indicate by check mark whether the registrant is a shell company (as defined in Rule 12b-2 of the Act). Yes  No 

The aggregate market value of the voting stock held by non-affiliates of the registrant computed by reference to the price at which the common equity was last sold as of June 30, 2018, was approximately $7.7 billion. Registrant has no non-voting shares. For purposes of this calculation, shares of common stock held by directors, officers and 5% stockholders known to the registrant have been deemed to be owned by affiliates, but this should not be construed as an admission that any such person possesses the power, direct or indirect, to direct or cause the direction of the management or policies of the registrant or that such person is controlled by or under common control with the registrant.

As of February 21, 2019, Registrant had outstanding 224,105,246 shares of common stock.

DOCUMENTS INCORPORATED BY REFERENCE



Portions of registrant’s definitive proxy statement referenced in Part III, Items 10 through 14 of this report, to be filed prior to May 1, 2019, are incorporated herein by reference.


 

STEEL DYNAMICS, INC.

Table of Contents



 

 



 

Page

Part I

 

 

Item 1.

Business

3

Item 1A.

Risk Factors

17

Item 1B.

Unresolved Staff Comments

23

Item 2.

Properties

24

Item 3.

Legal Proceedings

25

Item 4.

Mine Safety Disclosures

25

Part II

 

 

Item 5.

Market for Registrant’s Common Equity, Related Stockholder Matters and Issuer Purchases of Equity Securities

26

Item 6.

Selected Financial Data

28

Item 7.

Management’s Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results or Operations

30

Item 7A.

Quantitative and Qualitative Disclosures About Market Risk

42

Item 8.

Consolidated Financial Statements and Supplementary Data

43

Item 9.

Changes in and Disagreements with Accountants on Accounting and Financial Disclosure

79

Item 9A.

Controls and Procedures

79

Item 9B.

Other Information

79

Part III

 

 

Item 10.

Directors, Executive Officers, and Corporate Governance

80

Item 11.

Executive Compensation

80

Item 12.

Security Ownership of Certain Beneficial Owners and Management and Related Stockholder Matters

80

Item 13.

Certain Relationships and Related Transactions, and Director Independence

80

Item 14.

Principal Accounting Fees and Services

81

Part IV

 

 

Item 15.

Exhibits, Financial Statement Schedules

82

Item 16.

Form 10-K Summary

82

Exhibit Index

 

83

Signatures

 

86



 

 













 


 

 

PART I

Special Note Regarding Forward‑Looking Statements

Throughout this report, or in other reports or registration statements filed from time to time with the Securities and Exchange Commission under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, or under the Securities Act of 1933, as well as in documents we incorporate by reference herein or herefrom, or in press releases or oral statements made by our officers or Regulation FD authorized representatives, we may make statements that express our opinions, expectations, or projections regarding future events or future results, in contrast with statements that reflect present or  historical facts. These predictive statements, which we generally precede or accompany by such typical conditional words as “anticipate,” “intend,” “believe,” “estimate,” “plan,” “seek,” “project” or “expect,” or by the words “may,” “will,” or “should,” are intended to operate as “forward looking statements” of the kind permitted by the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995, incorporated in Section 27A of the Securities Act of 1933 and Section 21E of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934.  Such forward-looking statements involve both known and unknown risks, uncertainties and other factors that may cause our actual results, performance or achievements to be materially different from any future results, performance or achievements expressed or implied by such forward-looking statements.  That legislation protects such predictive and cautionary statements by creating a “safe harbor” from liability in the event that a particular prediction does not turn out as anticipated.

While we always intend to express our best judgment when we make statements about what we believe will occur in the future, and although we base these statements on assumptions that we believe to be reasonable when made, these forward looking statements are not a guarantee of performance, and you should not place undue reliance on such statements. Forward-looking statements are subject to many uncertainties and other variable circumstances, many of which are outside of our control, that could cause our actual results and experience to differ materially from those we thought would occur.

The following listing represents some, but not necessarily all, of the factors that may cause actual results to differ from those we may have anticipated or predicted:

·

United States or foreign trade policy affecting the amount of, or tariffs on, foreign steel imported in the United States, or adverse or less than satisfactory outcomes of pending and future trade cases alleging unlawful practices in connection with steel imports;

·

increased price competition brought about by global steelmaking overcapacity;

·

increased price and other forms of competition from other steel producers, scrap processors and alternative materials;

·

margin compression resulting from falling selling prices with no offsetting reduction in raw material costs, or our inability to pass increases in costs of raw materials and supplies, if any, onto our customers;

·

the adverse impact of periods of slower than anticipated economic growth or the risk of a recession, resulting in a general decrease of demand for our products;

·

the weakening of demand for steel products within the non-residential and residential construction, automotive, manufacturing, appliance, pipe and tube, and other steel-consuming industries;

·

conditions affecting steel or recycled metals consumption;

·

cyclical changes in market supply and demand for steel and recycled metals;

·

changes in the availability or cost of raw materials, such as recycled metals, iron substitute materials, including pig iron and iron concentrate, zinc, graphite electrodes, or other raw materials or supplies, which we use in our production processes;

·

periodic fluctuations in the availability and cost of electricity, natural gas, or other utilities;

·

the impact of, or changes in, environmental law or in the application of other legal or regulatory requirements upon our production processes or costs of production or upon those of our suppliers or customers, including actions by government agencies, such as the United States Environmental Protection Agency or related state agencies, upon our receipt of pending or future environmentally related construction or operating permits;

·

the impact of United States government or various other governmental agencies introducing laws or regulatory changes in response to the subject of climate change and greenhouse gas emissions, including the introduction of carbon emissions limitations or trading mechanisms;

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·

increased cybersecurity threats and vulnerabilities and increased global information technology security requirements, and a rise in sophisticated cybercrimes that pose a risk to the security and functionality of our systems and information networks and to the confidentiality, availability, and integrity of sensitive data, including intellectual property, proprietary information, financial information, customer, supplier and business partner information, and personally identifiable information;

·

changes in our business strategies or development plans which we have adopted or may adopt, and any difficulty or inability to timely, cost efficiently and successfully consummate, implement, integrate or operate any planned or potential construction or other projects, acquisitions, joint ventures or strategic alliances;

·

the impact of impairment charges;

·

private or governmental liability claims or litigation, or the impact of any adverse litigation costs or outcome of any litigation on the adequacy of our reserves or the availability or adequacy of our insurance coverage;

·

the occurrence of unanticipated equipment failures and plant outages;

·

costs to idle facilities, idled facility carrying costs, or increased costs to resume production at idled facilities; and

·

uncertainties involving new products or new technologies.

We also refer you to and urge you to carefully read the section entitled Risk Factors at Item 1A of this report to better understand some of the principal risks and uncertainties inherent in our businesses or in owning our securities, as well as the section entitled Management Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of Operations at Item 7. You should also review the notes to consolidated financial statements under headings in Note 1. Use of Estimates and in Note 9. Commitments and Contingencies.   

Any forward-looking statements which we make in this report or in any of the documents that are incorporated by reference herein or herefrom speak only as of the date of such statement, and we undertake no ongoing obligation to update such statements. Comparisons of results between current and any prior periods are not intended to express any future trends or indications of future performance, unless expressed as such, and should only be viewed as historical data.

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ITEM 1.BUSINESS



Our Company

Steel Dynamics, Inc. is one of the largest domestic steel producers and metal recyclers in the United States based on current estimated steelmaking and coating capacity of approximately 13 million tons and actual metals recycling volumes.  The primary source of revenues is from the manufacture and sale of steel products, processing and sale of recycled ferrous and nonferrous metals, and fabrication and sale of steel joists and deck products.

We believe our strategic focus to create value for shareholders, customers, employees and communities is differentiated through our six Core Operating and Leadership Principals:

·

Safety – We are focused on providing a safe working environment for all employees.  Our goal is to achieve zero injuries – no accidents, no lost workdays, and no injuries.



·

Enhancing Customer Relationships and Commitment – Our customers are critical to our success and are important business partners.  We strive to be a preferred partner by providing outstanding products and solutions, exceeding both current expectations and future needs, and deliver greater value.



·

Sustaining Superior Operating Culture – Our entrepreneurial culture fosters a team of energetic, positive, driven and innovative individuals by utilizing open communication and performance-based compensation aligned to our strategic focus. This results in our safe, low-cost, and highly efficient operations, which drive “best-in-class” operating and financial performance.



·

Strategic Growth, Intentional Margin Expansion and Consistency Through the Cycle – We are focused on growth opportunities that provide sustainable, higher volume and profitability throughout both strong and weak market environments, with diversification in end markets and product offerings.  We are squarely focused toward continued strategic growth both organic and transactional.



·

Driving Innovation – Through employee creativity and ingenuity, we drive innovation to improve safety, quality and productivity, implementing innovative technologies and processes in order to perform at the highest level and consistently achieve excellence in all that we do



·

Financial Strength and Flexibility – We have a disciplined focus on remaining a low-cost, highly efficient, customer-centric company generating best-in-class financial and operating performance that provides strong cash flow generation to support our current operations and continued growth.



Competitive Strengths / Business Strategies

We believe our financial strength and flexibility, coupled with our competitive advantages of maintaining a low, highly variable cost structure, producing a diversified value-added product offering, controlling a secure supply of recycled ferrous metals, fostering an entity-wide entrepreneurial culture and having an experienced senior management team and work force, positions us well to continue to strengthen our leadership position and execute our growth strategy. 

One of the Lowest Cost Steel Producers in the United States; State-of-the-Art Facilities / Allowing for Low Production Costs

We are focused on maintaining one of the lowest operating cost structures in the North American steel industry. Our low operating costs are primarily a result of our efficient plant designs and operations, our high productivity rate, low ongoing maintenance cost requirements and strategic locations near our customers and sources of our primary raw material, ferrous scrap.

We will continue to develop innovative ways to use our equipment, enhance our productivity and explore new technologies to further improve our unit costs of production at each of our facilities. As one of the lowest cost producers in each of our three primary operating segments, we are able to better manage through all cycles, and to consistently maximize our profitability. We continuously seek to maximize the variability of our cost structure and to reduce per unit and fixed costs. Our incentive compensation plans at all employee levels are based on both divisional and consolidated company performance. Performance-based incentive compensation is designed to reward high productivity and efficient use of physical resources and capital employed. Additionally, leveraging our existing facilities through capital effective organic growth and diversified product offerings allows us to maximize utilization.



Secure Supply of High Quality Just-in-Time Ferrous Raw Materials



We maintain a secure supply of ferrous raw material resources through the benefit of our metals recycling operations and Iron Dynamics (IDI). Ferrous materials represent the single largest raw material component of our steel operations’ manufacturing costs, at approximately 60% of such costs. During 2018, 2017, and 2016, OmniSource, our metals recycling operations, provided our steel operations with 39%, 38%, and 40%, respectively, of its ferrous scrap requirements. This represented 65%, 63%, and 61% of OmniSource’s total ferrous scrap shipments during 2018, 2017, and 2016, respectively. During 2018, 2017, and 2016, our steel operations consumed 10.9 million, 10.3 million, and 9.9 million tons,

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respectively, of metallic materials, of which iron units, other than scrap, represented approximately 14% in 2018 and 2016,  and 13% in 2017. IDI supplies 100% of its production to the Butler Flat Roll Division, representing 64%, 72%, and 65% of their iron units other than scrap in 2018, 2017, and 2016, respectively, through the transfer of liquid pig iron and hot briquetted iron, which are higher quality, energy-saving ferrous raw materials. We believe our metals recycling operations and IDI provide us with a high quality, cost effective, and secure raw material platform for effective working capital management.   



Diversified Product Mix / Expanded Product Offerings

We are one of the most diversified steel companies in the United States, with very broad product offerings. We currently offer a wide range of steel products (more specifically enumerated in the Steel Operations Products and Sales by End Market discussion later in this section), including:

Steel Operations:

Sheet Products.  Hot roll, cold roll and coated steel, including a wide variety of specialty products, such as light gauge hot roll, galvanized, galvanneal, Galvalume®, Galfan®, and painted products.

Long Products.  Structural steel beams, pilings, and standard and premium grade rail; engineered special-bar-quality of an expanding range of sizes and chemistries; various merchant-bar-quality products including rounds, angles, flats, reinforcing bar, and channels and specialty steel sections.

Steel Finishing. Turning, polishing, straightening, chamfering, threading, precision saw-cutting, cold draw and heat treating of bar products; and cutting to length, additional straightening, hole punching, shot blasting, welding and coating of beams, channels and specialty steel sections.

Metals Recycling Operations.  An array of both ferrous and nonferrous scrap recycling, scrap management, transportation, and brokerage products and services.    

Steel Fabrication Operations.  Steel joists, girders and steel deck, including specialty deck.

This diversified portfolio of products enables us to access a broad range of end-user markets, serve a wide customer base, and help mitigate our market exposure to any one product or end-user market, resulting in increased utilization. In addition, our value-added product offerings help to balance our exposure to commodity grade products supplied by other domestic steel, and foreign manufacturers.

We will continue to seek additional opportunities and to collaborate with our customers to anticipate their future needs by further expanding our range of products and offerings, which may allow our customers the ability to more effectively and efficiently navigate their supply chain.  One such opportunity is our recently completed and commissioned $82 million investment at our Structural and Rail Division to utilize excess melting and casting capability to produce up to 240,000 tons of various sizes of reinforcing bar including custom cut-to-length, smooth bar, and coiled.  Another such opportunity is the addition of a new $140 million galvanizing line at our Columbus Flat Roll Division which will increase annual coating capability by 400,000 tons with operations expected to begin mid-year 2020.   

Strategic Geographic Locations / Enter New Geographic Markets

The majority of our steelmaking facilities are in locations near sources of scrap materials and near our customer base, allowing us to realize freight savings for inbound scrap as well as for outbound steel products destined for our customers. This also allows us to provide consistent on-time delivery to our customer base with relatively short lead times, further solidifying our customer relationships. Our coated sheet steel products are also  available through our locations in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, Jeffersonville, Indiana and Columbus, Mississippi, due to river access.  Recycled ferrous scrap and iron units represent the most significant component of our cost of steel manufacturing. We believe that our metals recycling facilities are in the regions that account for a majority of the total ferrous scrap produced in the United States. Our steel fabrication operations have a national footprint allowing us to serve the entire joist and deck domestic market and national accounts.

We plan to continue to seek and enter new markets in strategic geographic locations that offer attractive growth opportunities within our areas of expertise as evidenced by our recent public announcement of the anticipated construction of a new state-of-the-art electric-arc-furnace flat roll steel mill.  The company currently expects to locate the facility in the southwestern United States to cost effectively serve not only the southern United States, but also the Mexican flat roll steel market.  This facility is anticipated to have an annual production capacity of approximately 3.0 million tons with the capability to produce the latest generation of advanced high strength steel products.  The project will include value-added finishing lines, including a galvanizing line with an annual coating capacity of 450,000 tons, and a paint line with an annual coating capacity of 250,000 tons.  The product offering is anticipated to include various flat roll steel products, including hot roll, cold roll, galvanized, Galvalume® and painted steel, primarily serving the energy, automotive, construction, and appliance sectors. 

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Experienced Management Team and Unique Corporate Culture / Foster Entrepreneurial Culture

Our senior management team is highly experienced and has a proven track record in the steel, metals recycling, and steel fabrication industries. Management’s objectives are closely aligned with our stockholders through meaningful stock ownership positions and performance‑based compensation programs that are correlated to the company’s profitability and operational performance in relationship to its steel manufacturing peers. Our entrepreneurial culture resonates throughout each of our operating segments. We emphasize decentralized decision making, with corporate risk oversight, and have established incentive compensation programs specifically designed to reward employee teams for their efforts toward identifying innovative ways to enhance productivity, improve profitability, and control costs.

We intend to continue to foster our entrepreneurial culture and emphasize decentralized operational decision making and responsibility, while continuing to maintain appropriate corporate policy and risk oversight. We reward teamwork, innovation, and operating efficiency, and will also continue to focus on maintaining the effectiveness of our incentive‑based bonus plans that are designed to maximize overall productivity and align the interests of our management and employees with our stockholders.  



Experienced Executive Management Team





 

 

 

 

Name

 

Age

 

Position

Mark D. Millett

 

59

 

President and Chief Executive Officer

Theresa E. Wagler

 

48

 

Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer

Russ B. Rinn

 

61

 

Executive Vice President, Metals Recycling

Chris A. Graham

 

54

 

Senior Vice President, Long Products Steel Group

Glenn A. Pushis

 

53

 

Senior Vice President, Special Projects

Barry T. Schneider

 

50

 

Senior Vice President, Flat Roll Steel Group

Miguel Alvarez

 

51

 

Senior Vice President, Southwest U.S and Mexico





Mark D. Millett, a co-founder of our company and director since inception, has been our President and Chief Executive Officer since January 2012. Prior to that, Mr. Millett has held various positions, including President and Chief Operating Officer, Executive Vice President of Metals Recycling and Ferrous Resources, President and Chief Operating Officer of OmniSource Corporation, and Executive Vice President and Chief Operating Officer for Flat Rolled Steels and Ferrous Resources. Mr. Millett was responsible for the design, construction, and start-up operation of our Butler, Indiana flat roll, melting and casting operations. Mr. Millett, prior to his co-founding of Steel Dynamics, served from 1981 to 1985 as chief metallurgist for Nucor Corporation’s Darlington, South Carolina, division, charged with developing the world’s first commercially viable thin-slab-casting process as the manager of that project at Nucor’s Hazelett facility. In 1987, Mr. Millett was given the responsibility by Nucor for the design, construction, staffing, and operation of the melting and casting facility at Nucor’s world’s‑first thin-slab casting facility at Crawfordsville, Indiana. Mr. Millett holds a bachelor’s degree in metallurgy from the University of Surrey in England. Mr. Millett was named Steelmaker of the Year in 2014 by the Association of Iron and Steel Technology.



Theresa E. Wagler is our Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer since May 2007.  Ms. Wagler joined the Steel Dynamics corporate finance team in 1998, and has held various finance and accounting positions, including Chief Accounting Officer and Vice President and Corporate Controller, and was appointed to her current position in May 2007. She is responsible for and oversees accounting, risk management, taxation, treasury, and information technology functions, as well as, financial planning and analysis, investor relations, and corporate communications. Prior to joining Steel Dynamics, Ms. Wagler served as Assistant Corporate Controller for Fort Wayne National Bank and as a certified public accountant with Ernst & Young LLP. She graduated cum laude from Taylor University with a bachelor’s degree in accounting and systems analysis. In addition, Ms. Wagler serves as a director and chair of the audit committee of CF Industries Holdings, Inc., a public company, and also serves as a director and audit committee chair for Trine University.



Russell B. Rinn is our Executive Vice President for Metals Recycling since July 2011. Mr. Rinn is responsible for OmniSource’s ferrous and nonferrous metals recycling operations in the eastern half of the United States, as well as sourcing, marketing, trading, and logistics activities spanning the nation. OmniSource procures metal scrap, processes it, and markets these recycled metals to external customers and supplies ferrous scrap to the company’s steel mills. Prior to joining Steel Dynamics, Mr. Rinn was an Executive Vice President of Commercial Metals Company (CMC), a Texas-based mini-mill steel company. He has more than 30 years of experience in the steel and metals recycling industries. Mr. Rinn is a graduate of the Executive Program of the Stanford University Graduate School of Business and of the Management Development Program at the University of Michigan’s Business School. He holds a bachelor’s degree in Finance, Marketing and Business Administration from Texas Lutheran University.



Chris A. Graham is our Senior Vice President, Long Products Steel Group, effective February 1, 2019.  In this role, Mr. Graham is responsible for the company's four long product steel mills, which combined have over 4 million tons of annual steelmaking capacity, producing specialized engineered bars, structural steel, railroad rail, merchant and reinforcing steel bars, and other specialty steels.  Since 2016, Mr. Graham served as Senior Vice President, Downstream Manufacturing and President of New Millennium Building Systems, responsible for the company's steel fabrication and downstream manufacturing operationsPrior to that, Mr. Graham served as a Vice President of Steel Dynamics and the President of New Millennium Building Systems fabrication operations.  Mr. Graham was part of the team that constructed the company's first steel mill in 1994.  He held various leadership positions within the company's steel group prior to moving into the fabrication operations in 2007.  He was

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responsible for four operating fabrication plants from 2007 to 2010, at which point he also became the team leader responsible for overseeing the restructuring and integration of three acquired fabrication facilities, and in 2014 was made responsible for the integration of the Columbus Flat Roll Division.  Mr. Graham is a graduate of Harvard Business School Advanced Management Program and earned a bachelor's degree in business management from Western Governors University and an MBA from the University of Saint Francis.    



Glenn A. Pushis is our Senior Vice President, Special Projects, effective February 1, 2019.  In this new position, Mr. Pushis is responsible for the successful design and construction of the company's planned new flat roll steel mill developed to serve the Southwestern U.S. and Mexico.  He has extensive experience in this capacity and has been instrumental in numerous construction projects for Steel Dynamics since its foundation.  Since 2016, Mr. Pushis served as Senior Vice President, Long Products Steel Group, responsible for the company's four long product steel mills.  Prior to that, Mr. Pushis served as Vice President overseeing the company's Butler Flat Roll Division and six flat roll coating facilities.  He has been with Steel Dynamics since 1994, holding various operational and leadership roles, and he was part of the team that constructed the company's first steel mill in 1994 - Butler Flat Roll Steel Mill.  He held various leadership positions within the company's steel group, including the positions of General Manager for the Engineered Bar Products Division from 2003 to 2007 and more recently, the Butler Flat Roll Division from 2007 to 2014. Mr. Pushis earned a bachelor's degree in mechanical engineering from Purdue University and his MBA from Indiana University.



Barry T. Schneider is our Senior Vice President, Flat Roll Steel Group since March 2016.  Since 2014, Mr. Schneider served as a Vice President overseeing the company's Engineered Bar Products and Roanoke Bar steel divisions.  Mr. Schneider is responsible for the company's two flat roll steel mills and numerous flat roll coating lines, including the recently acquired Heartland Flat Roll Division, which together have approximately 8.4 million tons of annual capacity, producing hot roll, cold roll and coated steel products, including a wide variety of specialty products, such as light gauge hot roll, galvanized and painted products. Mr. Schneider was also part of the team that constructed the company's first steel mill in 1994, serving in several engineering and operational roles in the melt shop during the company's first five years of operations. He was the manager of the Butler Flat Roll Division's hot strip mill and later the cold rolling and coating facilities from 2000 to 2007. Mr. Schneider then held the position of General Manager for the Engineered Bar Products Division from 2007 to 2014. Mr. Schneider earned a bachelor's degree in mechanical engineering and a Master of Science in engineering management from Rose-Hulman Institute of Technology. 



Miguel Alvarez joined the company as our Senior Vice President, Southwest U.S. and Mexico on February 1, 2019.  In this new position Mr. Alvarez is responsible for the comprehensive business development and partnerships in the region, encompassing both steel and recycled metals.  Prior to joining Steel Dynamics, since 2000 Mr. Alvarez served in leadership positions at BlueScope, a global engineered steel solutions provider and flat roll steel producer, focused on the global building and construction sectors.  Mr. Alvarez's responsibilities included leading BlueScope's North American metal buildings business, with manufacturing facilities in the U.S. and Mexico, as President of BlueScope Buildings North America, since 2017.  From 2010 to 2017, he served as the President of North Star BlueScope Steel, responsible for BlueScope's only North American electric-arc-furnace flat roll steel mill.  Mr. Alvarez earned a bachelor’s degree in industrial engineering and a Masters of Business Administration from the Technological Institute of Superior Studies in Monterrey, Mexico.



Industry Segments



We have three reporting segments: steel operations, metals recycling operations, and steel fabrication operations.  Refer to Notes 1 and 13 in the notes to consolidated financial statements in Part II, Item 8 of this Form 10-K for additional segment information.

 

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Steel Operations Segment



Steel operations consist of our six electric arc furnace steel mills, producing steel from ferrous scrap and scrap substitutes, utilizing continuous casting, automated rolling mills and several downstream steel coating and bar processing lines, and IDI, our liquid pig iron production facility, that supplies solely the Butler Flat Roll Division. Our steel operations sell directly to end-users, steel fabricators, and service centers. These products are used in numerous industry sectors, including the construction, automotive, manufacturing, transportation, heavy and agriculture equipment, and pipe and tube (including OCTG) markets. Our steel operations accounted for 75% of our consolidated net sales during 2018 and 72% in 2017 and 2016. We are predominantly a domestic steel company, with only 5% of our revenues generated from exported sales during 2018, and 2017, and 4% in 2016

Our steel operations consist primarily of steelmaking and coating operations. We have approximately 8.4 million tons of flat roll steel shipping capacity, comprised of 6.4 million tons of flat roll steel production capacity at our Butler and Columbus Flat Roll divisions and an additional 2.0 million tons of flat roll steel processing capacity at our Techs and Heartland divisions.  We also have annual flat roll galvanizing capability of 3.8 million tons and painting capability of 750,000 tons.



We have approximately 4.6 million tons of long product steel shipping capacity, as follows (tons in thousands):







 

 

 

 



Structural and Rail Division

 

2,200,000 

 



Engineered Bar Products Division

 

950,000 

 



Roanoke Bar Division

 

720,000 

 



Steel of West Virginia

 

555,000 

 



Vulcan Threaded Products Division

 

125,000 

 



Steelmaking capacities represent manufacturing capabilities based on steel mill configuration and related employee support. These capacities do not represent expected volumes in a given year. In addition, estimates of steel mill capacity are highly dependent on the specific product mix manufactured. Each of our steel mills can and do roll many different types and sizes of products; therefore, our capacity estimates assume a typical product mix.



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The following chart summarizes our steel operations primary products and the estimated percentage of tons sold by end market: 

Picture 1

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SHEET STEEL PRODUCTS

Our sheet steel products, consisting of hot roll, cold roll and coated steel products are produced by our Butler and Columbus Flat Roll Divisions, and our numerous downstream coating lines, including The Techs and Heartland Flat Roll Division (acquired June 29, 2018). Our sheet steel operations represented 70%, 71%, and 70% of steel operations net sales in 2018,  2017, and 2016, respectively. We produced 7.5 million, 7.1 million, and 6.9 million tons of sheet steel at these facilities in 2018, 2017, and 2016, respectively.

IDI produces liquid pig iron and hot briquetted iron (HBI) that serves as a substitute for a portion of the metallic raw material mix that goes directly into our Butler Flat Roll Division electric arc furnaces to produce steel. IDI’s primary focus is to maximize liquid pig iron production, due to the inherent economic benefits achieved at the steel mill when the material is used in the steelmaking process, such as reduced energy cost, reduced materials cost, and quicker melting cycles. During 2018,  2017, and 2016, respectively, IDI produced 262,000, 259,000 and 255,000 metric tons, of which 96%, 90% and 98%, respectively, was liquid pig iron. We have used, and plan to continue to use, all of the facility’s output internally.



The following chart summarizes the types of sheet steel products sold by sales dollars, during the respective years:

Picture 6

Customers. Steel processors and service centers typically act as intermediaries between primary sheet steel producers and the many end-user manufacturers that require further processing of hot roll coils. The additional processing performed by the intermediate steel processors and service centers include pickling, galvanizing, cutting to length, slitting to size, leveling, blanking, shape correcting, edge rolling, shearing and stamping. We believe that our intermediate steel processor and service center customers will remain an integral part of our customer base. The Columbus Flat Roll Division allows us to capitalize on the industrial markets in the Southern United States and Mexico, as well as further expand our customer base in painted, and line and other pipe products. Galvanized flat roll products produced by our Butler and Columbus Flat Roll Divisions are similar and are sold to a similar customer base. The Techs and Heartland Flat Roll Division specialize in the galvanizing of specific types of flat roll steels in primarily non-automotive applications, servicing a variety of customers in the heating, ventilation and air conditioning (HVAC), construction, agriculture and consumer goods markets.  Our sheet steel operations also provide a substantial portion of the sheet steel utilized in our steel fabrication operations.

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The following chart summarizes the types of customers who purchased our sheet steel products, by sales dollars, during the respective years:

Picture 7

LONG PRODUCTS

Our Structural and Rail Division produces a variety of parallel flange sections such as wide flange beams, American Standard Beams, manufactured housing beams, and H Piling, and channel sections for the construction, transportation and industrial machinery markets, as well as flat bars and large unequal leg angles used in construction markets. We also produce standard strength carbon, intermediate alloy hardness, and premium grade rails in 40 to 320 feet length for the railroad industry. Our state-of-the-art heat treating system allows us to produce high quality premium rail, which has been certified by all Class I railroads. In addition, our rail-welding facility has the ability to weld (Continuous Welded Rail) in lengths up to 1,600 feet, which offers substantial savings to the railroads both in terms of initial capital cost and through reduced maintenance. We recently completed and commissioned our expansion to utilize existing excess melting and casting capability to produce up to 240,000 tons of various sizes of reinforcing bar including custom cut-to-length, smooth bar, and coiled.  We also utilize our excess melting capacity to supply our Engineered Bar Products Division with pull-through volume of billets to utilize its excess rolling capacity.

Our Engineered Bar Products Division produces a broad array of engineered special-bar-quality (SBQ), merchant-bar-quality (MBQ), rounded-cornered squares, and smaller-diameter engineered round bars. We have a bar finishing facility at this mill, which provides various downstream finishing operations for our SBQ steel bars. Processing operations include turning, polishing, straightening, chamfering, precision saw-cutting and heat-treating capabilities. In addition, non-destructive testing services are available, including eddy current, flux leakage and ultrasonic inspection. Vulcan Threaded Products, Inc. (Vulcan), produces threaded rod product, and cold drawn and heat treated bar, creating strategic pull-through demand of special-bar-quality products provided from our Engineered Bar Products Division. 

Our Roanoke Bar Division primarily produces merchant bar products, including channels, angles, flats, merchant rounds, and reinforcing bar. In 2018, we completed our rolling line expansion project to utilize existing excess melting and casting capability to produce up to 200,000 tons of reinforcing bar, with multi-strand slitting and finishing capabilities. 

Steel of West Virginia primarily sells beams, channels, specialty steel sections and flats, and frequently performs fabrication and finishing operations on its products, such as cutting to length, additional straightening, hole punching, shot blasting, welding, galvanizing, and coating. Through this additional finishing, we create custom finished products that are generally placed directly into our customers’ assembly operations

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We produced the following long steel products at these facilities (tons):





 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 



 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 



 

2018

 

2017

 

2016

 

 



Structural and Rail Division

1,637,574 

 

1,353,699 

 

1,298,724 

 

 



     Rail production (included above)

288,194 

 

250,921 

 

238,410 

 

 



Engineered Bar Products Division

824,428 

 

698,951 

 

480,243 

 

 



Roanoke Bar Division

575,078 

 

473,097 

 

498,480 

 

 



Steel of West Virginia

307,013 

 

285,397 

 

289,114 

 

 



Customers. The principal customers for our structural steel products are steel service centers, steel fabricators and various manufacturers. Service centers, though not the ultimate end-user, provide valuable mill distribution functions to the fabricators and manufacturers, including small quantity sales, repackaging, cutting, preliminary processing and warehousing. The steel rail marketplace in the United States, Canada and Mexico is specialized and defined, with eight Class I railroads and a large distribution network.

SBQ products are principally consumed by cold finishers, forgers, intermediate processors, OEM manufacturers, steel service centers, and distributors, as well as pull through volume to Vulcan. Our MBQ products are sold primarily to steel service centers, as well as reinforcing bar distributors, joist producers, and OEMs. Some of the excess steel billet production at the Roanoke Bar Division is sold to mills without sufficient melting capacities, including our Steel of West Virginia facility. Our steel fabrication operations also purchase angles from Roanoke Bar Division. Steel of West Virginia’s customers are primarily OEMs producing truck trailers, industrial lift trucks, merchant products, guardrail posts, manufactured housing, mining, and off-highway construction equipment. Steel of West Virginia’s flexible manufacturing capabilities enable us to meet demand for a variety of custom-ordered and designed products. Many of these products are produced in small quantities for low volume end-uses resulting in a wide variety of customers, the largest of which are in the truck trailer and industrial lift truck industries. 

Steel Competition. The markets in which we conduct business are highly competitive with an abundance of competition in the carbon steel industry from North American and foreign integrated and mini-mill steelmaking and processing operations.  We compete in numerous industry sections, most significantly tied to the construction, automotive, and other manufacturing sectors.  In many applications within these industry sections, steel competes with other materials, such as aluminum, cement, composites, plastics, carbon fiber, glass and wood.  Some of our products are commodities, subject to their own cyclical fluctuations in supply and demand.  However, we are focused on providing a broader range of diversified value-added products that de-emphasize commodity steel. The primary competitive influences on products we sell are price, quality and value-added services.

Global steelmaking capacity exceeds global consumption of steel products.  Such excess capacity sometimes results in steel manufacturers in certain countries exporting steel at prices that are lower than prevailing domestic prices, and sometimes at or below their cost to produce.  Excessive imports of steel into the United States in 2017, intensified price competition on the domestic steel industry which negatively affected our ability to increase our selling prices and realize higher margins and profitability.  While the 2018 introduction of tariffs pursuant to Section 232 of the Trade Expansion Act of 1962, as amended, has decreased the volume of steel products imports in the United States, domestic steel and steel products prices remain negatively impacted by excessive imports of steel and steel products into the United States. 

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Metals Recycling Operations Segment



The metals recycling operations consists solely of OmniSource and includes both ferrous and nonferrous scrap metal processing, transportation, marketing, and brokerage services strategically located primarily in close proximity to our steel mills and other end-user scrap consumers throughout the eastern half of the United States.  In addition, OmniSource designs, installs, and manages customized scrap management programs for industrial manufacturing companies at hundreds of locations throughout North America. Our metals recycling operations accounted for 13% of our consolidated net sales during 2018 and 15% in 2017 and 2016. Our steel mills utilize a significant portion of the ferrous scrap processed through OmniSource as raw material in our steelmaking operations, and the remainder is sold to other consumers. This strategic symbiotic relationship with our own steelmaking operations provides valuable pull-through demand to OmniSource’s ferrous scrap operations. In 2018,  2017, and 2016, OmniSource provided our steel operations with 39%, 38%, and 40%, respectively, of its ferrous scrap requirements.

We shipped the following from our metals recycling operations:





 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 



 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 



 

2018

 

2017

 

2016

 

 



Ferrous metal total (gross tons)

5,123,553 

 

4,952,973 

 

5,070,380 

 

 



     Shipments to our steel mills

3,346,135 

 

3,108,858 

 

3,112,616 

 

 



     Percent of total to our steel mills

65% 

 

63% 

 

61% 

 

 



 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 



Nonferrous metals (thousands of pounds)

1,131,412 

 

1,086,799 

 

1,103,505 

 

 



We sell various grades of processed ferrous scrap primarily to steel mills and foundries.  Ferrous scrap metal is the primary raw material for electric arc furnaces, such as our steel mills.  In addition, we sell various grades of nonferrous metals such as copper, brass, aluminum and stainless steel, to aluminum, steel and ingot manufacturers, brass and bronze ingot makers, copper refineries and mills, smelters, specialty mills, alloy manufacturers, and other consumers. 

We purchase processed and unprocessed ferrous and nonferrous scrap metals, in a variety of forms for our metals recycling facilities.

Ferrous scrap comes from two primary sources:

·

Manufacturers and industrial plants, metal fabrication plants, machine shops and factories, which generate ferrous scrap referred to as prompt or industrial scrap, and

·

Scrap dealers, retail individuals, auto wreckers, demolition firms and others who provide steel and iron scrap, referred to as obsolete scrap. Obsolete scrap includes scrap recycled from items such as end-of-life automobiles, appliances, railroad cars and railroad track materials, agricultural machinery and demolition scrap from obsolete structures, containers and machines and represents a significant source of scrap generation.

Nonferrous scrap comes from three primary sources:

·

Manufacturers and other nonferrous scrap sources, which generate or sell scrap aluminum, copper, stainless steel, and other nonferrous metals,

·

Producers of items such as electric wire, telecommunication service providers, aerospace, defense and recycling companies that generate nonferrous scrap consisting primarily of copper wire, aluminum beverage cans, and various other metals and alloys, and

·

Retail individuals who sell material directly to our facilities, which they collect from a variety of sources.

We do not purchase a significant amount of scrap metal from a single source or from a limited number of major sources.  Market demand and the composition, quality, size, weight, and location of the materials are the primary factors that determine prices.

Products.    Our metals recycling operations primarily involve the purchase, processing, and resale of ferrous and nonferrous scrap metals into reusable forms and grades.  We process an array of ferrous products through a variety of methods, including sorting, shredding, shearing, cutting, torching, baling, briquetting, and breaking. Our major ferrous products include heavy melting steel, busheling, bundled scrap, shredded scrap and other scrap metal products, such as steel turnings and cast iron. These products vary in properties or attributes related to cleanness, size of individual pieces, and residual alloys. The necessary characteristics of the ferrous products are determined by the specific needs and requirements of the consumer and affect the individual product’s relative value. We process numerous grades of nonferrous products, including aluminum, brass, copper, stainless steel, and other nonferrous metals. Additionally, we provide transportation logistics (truck, rail, and river barge), marketing, brokerage, and scrap management services, providing competitive price and cost advantages to our suppliers and customers.

Customers.    We sell various grades of processed ferrous scrap to end-users, such as electric arc furnace steel mills, integrated steelmakers, foundries, secondary smelters, and metal brokers, who aggregate materials for other large users. Ferrous scrap metal is the primary raw material for electric arc furnaces, such as our steel mills. Most of our ferrous scrap customers purchase processed scrap through negotiated spot sales contracts which establish a quantity purchase for the month. The price we charge for ferrous scrap depends upon market demand and pricing, transportation costs, as well as the quality and grade of the scrap. We sell various grades of processed nonferrous scrap to end-users such as aluminum sheet and ingot manufacturers, brass and bronze ingot makers, copper refineries, mills, smelters, specialty steelmakers, alloy manufacturers, wire and cable

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producers, utilities, and telephone networks.  The price we charge for nonferrous scrap also depends upon market demand and pricing, transportation costs, as well as the quality and grade of the scrap.

Competition.  Scrap is a global commodity influenced by conditions in a number of industrialized and emerging markets throughout Asia, Europe and North America. The markets for scrap metals are highly competitive, both in the purchase of raw or unprocessed scrap, and the sale of processed scrap. With regard to the purchase of unprocessed scrap, we compete with numerous independent recyclers, as well as smaller scrap companies engaged only in collecting obsolete scrap. In many cases, we also purchase unprocessed scrap metal from smaller scrap dealers and other processors. Successful procurement of materials is determined primarily by the price offered by the purchaser for the raw scrap and the proximity of our processing facility to the source of the raw scrap. Both ferrous and nonferrous scrap sells as a commodity in both domestic and international markets, which are affected, sometimes significantly, by relative economic conditions, currency fluctuations, and the availability and cost of transportation. Competition for sales of processed scrap is based primarily on the price, quality, and location of the scrap metals, as well as the level of service provided in terms of reliability and timing of delivery.

We also face potential competition for sales of processed scrap from other producers of steel products, such as electric arc furnace and integrated steel mills, some of which like us are also vertically integrated in the scrap metals recycling business. In addition, other steel mills may compete with us in attempting to secure scrap supply through direct purchasing from our scrap suppliers. Scrap metal processors also face competition from substitutes for prepared ferrous scrap, such as pre-reduced iron pellets, HBI, pig iron, direct reduced iron (DRI), and other forms of processed iron. The availability and relative prices of substitutes for ferrous scrap could result in a decreased demand for processed ferrous scrap and could result in lower prices and/or lower demand for our scrap products.

The industry is highly fragmented with many smaller, regional, national and global companies, which have multiple locations in areas in which OmniSource also operates. No single scrap metals recycler has a significant market share in the domestic market.







Steel Fabrication Operations Segment



Our steel fabrication operations include seven New Millennium Building Systems plants that primarily serve the non-residential construction industry throughout the United States.  We have a national operating footprint that allows us to serve the entire domestic construction market, as well as national accounts, such as large retail chains.

Steel fabrication operations accounted for 8% of our consolidated net sales during 2018,  and 9% in 2017 and 2016. We sold 642,000, 627,000, and 563,000 tons of joist and deck products during 2018, 2017, and 2016, respectively. Our steel operations supply a substantial portion, approximately 58%, 51% and 59% in 2018, 2017, and 2016, respectively, of the steel utilized in our steel fabrication operations, providing strategic pull-through demand. 

Products.  Our steel fabrication operations produce steel building components, including steel joists, girders, trusses (six locations), and steel deck (five locations). Our joist products include bowstring, arched, scissor, double‑pitched and single‑pitched joists. Our deck products include a full range of steel decking: roof, form, composite floor, specialty architectural, floor systems, and bridge deck.

Customers and Markets.  Our primary steel fabrication operations customers are non-residential steel fabricators, such as, metal building companies, general construction contractors, developers, brokers and governmental entities.  Our customers are located throughout the United States, including national accounts. The steel joist and deck market in the United States was approximately 2.1 million, 2.0 million tons, and 1.9 million tons in 2018, 2017, and 2016, respectively, based on trade association estimates. Based on this information, our steel fabrication operations continue to maintain approximately one third of the total steel joist and deck market. We believe we are well positioned with our national footprint as the non-residential construction market continues to expand, and we have available capacity that can be deployed as needed.

Competition.  We compete with other North American joist and steel deck producers primarily on the basis of price, quality, customer service, and proximity to the customer.  Our national footprint allows us to service the entire domestic non-residential construction market, as well as national accounts such as large retail chains, and certain specialty deck customers.





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Other Information



Sources, Availability, and Cost of Steel and Other Operations’ Raw Materials

Scrap Metals. The principal raw material of our steel operations is scrap metal derived from, among other sources “home scrap”, generated internally at steel mills themselves; industrial scrap, generated as a by-product of manufacturing; and obsolete scrap recycled from end-of-life automobiles, appliances, railroad cars and railroad track materials, agricultural machinery and demolition scrap from obsolete structures, containers and machines.

Ferrous scrap typically comprises more than 80% of the metallic melt mix in electric arc furnace steelmaking, in contrast to integrated mill steelmaking, where the proportion of scrap has traditionally been approximately 25% to 35%. Depending upon the scrap substitute material that may be available from time to time, and the relative cost of such material, the percentage of scrap used in our steelmaking operations could be increased or reduced in our metallic melt mix.

Many variables can impact ferrous scrap prices, all of which reflect the pushes and pulls of the supply demand equation. These factors include the level of domestic steel production (high quality low-residual scrap is a by-product of steel manufacturing activity), the level of exports of scrap from the United States, and the amount of obsolete scrap production. In addition, domestic ferrous scrap prices generally have a strong correlation and spread to global pig iron pricing. Generally, as domestic steel demand increases, so does scrap demand and resulting scrap prices. The reverse is also normally, but not always, true with scrap prices following steel prices downward when supply exceeds demand. Excess sheet steel imports declined during 2016 with duties levied pursuant to the trade case rulings from the United States International Trade Commission, resulting in increased domestic steel mill utilization, resulting in improved scrap pricing. Steel imports rose during 2017, mostly related to structural and pre-fabricated structural long products, but also cold roll and coated sheet steel, maintaining pressure on steel selling prices in those markets.  However, scrap prices continued to climb in 2017 due to strong domestic steel mill utilization and level scrap exports. This trend continued in 2018 with stronger domestic steel mill utilization and demand.  When scrap prices greatly accelerate, this can challenge one of the principal elements of an electric arc furnace based steel mill’s traditional lower cost structure—the cost of its metallic raw material. 

The following table provides pricing per gross ton from American Metal Market (AMM) and Ryan’s Notes (Pig Iron) estimates for ferrous materials used in steel production:

Picture 11



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Iron Units. In addition to scrap, DRI, HBI, pig iron, and iron nuggets are used in our electric arc furnace steel mill production. During 2018,  2017, and 2016, we consumed 10.9 million, 10.3 million and 9.9 million tons, respectively, of metallic materials in our steelmaking furnaces, of which, iron units other than scrap, represented approximately 14%, 13% and 14% of the tons, respectively. Of these iron substitute units consumed, our IDI operation supplies 100% of its production to the Butler Flat Roll Division mill, representing 64%, 72% and 65% of their iron units in 2018, 2017, and 2016, respectively. 

Energy Resources

Electricity.  Electricity is a significant input required in the electric arc furnaces in our steelmaking operations, representing between 5% and 7% of steel production costs of goods sold in 2018,  2017 and 2016. We have entered into fixed price electricity contracts for the Butler Flat Roll Division, Columbus Flat Roll Division, Roanoke Bar Division and Steel of West Virginia, while our Engineered Bar Products Division has a combination of fixed pricing and market pricing for the various components of the electrical services (demand charge, energy charge, riders, etc.). Our Structural and Rail Division purchases electricity at current market prices and through fixed price forward contracts.

Patents and Trademarks

We currently do not own any material patents or patent applications for technologies that are in use in our production processes. We have the following major registered trademarks, as follows:

·

the mark “SDI” and a chevron alone;

·

the mark “SDI” and a chevron and “Steel Dynamics, Inc.” to the right of the chevron;

·

the mark “SDI” and a chevron and “Steel Dynamics” to the right of the chevron;

·

the mark “OmniSource Corporation” with the circle logo design;

·

the slogan “The Best in Metals Recycling”;

·

the mark “The Techs”; and

·

the mark “New Millennium Building Systems, LLC.”

Research and Development

Our research and development activities have consisted of efforts to expand, develop and improve our products and operating processes, and our efforts to develop and improve alternative ironmaking technologies through IDI. Most of these research and development efforts have been conducted in-house by our employees.

Environmental Matters

Our operations are subject to substantial and evolving local, state, and federal environmental, health and safety laws and regulations concerning, among other things, emissions to the air, discharges to surface and ground water and to sewer systems, and the generation, handling, storage, transportation, treatment and disposal of solid and hazardous wastes and secondary materials. Our operations are dependent upon permits regulating discharges into the environment or the use and handling of by-products in order to operate our facilities. We dedicate considerable resources aimed at achieving compliance with federal, state and local laws concerning the environment.  While we do not currently believe that our future compliance efforts with such provisions will have a material adverse effect on our results of operations, cash flows or financial condition, this is subject to change in the ever-evolving regulatory environment in which we operate.

Since the interpretation and enforcement of environmental laws and regulations that may be enacted from time to time are subject to changing social or political pressures, our environmental capital expenditures and costs for environmental compliance may increase in the future. In addition, due to the possibility of unanticipated regulatory or other developments, the amount and timing of future environmental expenditures may vary substantially from those currently anticipated. The cost of current and future environmental compliance may also place United States steel producers at a competitive disadvantage with respect to foreign steel producers, which may not be required to undertake equivalent costs in their operations.

Pursuant to the Resource Conservation and Recovery Act, or RCRA, which governs the treatment, handling and disposal of solid and hazardous wastes, the United States Environmental Protection Agency, or United States EPA, and authorized state or local environmental agencies may conduct inspections to identify alleged violations or areas where there may have been releases of solid or hazardous constituents into the environment and require the facilities to take corrective action to address any such releases. RCRA also allows citizens to bring certain suits against regulated facilities for potential damages and cleanup. Our steelmaking and certain other facilities generate wastes subject to RCRA. Our operations produce various by-products, some of which, for example electric arc furnace or EAF dust, are often categorized as hazardous waste, requiring special handling for disposal or for the recovery of metallics. We collect such by-products in pollution control equipment, such as baghouses, and either recycle or appropriately dispose of these by-products. While we cannot predict the future actions of the regulators or other interested parties, the potential exists for required corrective action at these facilities, the costs of which could be substantial.

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Under the Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation and Liability Act, known as “CERCLA” or “Superfund,” the United States EPA, state agencies and, in some instances, private parties have the authority to impose joint and several liability for the remediation of contaminated properties upon generators of waste, current and former site owners and operators, transporters and other potentially responsible parties, regardless of fault or the legality of the original disposal activity. Many states have statutes and regulatory authorities similar to CERCLA that can also apply. We have a number of material handling agreements with various contractors to properly dispose of or recycle our EAF dust and certain other by-products of our operations. However, we cannot assure that, even if there has been no fault by us, we may not still be cited as a waste generator by reason of an environmental cleanup at a site to which our by-products were transported.

The Clean Water Act and similar state and local laws apply to aspects of our operations and impose regulatory restrictions related to the discharge of wastewater, storm water and dredged or fill material. The United States EPA, state agencies and, in certain instances, private parties have the ability to bring suit alleging violations and seeking penalties and damages. The Clean Water Act’s provisions can require new or expanded water treatment investments to be made and can limit or even prohibit certain current or planned activities at our operations.

The Clean Air Act and analogous state and local laws require many of our facilities to obtain and maintain air permits in order to operate.  Air permits can impose new or expanded obligations to limit or prevent current or future emissions and to add costly pollution control equipment. Enforcement for alleged violations can be brought by the United States EPA, state agencies, and in certain instances private parties, and can result in substantial penalties and injunctive relief.

In addition, there are a number of other environmental, health and safety laws and regulations that apply to our facilities and may affect our operations. By way of example and not of limitation, certain portions of the federal Toxic Substances Control Act, Oil Pollution Act, Safe Drinking Water Act and Emergency Planning and Community Right-to-Know Act, as well as state and local laws and regulations implemented by the regulatory agencies, apply to aspects of our facilities’ operations. In some instances, we may also be subject to foreign governments’ regulations and international treaties and laws. Many of these laws allow both the governments and citizens to bring certain suits against regulated facilities for alleged environmental violations. Finally, our operations could be subject to certain toxic tort suits brought by citizens or other third parties alleging causes of action such as nuisance, negligence, trespass, infliction of emotional distress, or other claims alleging personal injury or property damage.

Employees

Our work force consisted of approximately 8,200 full time employees at December 31, 2018, of which approximately 9% were represented by collective bargaining agreements.



Available Information



Our internet website address is www.steeldynamics.com. We make available on our internet website, under “Investors,” free of charge, as soon as reasonably practicable after such materials are electronically filed with, or furnished to, the Securities and Exchange Commission, our Annual Report on Form 10-K, Quarterly Reports on Form 10-Q, Current Reports on Form 8-K and amendments to those reports, as well as press releases, ownership reports pursuant to Section 16(a) of the Securities Act of 1933, our Code of Ethics for Principal Executive Officers and Senior Financial Officers, our Code of Business Conduct and Ethics, and any amendments thereto or waivers thereof, as well as our Audit, Compensation and Nominating and Corporate Governance Committee Charters. We do not intend to incorporate the contents of our or any other website into this report. 

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ITEM 1A.    RISK FACTORS

Many factors could have an effect on our business, results of operations, financial condition and cash flows. We are subject to various risks resulting from changing economic, environmental, political, industry, business and financial conditions. The factors described below represent our principal risks.  

Risks Related to our Industry

Global steelmaking overcapacity and imports of steel into the United States have adversely affected, and may continue to adversely affect, United States steel prices, which may adversely affect our business, results of operations, financial condition and cash flows.

Global steelmaking capacity currently exceeds global consumption of steel products, which adversely affects United States and global steel prices. Such excess capacity sometimes results in steel manufacturers in certain countries exporting steel and steel products, including pre-fabricated long-product steel, at prices that are lower than prevailing domestic prices, and sometimes at or below their cost of production. Excessive imports of steel and steel products, including pre-fabricated steel, into the United States, such as in recent years, have exerted, and may continue to exert, downward pressure on United States steel and steel products prices, which adversely affects our business, results of operations, financial condition and cash flows.  Furthermore, anticipated additional domestic steel capacity could increase this global overcapacity.  This, in turn, may also adversely impact domestic demand for ferrous scrap and our ferrous metallics margins.  United States steel producers compete with many foreign producers, including those in China, Vietnam and other Asian and European countries. Competition from foreign producers is typically strong and is periodically exacerbated by weakening of the economies of certain foreign steelmaking countries. Additionally, low iron ore prices, resulting in disruption of the scrap price correlation to iron ore, leads to reduced global costs to produce steel, further depressing steel import prices.  A higher volume of steel exports to the United States tend to occur at depressed prices when steel producing countries experience periods of economic difficulty, decreased demand for steel products or excess capacity. The global steelmaking overcapacity is exacerbated by Chinese steel production capacity that far exceeds that country’s demand and has made China a major global exporter of steel, resulting in weakened global steel pricing than otherwise would be expected. While the introduction of tariffs pursuant to Section 232 of the Trade Expansion Act of 1962, as amended (“Section 232”), has decreased the volume of steel and steel products imports in the United States, domestic steel and steel products prices remain negatively impacted by excessive imports of steel and steel products into the United States.  Should the Section 232 tariffs expire or be relaxed or repealed or should it be circumvented by importers of steel and steel products, downward pressure may be exerted on United States steel and steel products prices, which adversely affects our business, results of operations, financial condition and cash flows

In addition, we believe the downward pressure on, and periodically depressed levels of, United States steel prices in recent years have been further accentuated through imports of steel involving dumping and subsidy abuses by foreign steel producers. Some foreign steel producers are owned, controlled or subsidized by foreign governments. As a result, decisions by these producers with respect to their production, sales and pricing are sometimes influenced to a greater degree by political and economic policy considerations than by prevailing market conditions, realities of the marketplace or consideration of profit or loss. However, while some tariffs, duties and quotas, including those imposed under Section 232, have been put into effect for steel and certain steel products imported from a number of countries that have been found to have been unfairly pricing steel imports to the United States, some foreign steel subject to these duties, tariffs and quotas circumvent the penalties by processing in or transporting through a foreign country not subject to the penalties.  Additionally, there is no assurance that the Section 232 tariffs or other already imposed tariffs, duties and quotas will remain in place or that new ones, even if justified, will be levied and even when imposed many of these are only short-lived. If such tariffs, duties or quotas expire or if others are further relaxed or repealed, or if relatively higher United States steel prices make it attractive for foreign steelmakers to export their steel products to the United States, despite the presence of tariffs, duties or quotas, the resurgence of substantial imports of foreign steel could create downward pressure on United States steel prices.

Our industry, as well as the industries of many of our customers and suppliers upon whom we are dependent, is affected by domestic and global economic factors including periods of slower than anticipated economic growth and the risk of a new recession.

Our financial results are substantially dependent not only upon overall economic conditions in the United States and globally, including Europe and in Asia, but also as they may affect one or more of the industries upon which we depend for the sale of our products. Global or domestic actions, including political actions, trade policies or restrictions, such as the replacement of the North American Free Trade Agreement with the United States-Mexico-Canada Agreement and the changed provisions thereunder, or changes in tax laws, could result in changing economic conditions in the United States and globally, or changes in our pre-tax and post-tax financial performance.  Additionally, periods of slower than anticipated economic growth could reduce customer confidence and adversely affect demand for our products and further adversely affect our business, results of operations, financial condition and cash flows. Metals industries have historically been vulnerable to significant declines in consumption and product pricing during periods of economic downturn or continued uncertainty, including the pace of domestic non-residential construction activity.

Our business is also dependent upon certain industries, such as construction, automotive, manufacturing, transportation, heavy and agriculture equipment, and pipe and tube (including OCTG) markets, and these industries are also cyclical in nature. Therefore, these industries may experience their own fluctuations in demand for our products based on such things as economic conditions, raw material and energy costs, consumer demand and infrastructure funding decisions by governments. Many of these factors are beyond our control. As a result of volatility in our industry or in the industries we serve, we may have difficulty increasing or maintaining our level of sales or profitability. If our industry or the industries we serve were to suffer a downturn, then we may experience an adverse effect on our business, results of operations, financial condition and cash flows.

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A prospective decline in consumer and business confidence and spending, which is often coupled with reductions in the availability of credit or increased cost of credit, as well as volatility in the capital and credit markets, could adversely affect the business and economic environment in which we operate and the profitability of our business. We are also exposed to risks associated with the creditworthiness of our suppliers and customers. If the availability of credit to fund or support the continuation and expansion of our customers’ business operations is curtailed or if the cost of that credit is increased the resulting inability of our customers or of their customers to either access credit or absorb the increased cost of that credit could adversely affect our business by reducing our sales or by increasing our exposure to losses from uncollectible customer accounts. A disruption of the credit markets could also result in financial instability of some of our suppliers and customers. The consequences of such adverse effects could include the interruption of production at the facilities of our customers, the reduction, delay or cancellation of customer orders, delays or interruptions of the supply of raw materials we purchase, and bankruptcy of customers, suppliers or other creditors. Any of these events may adversely affect our business, results of operations, financial condition and cash flows.

Our level of production and our sales and earnings are subject to significant fluctuations as a result of the cyclical nature of the steel industry and some of the industries we serve.

The steel manufacturing business is cyclical in nature, and the selling price of the steel we make may fluctuate significantly due to many factors beyond our control. Furthermore, a number of our products are commodities, subject to their own cyclical fluctuations in supply and demand in both metal consuming and metal generating industries, including the construction and manufacturing industries. The timing, magnitude and duration of these cycles and the resulting price fluctuations are difficult to predict. The sale of our manufactured steel products is directly affected by demand for our products in other cyclical industries, such as construction, automotive, manufacturing, transportation, heavy and agriculture equipment, and pipe and tube (including OCTG) markets. Economic difficulties, stagnant or slow global economies, supply/demand imbalances and currency fluctuations in the United States or globally could decrease the demand for our products or increase the amount of imports of steel into the United States, which could decrease our sales, margins and profitability.

The scrap metal recycling industry has historically been, and is expected to remain, highly cyclical and this could have a material adverse effect on our metals recycling operations’ results.

Scrap metal prices remain subject to fluctuation, and operating results within the metals recycling industry in general have historically been, and are expected to remain, highly cyclical in nature. Similarly, but not necessarily paralleling the price fluctuations in the steel business, the purchase prices for automobile bodies and various other grades of obsolete and industrial scrap, as well as the selling prices for processed and recycled scrap metals we utilize in our own manufacturing process, or which we resell to others through our metals recycling operations, are also volatile. During periods of excess domestic supply or increased imports, scrap metal prices may become or remain depressed and adversely affect the sales, profitability and margins of our scrap business. As a metals recycler, we may attempt to respond to changing recycled metal selling prices by adjusting the scrap metal purchase prices we pay to others, but our ability to do this may be limited by competitive or other factors during periods of low scrap prices, when inbound scrap flow may slow considerably, as scrap generators hold on to their scrap in hopes of getting higher prices later. As such, a prolonged period of low scrap prices could reduce our ability to obtain, process, and sell recycled materials, and this could adversely affect our metals recycling operations’ results. Conversely, periodic increased foreign demand for scrap can result in an outflow of available domestic scrap, as well as resulting higher scrap prices domestically that cannot always be passed on to domestic scrap consumers, thereby further reducing available domestic scrap flows and scrap margins, all of which could adversely affect our sales and profitability of our metals recycling operations. Additionally, during periods of high demand and resulting higher scrap prices, ferrous scrap consumers may seek and develop ferrous scrap alternatives, including pig iron and DRI. The availability and pricing of these scrap alternatives in the domestic market may have a longer-term impact on scrap pricing, particularly in prime grades, which could adversely affect our sales, profitability and margins.

Volatility and major fluctuations in scrap metal, pig iron, zinc and graphite electrode prices and availability, and our potential inability to pass higher costs on to our customers may constrain operating levels and reduce profit margins.

Steel producers require large amounts of raw materials, including scrap metal and scrap substitute products such as pig iron, pelletized iron and other supplies such as zinc, graphite electrodes and ferroalloys. Our principal raw material is scrap metal derived primarily from industrial scrap and end-of-life automobiles, appliances, railroad cars, railroad track materials, agricultural machinery and demolition scrap from obsolete structures, containers and machines. The prices for scrap are subject to market forces largely beyond our control, including demand by United States and international steel producers, freight costs and speculation. The prices for scrap have varied significantly in the past, may vary significantly in the future and do not necessarily fluctuate in tandem with the price of steel. Moreover, some of our integrated steel producer competitors are not as dependent as we are on scrap as a part of their raw material melt mix, which, during periods of high scrap costs relative to the cost of blast furnace iron used by the integrated producers, give them a raw material cost advantage over mini-mills. While our vertical integration into the metals recycling business, through our OmniSource operations, and into the ironmaking business, through our IDI facility, are expected to enable us to continue being a cost-effective supplier to our own steelmaking operations, for some of our metallics requirements, we will still need to rely on other metallics and raw material suppliers, as well as upon general industry supply conditions for the balance of our needs.

Purchase prices for auto bodies, scrap metal and scrap substitute products such as pig iron that we consume and selling prices for scrap and recycled metals that we sell to third parties are volatile and beyond our control. While OmniSource attempts to respond to changing recycled metal selling prices through adjustments to its metal purchase prices, its ability to do so is limited by competitive and other market factors. Changing prices could potentially impact the volume of scrap metal available to us and the volume and realized margins of processed metals we sell.

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The availability and prices of raw materials may also be negatively affected by new or existing laws and regulations, allocation by suppliers, interruptions in production, accidents or natural disasters, changes in exchange rates, global price fluctuations, the availability and cost of transportation, and competing uses for raw materials.  As a major producer of galvanized steel products, we purchase and consume a large amount of zinc, which is currently at historically high prices, and may have an effect on our profit margins.  Due to its use in other industries, demand for the primary raw material (needle coke) used in the production of graphite electrodes has expanded in recent years, leading to increased price, and possible difficulty in securing and timely obtaining graphite electrodes.  Graphite electrodes are a critical raw material in our steelmaking.  Any inability to secure a consistent and timely supply of our raw materials, and supplies, including graphite electrodes, could have an adverse effect on our business, financial condition, results of operations or prospects.

If prices for ferrous metallics increase by a greater margin than corresponding price increases for the sale of our steel products, we may not be able to recoup such cost increases from increases in the selling prices of steel products. Conversely, depressed prices for ferrous scrap may constrain its supply, which may adversely affect our metals recycling operations and also the availability of certain grades of scrap for our steelmaking operations. Additionally, our inability to pass on all or any substantial part of any cost increases during periods of rapidly rising scrap prices, through scrap or other surcharges, or to provide for our customers’ needs because of the potential unavailability of key raw materials or other inputs, may result in production slowdowns or curtailments or may otherwise have a material adverse effect on our business, financial condition, results of operations or prospects.

The cost and availability of electricity and natural gas are also subject to volatile market conditions.

Steel producers like us consume large amounts of energy to melt ferrous scrap in electric arc furnaces and reheat steel for rolling into finished products. We rely on third parties for the supply of energy resources we consume in our steelmaking activities. The prices for and availability of electricity, natural gas, oil and other energy resources are also subject to volatile market conditions, often affected by weather conditions as well as political, environmental and economic factors beyond our control. As consumers of electricity and natural gas, we must have dependable delivery in order to operate. Accordingly, we are at risk in the event of an energy disruption, including power outages or power unavailability. Prolonged blackouts or brownouts or disruptions caused by natural disasters or by political or environmental considerations would substantially disrupt our production. Since a significant portion of our finished steel products are delivered by truck, unforeseen fluctuations in the price of fuel would also have a negative impact on our costs or on the costs of many of our customers. In addition, changes in certain environmental regulations, including those that may impose output limitations or higher costs associated with climate change or greenhouse gas emissions, could substantially increase the cost of manufacturing and raw materials to us and other steel producers.

Fluctuations in the value of the United States dollar relative to other currencies may adversely affect our business.

Fluctuations in the value of the dollar can be expected to affect our business. A strong United States dollar, such as recently experienced, makes imported products less expensive, potentially resulting in more imports of steel products into the United States by our foreign competitors, while a weak United States dollar may have the opposite impact on imports.

Compliance with and changes in environmental and remediation requirements could result in substantially increased capital requirements and operating costs.

Existing laws or regulations, as currently interpreted or as may be interpreted in the future, as well as future laws or regulations, may have a material adverse effect on our results of operations and financial condition.

We are subject to numerous local, state, federal and international statutory and regulatory environmental requirements relating to, among other things:



·

the generation, storage, treatment, handling and disposal of solid and hazardous waste and secondary materials;

·

the discharge of materials into the air, including periodic changes to the National Ambient Air Quality Standards and to emission standards;

·

the management, treatment and discharge of wastewater and storm water;

·

the use and treatment of groundwater;

·

the remediation of soil and groundwater contamination;

·

climate change legislation or regulation;

·

the need for and the ability to timely obtain air, water or other environmental permits;

·

the timely reporting of certain chemical usage, content, storage and releases;

·

the remediation and reclamation of land used for iron mining;

·

natural resource protections; and

·

the protection of our employees’ health and safety.

Compliance with environmental laws and regulations, which affect our steelmaking, metals recycling, ironmaking, and copper and aluminum production operations, is a significant factor in our business. We are required to obtain and comply with environmental permits and licenses, and failure to obtain or renew or the violation of any permit or license could result in substantial fines and penalties, capital expenditures, operational changes, suspension of operations and/or the closure of a subject facility. Similarly, delays, increased costs and/or the imposition of onerous conditions to the securing or renewal of permits could have a material adverse effect on these operations.

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Uncertainty regarding adequate pollution control levels, testing and sampling procedures, and new pollution control technology are factors that may increase our future compliance expenditures. We are unable to predict the ultimate cost of future compliance with environmental requirements or their effect on our operations. Although we work hard to be in substantial compliance with all applicable laws and regulations, legal requirements frequently change and are subject to interpretation such that regulatory agencies may bring enforcement actions for alleged noncompliance. Private parties might also bring claims against us under citizen suit provisions and/or for property damage or personal injury allegedly resulting from our operations. New laws, regulations and changing interpretations by regulatory authorities, together with uncertainty regarding the application of existing requirements are among the factors that may increase our future expenditures to comply with environmental requirements. The cost of complying with existing laws or regulations as currently interpreted or reinterpreted in the future, or with future laws or regulations, may have a material adverse effect on our results of operations and financial condition.

Our manufacturing and metals recycling operations produce significant amounts of by-products, some of which are handled as solid or hazardous waste or as hazardous secondary materials. For example, our steel mills generate electric arc furnace (EAF) dust, which the United States Environmental Protection Agency (United States EPA) and other regulatory authorities classify as hazardous waste and regulate accordingly unless recycled in an exempt manner.

In addition, the primary feed materials for the shredders operated by our metals recycling operations are automobile bodies. A portion of the feed materials consist of unrecyclable material known as shredder residue. If laws or regulations or the interpretation of the laws or regulations change with regard to EAF dust or shredder residue or other by-products created by our operations, we may incur significant additional expenditures.

Federal and state environmental laws enable the United States EPA, state agencies and certain private parties to recover from owners, operators, generators and transporters the cost of investigation and cleanup of sites at which wastes or hazardous substances were disposed. In connection with these laws, we may be required to clean up contamination discovered at our sites including contamination that may have been caused by former owners or operators of the sites, to conduct additional cleanup at sites that have already had some cleanup performed, and/or to perform cleanup with regard to sites formerly used in connection with our operations.

In addition, we may be required to pay for, or to pay a portion of, the costs of cleanup at sites to which we sent materials for disposal or recycling, notwithstanding that the original disposal or recycling activity may have complied with all regulatory requirements then in effect. Under certain laws, a party can be held jointly and severally liable for all of the cleanup costs associated with a disposal site. In practice, a liable party often splits the costs of cleanup with other potentially responsible parties. We have received notices from the United States EPA, state agencies and third parties that we have been identified as potentially responsible for the costs of investigating and cleaning up a number of disposal sites. In most cases, many other parties are also named as potentially responsible parties and also contribute to payment of those costs.

Because cleanup liability can in some cases be imposed retroactively on activities that occurred many years ago, and because the United States EPA and state agencies are still discovering sites that pose a threat to public health or the environment, we can provide no assurance that we will not become liable for significant costs associated with investigation and remediation of cleanup sites.

Increased regulation associated with climate change and greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions could impose significant costs on both our steelmaking and metals recycling operations.

The United States government or various governmental agencies may introduce regulatory changes in response to the potential impacts of climate change. International treaties or agreements may also result in increasing regulation of GHG emissions, including the introduction of carbon emissions limitations or trading mechanisms. Any such regulation regarding climate change and GHG emissions, could impose significant costs on our operations and on the operations of our customers and suppliers, including increased energy, capital equipment, emissions controls, environmental monitoring and reporting and other costs in order to comply with current or future laws or regulations concerning climate change and GHG emissions. Any adopted future climate change and GHG regulations could negatively impact our ability, and that of our customers and suppliers, to compete with companies situated in areas not subject to or not complying with such limitations.

From a medium and long-term perspective, we are likely to see an increase in costs relating to our assets that emit significant amounts of GHGs as a result of these regulatory initiatives, which may impact our operations directly or through our suppliers or customers. Until the timing, scope and extent of any future regulation becomes known, we cannot predict the effect on our financial condition, operating performance and ability to compete.

Risks Related to the Business

Our senior secured credit facility contains, and any future financing agreements may contain, restrictive covenants that may limit our flexibility.

Restrictions and covenants in our existing debt agreements, including our senior secured credit facility, and any future financing agreements, may impair our ability to finance future operations or capital needs or to engage in other business activities. Specifically, these agreements may limit or restrict our ability to:

·

incur additional indebtedness;

·

pay dividends or make distributions with respect to our capital stock, in excess of certain amounts;

·

repurchase or redeem capital stock;

·

make some investments;

20

 


 

 

·

create liens on property;

·

make some capital expenditures;

·

enter into transactions with affiliates or related persons;

·

issue or sell stock of certain subsidiaries;

·

sell or transfer assets; and

·

enter into mergers, acquisitions or consolidations, or some joint ventures.

A breach of any of the restrictions or covenants could cause a default under our senior secured credit facility, our senior notes, or our other debt. A significant portion of our indebtedness may then become immediately due and payable.

Under our senior secured credit facility, we are required to maintain certain financial covenants tied to our leverage and profitability. Our ability to meet such covenants or other restrictions can be affected by events beyond our control. If a default were to occur, the lenders could elect to declare all amounts then outstanding to be immediately due and payable and terminate all commitments to extend further credit. If we are unable to repay those outstanding amounts, the lenders could proceed against the collateral granted to them to secure such indebtedness. We have pledged substantially all of our receivables and inventories and all shares of capital stock or other equity interests of our wholly-owned subsidiaries and intercompany debt held by us as collateral for our senior secured credit facility.

We may face significant price and other forms of competition from other steel producers, scrap processors and alternative materials, which could have a material adverse effect on our business, financial condition, results of operation or prospects.

The global markets in which steel companies and scrap processors conduct business are highly competitive and became even more so due to consolidations in the steel and scrap industries. Additionally, in many applications, steel competes with other materials, such as aluminum, cement, composites, plastics, carbon fiber, glass and wood.  Increased use of alternative materials for any reason, including as a response to regulations such as the Corporate Average Fuel Economy (CAFÉ) requirements, could decrease demand for steel or force other steel producers into new products or markets that compete more directly with us, and combined with increased competition could cause us to lose market share, increase expenditures or reduce pricing, any one of which could have a material adverse effect on our business, financial condition, results of operations or prospects. The global steel industry suffers from overcapacity, and that excess capacity intensifies price competition for some of our products. A decrease in the global demand for steel scrap, due to market or other conditions, including trade restrictions such as China’s refusal to accept steel scrap imports, generally causes a decrease in the price of scrap metals. A decrease in price could result in some scrap generators exiting the marketplace which could further decrease the availability of scrap. A shortage in the availability of scrap could have a material adverse effect on both our steelmaking and our metals recycling operations and thus on our business, financial condition, results of operations or prospects.

We are subject to significant risks relating to changes in commodity prices and may not be able to effectively protect against these risks.

We are exposed to commodity price risk during periods where we hold scrap metal inventory for processing or resale. Prices of commodities, including scrap, can be volatile due to numerous factors beyond our control. In an increasing price environment for raw materials, competitive conditions may limit our ability to pass on price increases to our consumers. In a decreasing price environment for processed scrap, we may not have the ability to fully recoup the cost of raw materials that we procure, process, and sell to our customers. In addition, new entrants into the market areas we serve could result in higher purchase prices for raw materials and lower margins from our scrap. Our sales and inventory position may be vulnerable to adverse changes in commodity prices, which could materially adversely impact our operating and financial performance. Thus, we engage in some hedging of certain commodities in futures markets.

Availability of an adequate source of supply is required for our metals recycling operations.

We procure our scrap inventory from numerous sources. These suppliers generally are not bound by long-term contracts and generally have no obligation to sell recyclable metal to us. In periods of low industry scrap prices, scrap suppliers may elect to hold recyclable metal to wait for higher prices or intentionally slow their metal collection activities. If a substantial number of scrap suppliers cease selling recyclable metal to us, we may be unable to recycle metal at desired levels and our results of operations and financial condition could be materially adversely affected. In addition, a slowdown of industrial production in the United States reduces the supply of industrial grades of metal to the metal recycling industry, resulting in our having less recyclable metal available to process and sell.

We are subject to cybersecurity threats and may face risks to the security of our sensitive data and information technology, which may adversely affect our business, results of operations, financial condition and cash flows.

Increased global cybersecurity and information technology security requirements, vulnerabilities and threats and a rise in sophisticated and targeted cybercrime pose a risk to the security and functionality of our systems and information networks, and to the confidentiality, availability and integrity of sensitive data, including intellectual property, proprietary information, financial information, customer, supplier and business partner information, and personally identifiable information, any of which could have materially adverse economic consequences.  Additionally, such cybersecurity vulnerabilities or attacks could result in an interruption of the functionality of our automated and electronically controlled manufacturing operating systems, which, if compromised, could cease, threaten, delay or slow down our ability to melt, roll or otherwise process steel or any of our other products for the duration of such interruption, which could have materially adverse economic consequences and which may adversely affect our business, results of operations, financial condition and cash flows. Our customers, suppliers and vendors may also store certain of our sensitive information on their information technology systems, which if breached or attacked, could likewise expose our sensitive information and have materially adverse economic consequences.

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Although we believe we have adopted procedures and controls to adequately protect our sensitive data, networks and information and operating technology and systems, there can be no assurance that a system or network failure, or cybersecurity breach or attack, will be prevented, whether due to attacks by cyber criminals or due to employee, contractor or other error or malfeasance. This could lead to system interruption, production delays or downtimes and operational disruptions, and the disclosure, modification or destruction of sensitive data, which could have an adverse effect on our reputation, customer, supplier and business partner relationships, financial results and results of operations, and could result in litigation or regulatory investigations, actions, fines or penalties, as well as increased cybersecurity monitoring and protection costs.  Additionally, as cybersecurity threats continue to evolve and become more sophisticated, we may need to invest additional time, resources and finances to protect the security of our sensitive data, systems and information networks.

We may face risks associated with the implementation of our growth strategy.

Our growth strategy subjects us to various risks. As part of our growth strategy, we may expand existing facilities, enter into new product or process initiatives, acquire or build additional plants, acquire other businesses and assets, enter into joint ventures, or form strategic alliances that we believe will complement our existing business. These expansions and transactions, including our recently announced planned construction of a new electric-arc-furnace flat roll steel mill with an anticipated annual production capacity of approximately 3.0 million tons expected to be located in the southwestern United States, may involve some or all of the following risks:

·

the risk of entering product or geographic markets in which we have little experience;

·

the risk of a newly constructed steel mill being completed over budget or not on time;

·

the risk of not being able to adequately obtain sufficient labor to efficiently build or staff a new steel mill;

·

the risk of expected markets, products, customers and demand for products produced by a new steel mill being lower than expected;

·

the difficulty of competing for acquisitions and other growth opportunities with companies having materially greater financial resources than us;

·

the inability to realize anticipated synergies or other expected benefits;

·

the difficulty of integrating new or acquired operations and personnel into our existing operations;

·

the potential disruption of ongoing operations;

·

the diversion of financial resources to new operations or acquired businesses;

·

the diversion of management attention from other business concerns to new operations or acquired businesses;

·

the loss of key employees, customers or suppliers of acquired businesses;

·

the potential exposure to unknown liabilities;

·

the inability of management to maintain uniform standards, controls, procedures and policies;

·

the difficulty of managing the growth of a larger company;

·

the risk of becoming involved in labor, commercial, or regulatory disputes or litigation related to the new operations or acquired businesses;

·

the risk of becoming more highly leveraged;

·

the risk of contractual or operational liability to other venture participants or to third parties as a result of our participation;

·

the inability to work efficiently with joint venture or strategic alliance partners; and

·

the difficulties of terminating joint ventures or strategic alliances.

These expansions or transactions might be required for us to remain competitive, but we may not be able to complete any such transactions on favorable terms or obtain financing, if necessary. Future expansions and transactions may not improve our competitive position and business prospects as anticipated, and if they do not, our business, financial condition, results of operations or prospects may be adversely affected.

Impairment charges could adversely affect our results of operations.

Occasionally, assumptions that we have made regarding products or businesses we have acquired or sought to develop about the sustainability of markets we sought to exploit, or about industry conditions that underlie our decision making when we elected to capitalize a venture turn out differently than anticipated.  In such instances, the fair value of such assets may fall below their carrying value recorded on our balance sheet.

Accordingly, we periodically test goodwill, and long-lived tangible and intangible assets to determine whether their estimated fair value is in fact less than their value recorded on our balance sheet.  If we determine that the fair value of any of these assets, from whatever cause, is less than the value recorded on our balance sheet, we are required to incur non-cash asset impairment charges, such as those recorded in past years, that adversely affect our results of operations. There can be no assurances that continued market dynamics or other factors may not result in future impairment charges.

We are subject to litigation and legal compliance risks which could adversely affect our financial condition, results of operations and liquidity.

We are involved from time to time in various routine litigation matters, including administrative proceedings, regulatory proceedings, governmental investigations, environmental matters, and commercial and construction contract disputes, none of which at the present time are expected to have a material impact on our financial conditions, results of operations or liquidity. For additional information regarding legal proceedings please refer to Item 3. Legal Proceedings.

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In addition to risks associated with our environmental and other regulatory compliance, our international operations are subject to complex foreign and United States laws and regulations, including the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act, regulations related to import-export controls, the Office of Foreign Assets Control, and other laws and regulations, each of which may increase our cost of doing business and expose us to increased risk.

Unexpected equipment downtime or shutdowns could adversely affect our business, financial condition, results of operations and prospects.

Interruptions in our production capabilities could adversely affect our production costs, products available for sale and earnings during the affected period. In addition to equipment failures, our facilities are also subject to the risk of catastrophic loss due to unanticipated events such as fires, explosions or violent weather conditions. Our manufacturing processes are dependent upon critical pieces of steelmaking equipment, such as our electric arc furnaces, continuous casters and rolling equipment, some of which are controlled by our information technology systems, as well as electrical equipment, such as transformers. This equipment may, on occasion, be out of service as a result of unanticipated failures or other events, including cybersecurity breaches or attacks or system failures. We have experienced plant shutdowns or periods of reduced production as a result of such equipment failures and may in the future experience plant shutdowns or periods of reduced production as a result of such equipment failures, or other events. These disruptions could have an adverse effect on our business, financial condition, results of operations and prospects.

We have incurred, and may incur in the future, costs to idle facilities, idled facility carrying costs, or increased costs to resume production at idled facilities.

Our Minnesota ironmaking operations are indefinitely idled and should we in the future resume production, we would incur increased costs related to preparing for operation, performing any required repairs and maintenance, and training employees. Should economic or market conditions dictate, we may in the future idle additional facilities, which may require us to incur idling and carrying costs related to those facilities, as well as further increased costs should production be resumed at any idled facility, which could have an adverse effect on our financial results and results of operations.

Governmental agencies may refuse to grant or renew some of our licenses and permits.

We must receive licenses and air, water and other permits and approvals from state and local governments to conduct certain of our operations or to build, expand or acquire new facilities, such as our anticipated construction of a new electric arc furnace flat roll steel mill with an anticipated annual production capacity of approximately 3.0 million tons expected to be located in the southwestern United States. Governmental agencies sometimes resist the establishment of certain types of facilities in their communities, including scrap metal collection and processing facilities. There can be no assurance that future approvals, licenses and permits will be granted or that we will be able to maintain and renew the approvals, licenses and permits we currently hold. Failure to do so could have a material adverse effect on our business, financial condition, results of operations and prospects.

ITEM 1B.UNRESOLVED STAFF COMMENTS



None.

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ITEM 2.PROPERTIES



The following table describes our significant properties as of December 31, 2018. These properties are owned by us and not subject to any significant encumbrances or are leased by us. We believe these properties are suitable and adequate for our current operations and are appropriately utilized. For additional information regarding our facilities please refer to Item 1. Business. 





 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 



 

 

 

 

 

Site

 

Site



 

 

 

 

 

Acreage

 

Acreage

Operations

 

Location

 

Description

 

Owned

 

Leased

Steel Operations Segment *

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Butler Flat Roll Division:

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 Butler Operations

 

Butler, IN

 

Flat Roll Steel Mill and Coating Facility

 

1,021 

 

 Jeffersonville Operations

 

Jeffersonville, IN

 

Flat Roll Steel Coating Facility

 

27 

 

10 

Iron Dynamics

 

Butler, IN

 

Liquid Ironmaking Facility

 

25 

 

Columbus Flat Roll Division

 

Columbus, MS

 

Flat Roll Steel Mill and Coating Facility

 

1,485 

 

14 

The Techs

 

Pittsburgh, PA

 

Flat Roll Steel Coating Facilities

 

16 

 

Heartland Flat Roll Division

 

Terre Haute, IN

 

Flat Roll Steel Rolling and Coating Facility

 

193 

 

Structural and Rail Division

 

Columbia City, IN

 

Structural and Rail Steel Mill

 

700 

 

Engineered Bar Division

 

Pittsboro, IN

 

Engineered Bar Steel Mill and Finishing Facility

 

312 

 

Vulcan Threaded Products

 

Pelham, AL

 

Bar Steel Processing Facility

 

29 

 

Roanoke Bar Division

 

Roanoke, VA

 

Merchant Bar Steel Mill

 

290 

 

Steel of West Virginia:

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

    West Virginia

 

Huntington, WV

 

Specialty Shapes Steel Mill and Finishing Facility

 

49 

 

    Kentucky

 

Wurtland, KY

 

Coating Facility

 

28 

 

    Kentucky

 

Ashland, KY

 

Finishing Facility

 

58 

 

    Tennessee

 

Memphis, TN

 

Finishing Facility

 

 

Metals Recycling Operations Segment

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

   OmniSource:

 

 

 

 

 

 

Indiana

 

Multiple Cities

 

Ferrous and Nonferrous Scrap Processing

 

459 

 

28 

Michigan

 

Multiple Cities

 

Ferrous and Nonferrous Scrap Processing

 

189 

 

North Carolina

 

Multiple Cities

 

Ferrous and Nonferrous Scrap Processing

 

346 

 

Ohio

 

Multiple Cities

 

Ferrous and Nonferrous Scrap Processing

 

212 

 

21 

Oklahoma

 

Sand Springs, OK

 

Ferrous Scrap Processing

 

 

Tennessee

 

Johnson City, TN

 

Ferrous and Nonferrous Scrap Processing

 

33 

 

Virginia

 

Multiple Cities

 

Ferrous and Nonferrous Scrap Processing

 

196 

 

Steel Fabrication Operations Segment

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

New Millennium Building Systems:

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Joist and Deck Operations

 

Butler, IN

 

Steel Joist and Deck Fabrication Facility

 

155 

 

Joist Operations

 

Fallon, NV

 

Steel Joist Fabrication Facility

 

53 

 

Joist and Deck Operations

 

Hope, AR

 

Steel Joist and Deck Fabrication Facility

 

73 

 

Joist Operations

 

Juarez, MX

 

Steel Joist Fabrication Facility

 

17 

 

Joist and Deck Operations

 

Lake City, FL

 

Steel Joist and Deck Fabrication Facility

 

75 

 

Deck Operations

 

Memphis, TN

 

Deck Fabrication Facility

 

19 

 

Joist and Deck Operations

 

Salem, VA

 

Steel Joist and Deck Fabrication Facility

 

63 

 

Other Operations

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Corporate Headquarters

 

Fort Wayne, IN

 

Office Building (116,000 square feet)

 

20 

 

SDI LaFarga, LLC

 

New Haven, IN

 

Copper Wire Rod Facility

 

35 

 

Mesabi Nugget 

 

Hoyt Lakes, MN

 

Ironmaking Facility – Idled May 2015

 

**

 

**

Mesabi Mining

 

Hoyt Lakes, MN

 

Iron Ore Concentration and Grinding (Mining

 

**

 

**



 

 

 

not developed) – Idled May 2015

 

 

 

 

Mining Resources

 

Chisholm, MN

 

Iron Ore Tailings Mining – Idled May 2015

 

***

 

***




*       For 2018, our steel mill production utilization was 96% of our estimated annual steelmaking capability.

**    The Mesabi Nugget and Mesabi Mining properties are located near Hoyt Lakes, Minnesota.  The site encompasses 7,981 acres of land owned outright by us (including mineral and surface rights) and land for which we acquired leasehold interests (including 774 acres of mineral and 624 acres of surface rights).

***  Mining Resources has leases for 488 acres of surface rights and 916 acres for iron-bearing materials of iron tailings basins located in Chisholm, Minnesota.

24

 


 

 

ITEM 3.LEGAL PROCEEDINGS



We are involved in various litigation matters, including administrative proceedings, regulatory proceedings, governmental investigations, environmental matters, and commercial and construction contract disputes, none of which are currently expected to have a material impact on our financial condition, results of operations, or liquidity



We may also be involved from time to time in various governmental investigations, regulatory proceedings or judicial actions seeking penalties, injunctive relief, and/or remediation under federal, state and local environmental laws and regulations. The United States EPA has conducted such investigations and proceedings involving us, in some instances along with state environmental regulators, under various environmental laws, including RCRA, CERCLA, the Clean Water Act and the Clean Air Act. Some of these matters have resulted in fines or penalties, for which a total of $451,000 is recorded in our financial statements as of December 31, 2018.



ITEM 4.MINE SAFETY DISCLOSURES

Information required to be furnished pursuant to Item 4 concerning mine safety disclosure matters, if applicable, by Section 1503(a) of the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act and Item 104 of Regulation S-K (17 CFR 229.104), is included in Exhibit 95 to this annual report. There are no mine safety disclosures to report for the year ended December 31, 2018, therefore, no Exhibit 95 is required.

25

 


 

 

PART II

ITEM 5.MARKET FOR REGISTRANT’S COMMON EQUITY, RELATED STOCKHOLDER MATTERS AND ISSUER PURCHASES OF EQUITY SECURITIES

The information required by Item 5 with respect to securities authorized for issuance under equity compensation plans is set forth in Part III, Item 12 of this Form 10-K. Our common stock trades on The NASDAQ Global Select Stock Market under the symbol STLD.

As of February 21, 2019, we had 224,105,246 shares of common stock outstanding and held beneficially by approximately 24,500 stockholders based on our security position listing. Because many of the shares were held by depositories, brokers and other nominees, the number of registered holders (approximately 1,460) is not representative of the number of beneficial holders.

Issuer Purchases of Equity Securities

We purchased the following equity securities registered by us pursuant to Section 12 of the Exchange Act during the three months ended December 31, 2018.





 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 



 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 



Period

 

Total Number of Shares Purchased

 

Average Price Paid per Share

 

Total Number of Shares Purchased as Part of Publicly Announced Program (1)

 

Maximum Dollar Value of Shares That May Yet be Purchased Under the Program (in thousands) (1)

 



 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 



Quarter ended December 31, 2018

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 



 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 



October 1-31

 

3,893,747 

 

$

40.45 

 

 

3,893,747 

 

$

571,827 

 



November 1-30

 

2,297,889 

 

 

38.08 

 

 

2,297,889 

 

 

484,315 

 



December 1 - 31

 

2,663,127 

 

 

31.98 

 

 

2,663,127 

 

 

399,148 

 



 

 

8,854,763 

 

 

 

 

 

8,854,763 

 

 

 

 



(1)

On September 4, 2018, we announced that our board of directors had authorized an additional share repurchase program of up to $750.0 million of our common stock. Our previous share repurchase program, which was authorized in October 2016, was completed in August 2018.

26

 


 

 

Total Return Graph

Picture 12



27

 


 

 

ITEM 6.SELECTED FINANCIAL DATA

The following table sets forth the selected consolidated financial and operating data of Steel Dynamics, Inc. The selected consolidated operating, other financial and balance sheet data, as of and for each of the years in the five-year period ended December 31, 2018, were derived from our audited consolidated financial statements. You should read the following data in conjunction with Item 7. Management’s Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of Operations and our consolidated financial statements and notes appearing elsewhere in this Form 10-K.

You should also read the following information in conjunction with the data in the table on the following page:

·

On June 29, 2018, we completed the acquisition of Heartland Steel Processing, LLC (formerly known as Companhia Siderurgica Nacional, LLC) (Heartland), for a total cash purchase price of $434.0 million.  Heartland operations are reflected in our steel operations from the date of acquisition.  

·

In the fourth quarter of 2017, we recorded a tax benefit related primarily to the impact of the revaluation of the company’s deferred tax assets and liabilities as of December 31, 2017, using the lower federal tax rate enacted in the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act of 2017, which increased net income and net income attributable to Steel Dynamics, Inc. by $180.6 million, and basic and diluted earnings per share by $0.75.

·

In the fourth quarter of 2016, we recorded a non-cash asset impairment charge associated with the company’s Minnesota ironmaking operations and certain OmniSource assets, which reduced 2016 operating and pretax income by $132.8 million, net income by $89.5 million, net income attributable to Steel Dynamics, Inc. by $76.4 million, and basic and diluted earnings per share by $0.31.

·

In the fourth quarter of 2015, we recorded a pretax non-cash asset impairment charge related to goodwill, trade name and certain other assets associated with OmniSource, which reduced 2015 operating income by $428.5 million, and net income and net income attributable to Steel Dynamics, Inc. by $268.7 million, and basic and diluted earnings per share by $1.11.

·

In the fourth quarter 2014, we recorded a non-cash asset impairment charge associated with the company’s Minnesota ironmaking operations, which reduced 2014 operating and pretax income by $260.0 million, net income by $179.1 million, net income attributable to Steel Dynamics, Inc. by $132.6 million, and basic and diluted earnings per share by $0.55.

·

On September 16, 2014, we completed the acquisition of Severstal Columbus, LLC (Columbus Flat Roll Division). Columbus Flat Roll Division operations are reflected in our steel operations from the date of acquisition.



28

 


 

 





 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 



 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 



Years Ended December 31,



2018

 

2017

 

2016

 

2015

 

2014



 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 



(dollars and shares in thousands, except per share data)

Operating data:

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Net sales

$

11,821,839 

 

$

9,538,797 

 

$

7,777,109 

 

$

7,594,411 

 

$

8,755,952 

Gross profit

 

2,322,814 

 

 

1,582,014 

 

 

1,334,864 

 

 

731,718 

 

 

966,211 

Operating income (loss)

 

1,722,409 

 

 

1,066,881 

 

 

727,966 

 

 

(72,784)

 

 

320,320 

Asset impairment charges reflected in operating income (loss)

 

 -

 

 

 -

 

 

(132,839)

 

 

(428,500)

 

 

(260,000)

Net income (loss)

 

1,255,805 

 

 

805,796 

 

 

360,006 

 

 

(145,170)

 

 

91,650 

Net income (loss) attributable to Steel Dynamics, Inc.

 

1,258,379 

 

 

812,741 

 

 

382,115 

 

 

(130,311)

 

 

157,024 



 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Basic earnings (loss) per share

$

5.38 

 

$

3.38 

 

$

1.57 

 

$

(0.54)

 

$

0.68 

Weighted average common shares outstanding

 

233,923 

 

 

240,132 

 

 

243,576 

 

 

242,017 

 

 

232,547 



 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Diluted earnings (loss) per share

$

5.35 

 

$

3.36 

 

$

1.56 

 

$

(0.54)

 

$

0.67 

Weighted average common shares and share

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

    equivalents outstanding

 

235,193 

 

 

241,781 

 

 

245,298 

 

 

242,017 

 

 

242,078 



 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Dividends declared per share

$

0.75 

 

$

0.62 

 

$

0.56 

 

$

0.55 

 

$

0.46 



 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Capital expenditures

$

239,390 

 

$

164,935 

 

$

198,160 

 

$

114,501 

 

$

111,785 



 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Other data (unaudited):

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Shipments:

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Steel operations segment (net tons)

 

10,609,763 

 

 

9,726,977 

 

 

9,245,946 

 

 

8,328,150 

 

 

7,358,366 



 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Metals recycling operations segment

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Ferrous metals (gross tons)

 

5,123,553 

 

 

4,952,973 

 

 

5,070,380 

 

 

5,139,506 

 

 

5,566,238 

Nonferrous metals (thousands of pounds)

 

1,131,412 

 

 

1,086,799 

 

 

1,103,505 

 

 

1,082,777 

 

 

1,173,771 



 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Steel fabrication operations segment (net tons) 

 

641,698 

 

 

627,274 

 

 

562,725 

 

 

492,875 

 

 

480,509 



 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Steel operations segment production (net tons)

 

10,899,776 

 

 

9,995,082 

 

 

9,503,465 

 

 

8,528,885 

 

 

7,376,657 



 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Number of employees

 

8,200 

 

 

7,635 

 

 

7,695 

 

 

7,510 

 

 

7,780 



 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Balance sheet data:

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Cash and equivalents and short-term investments

$

1,057,003 

 

$

1,028,649 

 

$

841,483 

 

$

727,032 

 

$

361,363 

Property, plant and equipment, net

 

2,945,767 

 

 

2,675,904 

 

 

2,787,215 

 

 

2,951,210 

 

 

3,123,906 

Total assets

 

7,703,563 

 

 

6,855,732 

 

 

6,423,732 

 

 

6,202,082 

 

 

7,233,159 

Long-term debt (including current maturities)

 

2,376,723 

 

 

2,381,940 

 

 

2,356,826 

 

 

2,594,656 

 

 

2,981,849 

Equity

 

3,775,989 

 

 

3,195,068 

 

 

2,777,459 

 

 

2,545,111 

 

 

2,795,527 



 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Shares outstanding (in thousands)

 

225,272 

 

 

237,397 

 

 

243,785 

 

 

243,090 

 

 

241,449 





29

 


 

 

ITEM 7.       MANAGEMENT’S DISCUSSION AND ANALYSIS OF FINANCIAL CONDITION AND RESULTS OF OPERATIONS

Forward‑Looking Statements

This report contains some predictive statements about future events, including statements related to conditions in the steel and metallic scrap markets, Steel Dynamics’ revenues, costs of purchased materials, future profitability and earnings, and the operation of new or existing facilities. These statements, which we generally precede or accompany by such typical conditional words as "anticipate," "intend," "believe," "estimate," "plan," "seek," "project" or "expect," or by the words "may," "will," or "should," are intended to be made as “forward-looking,” subject to many risks and uncertainties, within the safe harbor protections of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. These statements speak only as of this date and are based upon information and assumptions, which we consider reasonable as of this date, concerning our businesses and the environments in which they operate. Such predictive statements are not guarantees of future performance, and we undertake no duty to update or revise any such statements. Some factors that could cause such forward-looking statements to turn out differently than anticipated include: (1) the effects of uncertain economic conditions; (2) cyclical and changing industrial demand; (3) changes in conditions in any of the steel or scrap-consuming sectors of the economy which affect demand for our products, including the strength of the non-residential and residential construction, automotive, manufacturing, appliance, pipe and tube, and other steel-consuming industries; (4) fluctuations in the cost of key raw materials and supplies (including steel scrap, iron units, zinc, graphite electrodes, and energy costs) and our ability to pass on any cost increases; (5) the impact of domestic and foreign import price competition; (6) unanticipated difficulties in integrating or starting up new or acquired businesses or assets; (7) risks and uncertainties involving product and/or technology development; and (8) occurrences of unexpected plant outages or equipment failures.



More specifically, we refer you to the sections titled Special Note Regarding Forward-Looking Statements at the beginning of Part I of this Report and Item 1A. Risk Factors, as well as in other subsequent reports we file with the Securities and Exchange Commission, for a more detailed explanation of these and other factors and risks that may cause such predictive statements to turn out differently than expected or anticipated. These reports are available publicly on the Securities and Exchange Commission website, www.sec.gov, and on our website, www.steeldynamics.com under “Investors – SEC Filings”.

 

Operating Statement Classifications



Net SalesNet sales from our operations are a factor of volumes shipped, product mix and related pricing. We charge premium prices for certain grades of steel, product dimensions, certain smaller volumes, and for value-added processing or coating of our steel products.  Except for the steel fabrication operations, we recognize revenues from sales and the allowance for estimated returns and claims from these sales at the point in time control of the product transfers to the customer, upon shipment or delivery. Our steel fabrication operations recognize revenues over time based on completed fabricated tons to date as a percentage of total tons required for each contract.  



Costs of Goods SoldOur costs of goods sold represent all direct and indirect costs associated with the manufacture of our products. The principal elements of these costs are scrap and scrap substitutes (which represent the most significant single component of our consolidated costs of goods sold), steel substrate, direct and indirect labor and related benefits, alloys, zinc, transportation and freight, repairs and maintenance, utilities such as electricity and natural gas, and depreciation.



Selling, General and Administrative ExpensesSelling, general and administrative expenses consist of all costs associated with our sales, finance and accounting, and administrative departments. These costs include, among other items, labor and related benefits, professional services, insurance premiums, and property taxes. Company-wide profit sharing and amortization of intangible assets are each separately presented in the statement of operations.



Interest Expense, net of Capitalized InterestInterest expense consists of interest associated with our senior credit facilities and other debt net of interest costs that are required to be capitalized during the construction period of certain capital investment projects



Other Expense (Income), netOther income consists of interest income earned on our temporary cash deposits and short-term investments; any other non-operating income activity, including income from non-consolidated investments accounted for under the equity method. Other expense consists of any non-operating costs, such as certain acquisition and financing expenses.

30

 


 

 

2018 Overview 



Our 2018 consolidated results benefited from steady improvement in the domestic steel market, resulting in record steel shipments and sales, improved metal spreads from increased selling prices, and a resulting 67% increase in operating income. Underlying domestic steel consumption improved,  based on increased consumption of approximately 2% from strong automotive, construction and energy markets. Lower finished steel imports benefited domestic steel mill utilization, with our metals recycling operations realizing increased volumes and operating income. The non-residential construction market continued to strengthen, resulting in record steel fabrication shipments and increased selling prices. However, the segment reported decreased operating income compared to 2017 due to higher average steel input costs.



We achieved record 2018 operational and financial results. We achieved numerous annual records, while continuing to focus on company-wide safety.



Summary of significant achievements within our annual 2018 results:

·

Record consolidated net sales of $11.8 billion

·

Record operating income of $1.7 billion and pretax income of $1.6 billion

·

Record consolidated net income of $1.3 billion

·

Record annual cash flow from operations of $1.4 billion

·

Record steel operations shipments of 10.6 million tons

·

Record steel fabrication operations shipments of 642,000 tons



Consolidated operating income for 2018 increased $655.5 million, or 61%, to $1.7 billion, compared to $1.1 billion in 2017. Net income attributable to Steel Dynamics, Inc. for 2018 increased $445.6 million, or 55%, to $1.3 billion, compared to 2017. Diluted earnings per share attributable to Steel Dynamics, Inc. was $5.35 for 2018, compared to $3.36 for 2017.



Acquisition of Heartland Flat Roll Division (Heartland)

On June 29, 2018, we completed our acquisition of 100% of Heartland Steel Processing, LLC (formerly known as Companhia Siderurgica Nacional, LLC) (Heartland), for a cash purchase price of $396.4 million, plus customary working capital transaction purchase price adjustments of $37.6 million, which were paid in September 2018. Located in Terre Haute, Indiana, Heartland produces various types of higher-margin, flat roll steel by further processing hot roll coils into pickle and oil, cold roll, and galvanized products. The acquisition expanded our annual flat roll steel shipping capacity of lighter-gauge and greater width flat roll steel offerings that will broaden and diversify our value-added product portfolio and provide operational and logistics benefits to other nearby operations. Heartland’s post-acquisition operating results are reflected in our financial statements in the steel operations reporting segment.



2017 Overview



Our consolidated results for 2017 benefited from improved demand in the domestic steel market, resulting in record steel shipments and sales compared to 2016, improved metal spreads from increased selling prices, and a resulting 19% increase in operating income. Underlying domestic steel consumption increased in 2017, as the construction and energy markets continued to improve throughout the year, the heavy and off-road equipment and general industrial manufacturing markets improved, and the automotive markets remained strong. However, steel imports rose again in 2017, most notably in structural and fabricated structural, but also in cold roll and coated sheet. Supported by increased domestic steel mill utilization compared to 2016, our metals recycling operations were able to maintain consistent volume and realize increased ferrous metal spreads, while also further reducing operating costs, resulting in improved operating income of almost 250%. The non-residential construction market continued to strengthen, resulting in record steel fabrication sales and shipments, however increasing selling prices were outpaced by higher steel input costs, resulting in compressed metal spread.



Our 2017 performance, both operationally and financially was our second best year. We achieved numerous, then annual records, while continuing to focus on and improve company-wide safety.



Summary of significant achievements within our annual 2017 results:

·

Record consolidated net sales of $9.5 billion

·

Record consolidated operating income of $1.1 billion, and pretax income of $935 million

·

Record steel operations shipments of 9.7 million tons

·

Record steel fabrication operations shipments of over 627,000 tons



Consolidated operating income for 2017 increased $206.1 million, or 24%, to $1.1 billion, compared to $860.8 million in 2016, which excludes $132.8 million of non-cash asset impairment charge. Net income attributable to Steel Dynamics, Inc. for 2017 increased $354.1 million, or 77%, to $812.7 million, compared to 2016. Diluted earnings per share attributable to Steel Dynamics, Inc. for 2017 was $3.36, compared to $1.56 for 2016. Included in net income for 2017 was a one-time tax benefit of $180.6 million, or $0.75 per diluted share, resulting from our revaluation of our deferred tax assets and liabilities in connection with the U.S. Federal Tax Cuts and Jobs Act of 2017, and net income for 2016 was reduced by $76.4 million, or $0.31 per diluted share, of non-cash asset impairment charge.

31

 


 

 

Segment Operating Results (dollars in thousands)









 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 



 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 



Years Ended December 31,



2018

 

% Change

 

2017

 

% Change

 

2016



 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Net sales

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Steel Operations

$

9,263,152 

 

29%

 

$

7,175,409 

 

22%

 

$

5,870,924 

Metals Recycling Operations

 

3,202,214 

 

14%

 

 

2,813,004 

 

30%

 

 

2,171,877 

Steel Fabrication Operations

 

921,951 

 

12%

 

 

824,425 

 

17%

 

 

703,522 

Other

 

429,060 

 

14%

 

 

375,511 

 

36%

 

 

276,912 



 

13,816,377 

 

 

 

 

11,188,349 

 

 

 

 

9,023,235 

Intra-company

 

(1,994,538)

 

 

 

 

(1,649,552)

 

 

 

 

(1,246,126)



$

11,821,839 

 

24%

 

$

9,538,797 

 

23%

 

$

7,777,109 



 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Operating income (loss)

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Steel Operations

$

1,839,852 

 

67%

 

$

1,098,630 

 

19%

 

$

926,954 

Metals Recycling Operations (1)

 

75,891 

 

7%

 

 

71,052 

 

248%

 

 

20,423 

   Asset Impairment Charges Reflected in

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

   Metals Recycling (1)

 

 -

 

 

 

 

 -

 

 

 

 

(5,500)

Steel Fabrication Operations

 

61,901 

 

(29)%

 

 

87,295 

 

(4)%

 

 

90,955 

Other (2)

 

(253,195)

 

(33)%

 

 

(190,785)

 

37%

 

 

(301,116)

   Asset Impairment Charges Reflected in

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

   Other (2)

 

 -

 

 

 

 

 -

 

 

 

 

(127,339)



 

1,724,449