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Nucor (NUE -0.83%)
Q4 2018 Earnings Conference Call
Jan. 29, 2019 2:00 p.m. ET

Contents:

Prepared Remarks:

Operator

Good day, everyone, and welcome to the Nucor Corporation fourth-quarter of 2018 earnings call. As a reminder, today's call is being recorded. [Operator instructions] Certain statements made during this conference call will be forward-looking statements that involve risks and uncertainties. The words we expect, believe, anticipate and variations of such words and similar expressions are intended to identify those forward-looking statements, which are based on management's current expectations and information that is currently available.

Although Nucor believes they are based on reasonable assumptions, there can be no assurance that future events will not affect their accuracy. More information about the risks and uncertainties relating to these forward-looking statements may be found in Nucor's latest 10-K and subsequently filed 10-Qs, which are available on the SEC's and Nucor's website. The forward-looking statements made in this conference call speak only as of this date, and Nucor does not assume any obligation to update them, either as a result of new information, future events or otherwise. For opening remarks and introductions, I would like to turn the call over to Mr.

John Ferriola, chairman, chief executive officer and president of Nucor Corporation. Please go ahead, sir.

John Ferriola -- Chairman, Chief Executive Officer, and President

Good afternoon, and thank you for joining us for our fourth-quarter earnings call and for your interest in Nucor. Other members of Nucor's executive team are also on the call today, including Jim Frias, our chief financial officer; Joe Stratman, our chief digital officer; Craig Feldman, responsible for raw materials; Ladd Hall, responsible for sheet and tubular products; Ray Napolitan, responsible for engineered bar products; Dave Sumoski, responsible for merchant bar and rebar products; Leon Topalian, responsible for beam and plate products; and Chad Utermark, responsible for propagated construction products. Before we review our 2018 financial results, let me make a few comments about safety. Safety continues to be job No.

1 for every Nucor teammate. Nucor's safety incident rates are consistently below the national averages for comparable operations, almost always less than half of the nationwide figure. But we're not satisfied with that. Our goal is zero incidents in all Nucor facilities.

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Our teammates remind each other regularly that they must work safely, so that each of us returns home to our families at the end of every shift. So let me just take a moment to repeat what I say every time I visit a Nucor facility. Nothing is more important than safety. Absolutely nothing.

I want to thank all of our teammates for working safely and identifying and mitigating the risks in your operations. I appreciate your continued focus on driving our incident rates toward our ultimate goal, which always must be zero. Now I'll review some highlights from the year, then Jim Frias will discuss our financial performance for the fourth quarter and for the year. The best way for me to sum up 2018 is this.

It was a record year for Nucor. We posted record earnings per share, and we shipped a record amount of steel. Strong economic growth fueled our record year. Tax reform and the ongoing efforts to reform the federal regulatory system took a good economy at the end of 2017 and made it even better.

The Section 232 steel tabs provided another tailwind for Nucor between the tariffs, and the cumulative impact of the trade cases the industry has won in recent years on fairly traded imports to the U.S. market have declined significantly. Increased demand levels and lower imports generated approximately six million tons of added volume for the U.S. steel industry last year.

Over the past decade, we have been positioning Nucor to take full advantage of an upturn in the steel market. During that time, we invested more than $9 billion to increase the company's peak earnings power. These investments enhanced our competitive strengths by building on our product diversity and market leadership positions. Our financial results demonstrate that Nucor's disciplined strategy of investing for profitable growth is working.

Here are just a few examples of how those investments are growing our company's earnings power and driving shareholder value creation. Our Sheet Mill Group's 2018 pre-tax contribution was more than 80% greater than the group's prior record performance achieved during the previous steel industry's up-cycle. During the economic downturn, our sheet mill investments included the acquisition of Gallatin Steel, Decatur's galvanizing line, Berkeley's castor and hot mill upgrade and Hickman's vacuum degasser. Our engineered bar products group also delivered record earnings last year, driven by strategic investments that expanded value-added product capabilities at our mills in Nebraska, Tennessee and South Carolina.

The plate mill group realized attractive returns because of the investments we made to add heat treating and normalizing capabilities at our Nucor Steel Hertford and to add accelerated cooling capabilities at Tuscaloosa. The structural steel mill group is capitalizing on Nucor-Yamato's expanded product portfolio that now includes high-strength, low-alloy beams and wider, lighter sheet pilings. Shipments of high-strength, low-alloy beams more than doubled in 2018 from the prior-year level. This has been achieved after making of our first shipments in late 2016 into this product market previously served exclusively by imports.

Our downstream steel product segment delivered record earnings in 2018, powered by the impressive performance of the HSS and electrical conduit products acquisitions we completed in late 2016 and early 2017. Finally, significant earning gains were achieved by our David J. Joseph scrap business in both of our DRI plants. The Louisiana DRI facility established new annual records of plant uptime, production and shipments in 2018.

David J. Joseph's profitability was just shy of its record performance achieved during 2008's unprecedented raw materials market. Successful execution of DJJ's mill alignment and efficiency initiatives is enhancing the returns delivered by both our scrap recycling and steelmaking businesses. We continue to invest in Nucor's future in order to build on Nucor's long track record of delivering superior returns for investors.

Over the course of 2018, we announced approximately $1 billion of value-enhancing investments to build new mills, expand production capacity at existing mills and advance Nucor's technological capabilities. In 2019, we have already announced another $1.3 billion investment to build a modern, state-of-the-art plate mill in the U.S. Midwest, which I'll discuss in greater detail shortly. In the coming year, we expect to complete many of these high-return initiatives, which will grow our steelmaking capabilities in both long and flat products.

Six projects will begin operations this year that represent approximately $1 billion in capital investment and will create approximately 700 new full-time jobs at Nucor. We are excited to begin realizing the benefits of these value-enhancing investments. Many of you joined us earlier this month for the announcement of our newest growth initiative, a state-of-the-art plate mill, to be located in the Midwest. The mill will have an annual capacity of 1.2 million tons and is expected to be operational in 2022.

This investment will position us right in the heart of America's largest plate-consuming region, which will give us logistical advantages over our competitors. It is also a region with excellent scrap availability. The new mill will allow us to produce 97% of the plate products demanded in the domestic market, including the highest-margin products, enabling us to build a clear market leadership position in the U.S. plate market.

With these investments, Nucor will be well-positioned to capitalize on regional market opportunities and drive continued, profitable growth. We will post the status update on our major investment initiatives on the Investor Relations page of our website later today. As we begin 2019, we are encouraged about the outlook for our domestic end-use market. In fact, we see improving market conditions in 20 of the 24 end-use markets we participate in today.

Three of the remaining four are stable, and one is declining as we head into 2019. 2019 is expected to be another solid year for automotive sales, and Nucor plans to continue growing our share of this important market. In construction, we expect low single-digit growth this year, and we have a strong presence in this market from highways to HVAC. Despite recent volatility in the energy market, market demand for line pipe will continue to grow as longer mileage projects get under way.

We look forward to expanding our Gallatin mill in order to produce the API grades required by this market. And in the heavy equipment and agricultural markets, we continue to experience healthy demand in high replacement needs. 2018 was an extraordinary year. And while we are proud of Nucor's continued success, we remain focused on taking care of our customers, executing our growth strategy and delivering even higher returns on our invested capital.

Jim Frias will now provide more specific detail about our fourth-quarter performance and financial position. Jim?

Jim Frias -- Chief Financial Officer

Thanks, John. Nucor reported fourth-quarter 2018 earnings of $2.07 per diluted share and full-year 2018 record earnings of $7.42 per diluted share. Fourth-quarter results exceeded the top end of our guidance range by about $0.12 per diluted share due to stronger-than-expected performance by our sheet structural and raw materials businesses. 2018 record annual earnings represent an increase of 24% compared to our previous earnings record of $5.98 per diluted share reported in 2008.

Our strategy for profitable growth is working. Nucor continues to benefit from our long-standing tradition of investing opportunistically through economic cycles to grow long-term earnings power. Nucor also generated exceptionally strong cash flow over the course of 2018. For the year, cash provided by operating activities totaled approximately $2.4 billion as compared with 2017's operating cash flow of approximately $1.1 billion.

These results, combined with our disciplined approach to capital allocation, enabled us to return more than $1.3 billion to shareholders via dividends of $485 million and share repurchases of $854 million. After repurchasing 13.7 million shares last year, Nucor ended 2018 with approximately 306 million shares outstanding. $1.5 billion remains available under Nucor's existing share repurchase authorization. And in addition, in December, Nucor's board increased our regular quarterly cash dividend by more than 5% to $0.40 per share.

Our company has increased its base dividend for 46 consecutive years, every year since we first began paying dividends in 1973. Nucor's long-term success in rewarding our shareholders has been and will continue to be driven by effective and balanced capital allocation. Our ongoing investments to deliver future profitable growth are the vital foundation to that work. For 2019, we estimate capital expenditures of approximately $1.8 billion.

That represents a significant increase from 2018 capital spending of approximately $1 billion. Approximately 70% of planned 2019 capital expenditures are for expansion, product improvement and cost-savings projects, with the remaining 30% for replacement or maintenance purposes. As John has already noted, Nucor has announced 10 significant growth projects to represent total capital investment of approximately $3.5 billion that will begin operations between 2019 and 2022. Of these capital outlays, approximately $600 million has been spent through 2018.

An estimated $900 million will be spent in 2019, and the remaining investments of about $2 billion will occur through the end of 2022. We are excited about the impact that these investments will have for Nucor and all its stakeholders. We are directing our capital very strategically toward clear market opportunities and expect these projects to provide incremental EBITDA exceeding $600 million during normal market conditions. Nucor is already among the most diversified steel producers in the world with leadership positions in numerous products, regions and end-use markets.

These investments will enhance those leadership positions and position Nucor to outperform the industry for many years to come. We intend to fund these investments with internally generated cash flow and plan to continue returning a minimum of 40% of our earnings to our shareholders while maintaining our strong financial condition. With respect to our balance sheet. At year end, our total debt outstanding was $4.3 billion, and our gross debt-to-capital ratio was 30%.

Our year-end cash and short-term investments totaled approximately $1.4 billion. Now turning to our outlook, John has already mentioned the positive trends we are observing in our major end-use markets. We do think that 2019 will be another strong year with earnings performance among the best in Nucor's history. For the first quarter of 2019, although sheet pricing and margins are expected to decrease compared to the fourth quarter of 2018, we expect that this will be partially offset by increases in profitability at our bar and structural mills.

The performance of the raw materials segment is expected to decrease in the first quarter of 2019 as compared to the fourth quarter of 2018 due to the decreased performance of our DRI businesses. We expect the profitability of our steel products segment in the first quarter of 2019 to be similar to the fourth quarter of 2018. Overall, we do expect that the first quarter of 2019 will be much stronger for Nucor than the first quarter of 2018. Thank you for your interest in our company.

Now I'll turn the call back over to John. John?

John Ferriola -- Chairman, Chief Executive Officer, and President

Thanks, Jim. Before I wrap up, I want to say a few words about our newly updated corporate website, nucor.com. The new website and branding reflect our focus on our customers. It is part of our effort to achieve commercial excellence by using our broad product portfolio and financial strength to give our customers the best possible experience.

This is summed up by our new tag line, "Powerful Partnerships. Powerful Results." The website is a great resource for anyone who wants to learn more about our company. We will continue to build upon and improve this site to meet the needs of our stakeholders. My thanks to the team that brought this new site together.

Let me conclude by thanking our more than 25,000 teammates across Nucor for making 2018 a record year for our company. Your efforts, not just in 2018, but as we pursued our growth strategy over the last decade, enabled us to obtain this milestone. I am proud that we could recognize your hard work with an extraordinary bonus last year. You certainly deserved it.

The team at Charlotte appreciates the work you do every day to build a safer and more profitable Nucor. I'd also like to say thank you to our customers. We appreciate the trust you place in Nucor, and we'll continue to do our very best to earn it with every order. We would now be happy to answer your questions.

Operator? 

Questions and Answers:

Operator

[Operator instructions] We'll take our first question from Curt Woodworth with Credit Suisse.

Curt Woodworth -- Credit Suisse -- Analyst

Good afternoon, John. Just two questions not relating to the flat-rolled market, which tends to get all depressed. But firstly, when you look at your long products portfolio, you've seen pretty significant change in metal spread across most -- all your long product categories, as well as plate. So I had just some quick numbers looking at 1Q '18 versus 4Q '18, and it's about $1.6 billion of incremental EBITDA run rate just on metal spread change.

So first question is, do you think that fundamentals for those products in terms of consolidation of the bar market, tariffs, is everything you're seeing on the demand side? Would that suggest, do you think, margins would stay elevated relative to where you were this year? And then second question, similarly just on the downstream businesses. Obviously, HSS had a very good performance this year. Do you think that hollow structural pricing can stay relatively solid, even though we've seen clearly a big step-down in HRC, and just talk to how we should model that business?

John Ferriola -- Chairman, Chief Executive Officer, and President

Let me start by addressing the first question. Clearly, as we mentioned in the script, we see demand staying strong in our downstream businesses and the downstream markets. That includes our long products. So we see another good year for that.

I'm not going to comment on what's happening with any of our competitors. I'll just refer to the demand and say the demand looks good going forward. We continue to work with some projects that will actually help us in 2019 lower our cost structure in some of the capital projects that we're bringing online. We're excited about that.

So with demand strong, plus bringing on some capacity that we think will be very competitive in the marketplace, we think it's going to be a good strong year for our long products. And plate looks really good going into the year also. I don't see anything changing there, slipping just a little bit as we start the year, but the end demand remains strong. So I think it's going to be a good year for that also.

Now to address your question on HSS, that has been just an outstanding business for us, both the HSS and the conduit business. Certainly, we'll see pricing dip a little bit with HR -- with hot band dipping a little bit, but the margins should stay pretty constant. And so we think demand is certainly good. And as you might have heard, we just announced a price increase of $40 on HR and on our -- or on our flat-rolled products and also on the HSS.

So we see that market picking up in terms of pricing.

Curt Woodworth -- Credit Suisse -- Analyst

Have you seen customer have lead times extended on those price hike announcements? Do you think that's enough to get consumers kind of out of the de-stock mindset?

John Ferriola -- Chairman, Chief Executive Officer, and President

Well, I can't comment. It's really too early to comment on what's happening there. But I know our lead times on hot band today are about three to four weeks, and cold-rolled and galv is about five to six weeks, somewhat in that neighborhood. But it's too early to see any change in that based on price increase that was just on yesterday.

Curt Woodworth -- Credit Suisse -- Analyst

OK. Thank you.

Operator

And next, we'll go to Matthew Korn with Goldman Sachs.

Matthew Korn -- Goldman Sachs -- Analyst

Hey, good afternoon, everyone. Congratulations on a great year.

John Ferriola -- Chairman, Chief Executive Officer, and President

Thank you.

Matthew Korn -- Goldman Sachs -- Analyst

I want to ask on the scrap market. It seems as though the market was fairly shocked at the gap down in price that we saw in early January. In watching the recent report, it seems that the export markets have come up their bottom. Turkish mills are buying again.

Asking your view, do you think is meaningful yet for the domestic market? Should we be getting a little bit more constructive as we think about February and afterwards?

John Ferriola -- Chairman, Chief Executive Officer, and President

Well, it's certainly going -- we think it's hit the bottom. We think that it's going to strengthen going forward. You mentioned several of the reasons why. I would also add to that the seasonal issue as we go into the winter months.

By now, the flows are still very strong. There's no issue with flows, but we're about to hit a terrible cold snap in the Midwest that could impact that. So I would say, certainly, no more down movement, we don't think. We think it's going to be pretty stable to moving up slowly.

Matthew Korn -- Goldman Sachs -- Analyst

And then ex-scrap costs, how should we think about the total drag from many other higher year-over-year raw materials into '19, electrodes, natural gas, other metallics, assuming that there's a little bit less DRI availability from Louisiana this year versus last year? Overall, what would you say your budgeting for '19 on the raw material side on that front versus '18? If you could give any color.

John Ferriola -- Chairman, Chief Executive Officer, and President

Jim, do you have any details on what we have budgeted?

Jim Frias -- Chief Financial Officer

Not specifically, but I would say that we would not expect material inflation in those areas.

John Ferriola -- Chairman, Chief Executive Officer, and President

Also, the electrode increases that we saw last year were baked into last year's numbers. And frankly, we see that starting to soften a bit. So we expect them to be no higher and probably a little bit softer as we go into 2019. Alloys, we think, will be flat going forward.

So in terms of raw material costs, the one I've known out there is still the iron ore with the situation that just occurred in Brazil. We don't know what impact that will have on us. It's too early to tell.

Matthew Korn -- Goldman Sachs -- Analyst

All right. Thank you very much.

Operator

And next, we'll go to Seth Rosenfeld with Jefferies.

Seth Rosenfeld -- Jefferies -- Analyst

Good afternoon. Thanks for taking the question. Two follow-ups on the downturn products division, please. Can you just comment on the outlook for order backlog in that division and how that's developed over the last year? Comparing this to January 2018, would you see a stronger or slightly weaker backlog at this stage? And secondly, can you comment on fabrication margin? Obviously, rebar fab has been under some pressure for some time.

What are your expectations for those margins going into 2019?

John Ferriola -- Chairman, Chief Executive Officer, and President

Jim, why don't you kick it off?

Jim Frias -- Chief Financial Officer

Yes. I'll address the first part of the question on demand for our downstream year over year. And I would say, overall, the demand for our downstream business is strong as we enter 2019. Most of our downstream businesses have improved backlogs year over year.

I might have mentioned that last year, we were in a margin squeeze as steel prices went up, and we're proud of the teams. They were able to navigate that. And we're looking forward to 2019 as we expect some expansion in margins with steel prices having come down slightly. In regards to your second part of the question, which was rebar fab, that is one of the still challenging markets that we have.

That's no secret. That market has been challenged, especially in the U.S., for the last 12 to 18 months. Demand is solid, imports have declined, and rebar steel costs have risen. However, the marketplace fabrication pricing has not yet fully reacted to that.

We are encouraged, however, recently by the pricing dynamics that we're starting to see. We do have a backlog. However, we have to work through it. But we do expect improved performance as we enter the second half of the year in rebar fabrication.

Seth Rosenfeld -- Jefferies -- Analyst

And just to clarify. Given the tenure of that backlog, would you expect rebar fab on a stand-alone basis to see a meaningful improvement in margins by second half or take longer, the entirety of that order book to turn more positive?

Jim Frias -- Chief Financial Officer

I think we'll see, in the second half of the year, yes, more improved margins, especially in the U.S. Our Canadian fabrication business, which is a significant part of our business, is very strong, very strong backlogs with better margins. But in the U.S., we'll work through those over the next 6 to 8 months. But with current pricing dynamics that we see currently, we are encouraged for the second half of the year.

Seth Rosenfeld -- Jefferies -- Analyst

Great. Thank you very much.

Operator

Next we'll go to Timna Tanners with Bank of America Merrill Lynch.

Timna Tanners -- Bank of America Merrill Lynch -- Analyst

Hey, good afternoon, guys. How are you? First, I thought I'd start out asking if we could make some comments about some of the new capacity in the marketplace recently. So specifically, the JSW mill and the restart at Granite City. Are you seeing them? Are you running up against them? Is that part of the market weakness? And what do you think the market will look like in a couple of years? Do you see all this new capacity being as daunting as some fear? Or do you think that we'll have a shake-out?

John Ferriola -- Chairman, Chief Executive Officer, and President

Well, I think there's always a shake-out if there's a spiking in demand. But I'll -- let me address the first question. When you look at what's come online today, particularly in the sheet markets, exclusively in the sheet market, you're looking at about 2.5 million tons of new capacity coming online. Imports are down about one million tons.

So you have a net of about 1.5 million tons in a market that's 60 million tons overall the whole sheet market. So it's not that great of a change. At the end of the day, the most cost competitive, most efficient, best operating company will be one that does the best regardless of what happens with capacity coming online. And we think we do pretty well in all of those areas.

So there'll be some shake-out probably. We see a major impact today, some. I don't believe that the current pricing situation that you see today is a result of that additional capacity. I believe that some of it is a result of the service center buildup that took place at the end of last year.

And there's going to be a period of time when they're looking to unload some of those tons. When you look at the months on hand for sheet products, you can kind of see where we -- what happens over the months between October and December. So there's some of that going forward. But the key thing here is demand continues to be strong, and we think that demand will continue to grow.

Our best estimate today on sheet is probably about 1.5% to 2% growth over the course of this year. So between the demand growth, as we work our way out of this inventory situation that's short-lived, I think you're going to see things start to return to a more normalized state. We announced the price increase the other day, and we would not do it if we weren't confident that we'd be able to collect on it.

Timna Tanners -- Bank of America Merrill Lynch -- Analyst

OK, super. That's helpful. And then just because the buyback in Q4 was particularly high, and you have that high-quality problem of generating a lot of cash even when I plug in this new CAPEX guidance, should we consider this being a good run rate, given what you know of your current project profile? Or are there other factors that we should consider when contemplating what your buyback program might look like?

John Ferriola -- Chairman, Chief Executive Officer, and President

Jim, you want to tackle that?

Jim Frias -- Chief Financial Officer

Yes, John, I'll take it. Timna, we will return 40% of profits as a minimum to investors. And then with the board of directors, we'll look at our net debt capital position through the year. And if we think we have extra liquidity that should be returned to investors, we will.

And we'll choose between additional dividends or share repurchases based on what our intrinsic value model says about the stock price at that time. The other thing I'd add is we did raise a dividend issue by 5%, and we were able to do that because we've reduced the share count by 4%. And so year over year, our dividend outlays will be about the same in 2019 compared to '18 even though the dividend per share is higher than 5%. Is that helpful?

Timna Tanners -- Bank of America Merrill Lynch -- Analyst

Yes, it is. I mean, I guess, I would just say, is there anything in particular that helped drive the Q4 size of the buyback? I think I understood you saying it was also an analysis of where you think the share price should be and where it is. Is that like factored in as well?

Jim Frias -- Chief Financial Officer

Yes, it is. But I think the bigger factor was just that we recognized we're going to finish the year with such strong liquidity. And so we felt like it was the appropriate thing to do.

Timna Tanners -- Bank of America Merrill Lynch -- Analyst

OK.

Operator

Next we'll go to Phil Gibbs with KeyBanc Capital Markets.

Phil Gibbs -- KeyBanc Capital Markets -- Analyst

Good afternoon. John, during your mid-quarter, you stated in the release that you thought your cash balance would be flat quarter over quarter. And this morning, it showed it was down over $500 million. And I guess, we were surprised by that, to say the least.

Any thoughts on that?

John Ferriola -- Chairman, Chief Executive Officer, and President

Well, in general, it was a result of an inventory build that we weren't anticipating. Jim, you want to get into any more detail?

Jim Frias -- Chief Financial Officer

Phil, I would just say that we weren't expecting them to go up the way it did, and we think it's something that needs to come back down early in 2019. So we'll work on that. But that's the reason we didn't hit the cash numbers we were expecting.

Phil Gibbs -- KeyBanc Capital Markets -- Analyst

You think that was more related to some of the contractor service on our customers not taking as much volume as you thought late in the year, pushing that out?

Jim Frias -- Chief Financial Officer

There were a number of factors. That was one of the factors. There's also quite a long lead time for some of the things that we use to make steel. And as that plays a factor to the forecast of what we're going to be operating at have to be made months and months in advance of actually receiving the materials.

Phil Gibbs -- KeyBanc Capital Markets -- Analyst

OK. And then secondly, costs within the steel business looked a little bit elevated to our model. Just curious if there were any maintenance outages in the number or was there some catch-up that got played through into the numbers from earlier in the year on some of those inflationary items?

John Ferriola -- Chairman, Chief Executive Officer, and President

There wasn't anything extraordinary in the way of maintenance. Towards the end of the year, when we had some available time, we took the opportunity to do some extra maintenance, but there was nothing extraordinary that we can refer to.

Phil Gibbs -- KeyBanc Capital Markets -- Analyst

Thanks, guys.

Operator

And next, we'll go to Derek Hernandez with Seaport Global Securities.

Derek Hernandez -- Seaport Global Securities -- Analyst

Hi, good afternoon. I was just hoping if you could elaborate your view on the positive end-use demand and the general economic conditions as well as the three segments that you said were not as positive as previously.

John Ferriola -- Chairman, Chief Executive Officer, and President

Well, what I said was that we saw, out of the 24 markets that we follow, 23 of them are steady or increasing. The one that we see declining slightly as we go into 2019 is power generation.

Derek Hernandez -- Seaport Global Securities -- Analyst

I see. Thank you very much.

Operator

That does conclude today's question-and-answer session. I'd like to turn the call back over to John Ferriola for any additional comments or closing remarks.

John Ferriola -- Chairman, Chief Executive Officer, and President

Thank you, David. Let me sign off by saying thank you to our shareholders. We appreciate your ongoing confidence and your support. Thank you to our customers.

We appreciate the opportunity to earn your business every day. We believe that together, we can build powerful partnerships and powerful results. And finally, to my new Nucor teammates, thank you for a great year and your ongoing commitment to take care of our customers. And as always, and most importantly, thank you for doing it safely.

Thanks for your interest in Nucor. Have a great day.

Operator

[Operator signoff]

Duration: 36 minutes

Call Participants:

John Ferriola -- Chairman, Chief Executive Officer, and President

Jim Frias -- Chief Financial Officer

Curt Woodworth -- Credit Suisse -- Analyst

Matthew Korn -- Goldman Sachs -- Analyst

Seth Rosenfeld -- Jefferies -- Analyst

Timna Tanners -- Bank of America Merrill Lynch -- Analyst

Phil Gibbs -- KeyBanc Capital Markets -- Analyst

Derek Hernandez -- Seaport Global Securities -- Analyst

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