Steel & Tube Holdings Limited logo

Steel & Tube – Investor Presentation May 2022

Investor Presentation16 May 2022STUMaterials

Investor Presentation
16 May 2022

2
Welcome

Susan Paterson

Chair

3
Agenda

Strategy and

Finance

•Company

Overview

•Financial Update

•Discussion

Business

Update

•Distribution

•Rollforming

•Reinforcing

•Discussion

•Site Visits

Functions

•Customer Value

Proposition

•Supply Chain

•People & Culture

•Discussion

Sustainability

•Our approach

•Dr Troy Coyle,

HERA

•Discussion

4
Company

Update

Mark Malpass

Chief Executive Officer

5
Steel & Tube

•One of NewZealand’s leading

providers of steel solutions

•A proud NewZealand

company, with over 68 years

of trading history

•We offer NewZealand’s most

comprehensive range of

steelproducts, services and

solutions

•Our stable of best-in-class

businesses are some of this

country’s leadingsteel

suppliers

26 Sites

Nationwide

6
Our purpose

To make life easier for our customers

needing steel solutions

•Providing a one-stop-shop for the most

essential steel products – from foundation

to roof and everywhere in between

•Doing everything we can to make it easy

for our customers to do business with us

•Always looking for ways to work smarter

•Using technology and great thinking to pull

it all together and enable a better business

•Building one great team right across the

Steel & Tube business

7
Our business divisions

Products sourced from preferred

steel mills and distributed through

our national network

Products processed before sale, typically

on a contract or project basis, including

onsite installation services

Distribution

Infrastructure

SteelPiping SystemsChain & Rigging

FasteningsRural ProductsStainless Steel

RoofingCoil ProcessingReinforcing

PurlinsComFlor/ CFDLMesh

8
Primary product and service offering by participants

Steel distributionPlate processing Coil processingStainless steelEngineering steelReinforcing steelWireRoofingFasteners

Steel & Tube


5


5


5


5


5


5


5


5


5

Fletcher Steel


j


5


5


5


5


5


55

Vulcan


5


5


5


5


5

United Industries


5


5


5


55

Asmuss


55


5


5

Summit Steel & Wire


5


55


5

Wakefield Metals


5


5

9
Journey to refreshed

board, strategy &

leadership

Project Strive

Change programme,

operational reset

Extensive

organisational

review

FY18FY19FY20FY21 to FY23

2H17

January to June

Our journey

Late-2017 embarked on an extensive company-

wide reset to drive sustainable earnings

improvement and rebuild shareholder value.

Foundation now built and moving forward.

Moving Forward

Steel & Tube leadership

in the sector and the preferred

choice for steel products and

solutions across the country

Strengthening the core

and building on higher

value segments

10
Structural changes delivering value (1H18-1H22)

Optimised national network

with regional strength

•Sites reduced from 50 to 26

•$2.5m reduction in annual lease costs

Enhanced customer value

proposition

•Group-wide Customer Excellence Centre established, e-commerce,

omnichannel platform, CRM and customer segmentation, digital

strategy

Significant cost reductions and

efficiencies locked in

•Opexreduced by 17.0%

•Opexvs sales reduced from 19.3% to 15.3%

•FTEs down 18.2% (1,100 to 900 including vacancies)

Robust balance sheet •Net debt reduced from $126.9m (June 2017) to $43.5m (April 2022)

Operational excellence•Distribution Centre Lean systems and focus on DIFOTIS

•Bar code scanning and traceability

Supply chain disciplines•S&OP forecasting systems, product traceability, digital tools

DIFOTIS: Delivered in full on time on spec; FTEs: Full Time Equivalent employees; S&OP: Sales and Operations Planning

11
Customer satisfaction

NPS of 38 for FY22 (10 months)

Focusing on continual improvement

Carbon Reduction*

Greenhouse gas emissions 939 tCO2-e

1378

883

957

1018

939

0

500

1 000

1 500

1H202H201H212H211H22

Tc o 2

-

E

*Reporting in accordance with Greenhouse Gas Protocols and includes all material emissions under Scope 1 and 2, with Scope 3 limited to business travel.

TRIFR: Employee Total Recordable Injury Frequency Rate.

24

34

38

0

10

20

30

40

50

FY20

( 1 0 M O NTHS)

FY21

( 1 0 M O NTHS)

FY22

( 1 0 M O NTHS)

NPS SCORE

0

5

10

15

FY16FY17FY18FY19FY20FY21Apr 22

TRIFR

5

13

15

19

29

35

0

10

20

30

40

July 20Nov 20Mar 21July 21Dec 21Apr 22

eNPS

SCORE

Employee Engagement

Satisfaction Score 7.8/10

Employee Safety Measure

TRIFR 1.13 Well below industry standards

12
COVID-19 management

Agile management through

COVID-19 focussed on

people supporting customers

•Leadership position on

vaccine incentives for staff

•Vaccine protocols for

customers and suppliers

visiting sites

•Exclusion zones deployed

at all sites

•RAT supply investment

•Approved Close Contact

Exemption Scheme Critical

Services Register

0

2

4

6

8

10

12

14

16

18

1 July 20211 September 20211 November 20211 January 20221 March 20221 May 2022

Weekly Revenue ($m)

Weekly Revenue -FY22 Vs FY21

FY22

FY21

L oc kdown

A u ckland AL3

NZ moved to "red"

13
•Positive economic activity

driving increased demand

for steel across a range of

sectors

•High levels of customer

service and operational

performance

•Disciplined supply chain

management led to

improved availability of

high demand products

•Use of data analytics to

support pricing decisions

•Global COVID-19

environment

•Congested Global supply

chains

•Increasing steel pricing

and cost pressures

•Competition for talent -

labourconstraints,

particularly construction

•Potential cooling effect of

rising interest rates

•Significant rebuilding of

investment in infrastructure

•Exposures across climate

change, three waters, and

circular economy

•Manufacturing (food &

non-food) expanding

•Commercial construction

activity building

•Residential pipeline

expected to moderate

Strongly positioned to benefit from market conditions

HeadwindsTailwindsSteel & Tube Value

14
Positive economic activity driving demand for steel

Increased demand across a range of sectors; most trends expected to continue medium term

2

3

4

2

3

5

6

M ar-1 7M ar-1 8M ar-1 9M ar-2 0M ar-2 1M ar-2 2

SQM (000s)

No. Cons ents (000s)

Rolling 12months

Non-Residential Consents

ConsentsFloor Area

5

6

7

8

25

30

35

40

45

50

M ar-1 7M ar-1 8M ar-1 9M ar-2 0M ar-2 1M ar-2 2

Rolling 12months

SQM (000s)

No. Cons ents (000’s)

Residential Consents

ConsentsFloor Area

20

40

60

M ar-1 7M ar-1 8M ar-1 9M ar-2 0M ar-2 1M ar-2 2

Performance of Manufacturing

Index (PMI)

Source: Statistics New Zealand, BNZ –BusinessNZPMI, Statistic NZ, NZIER

Manufacturing

31%

Other

8%

Residential

Construction

21%

Commercial

26%

Infrastructure

14%

Share of FY22 (10 months) Sales

Steel & Tube is a diversified

business with limited

exposure to any one sector

50

10 0

15 0

J u n- 1 7J u n- 1 8J u n- 1 9J u n- 2 0J u n- 2 1J u n- 2 2

Index (2010=100:sa)

Activity Index

Infrastructure Construction

15
DIFOT

98%

FY21: 98%

Results April YTD - 10 months financial performance

Record revenue and earningsdriven by strong sector demand, customer service,

operational performance and disciplined supply chain management

Revenue

$479.3m

+24.6%

EBITDA

$53.6m

+81.6%

EBIT

$37.9m

+156.7%

NPAT

$24.1m

+226.7%

Vol u me

136,831t

+7.8%

Dividend

1H22: 5.5cps

1H21: 1.21 cps

Customer NPS

38

FY21: 34

TRIFR

1.13

FY21: 4.04

Employee NPS

35

FY21: 13

Net Promoter Score (NPS): Measure of customer/employee satisfaction

Employee Total Recordable Injury Frequency Rate (TRIFR): Employee safety measure

Earnings Before Interest and Tax (EBIT), Earnings Before Interest Tax Depreciation and Amortisation (EBITDA), Net Profit After Tax (NP AT)

DIFOT: based on deliveries from Distribution Centres

P ercent comparatives are to FY21 (10 months)

16
Strong results driven by delivery on strategic initiatives

Benefits of strategic initiatives becoming clear

•Volumes and revenues – rebuilt post COVID-19 and targeted growth product categories

•Margin improvements –driven by product margins and labour / freight efficiencies

•Improved customer service and delivery – key driver of performance

•Significant structural cost reductions – established a resilient underlying business platform

•Optimised working capital and invested in inventory to support customer growth

•Digital initiatives have been embedded - now taking hold

•Growth focused on strengthening the core and building on high value segments

Positive market backdrop

•Positive economic activity driving increased demand for steel across a range of sectors

17
Strategic focus

Growth focused on strengthening the core and building on higher value segments

•Continue to build best-in -class customer

experience

•Leverage opportunities to cross sell wide

range of products and services

•Drive gross margin $/tonnethrough dynamic

pricing and product procurement

•Ongoing focus on operating model –

warehouse operations, digitizing supply

chains and customer facing channels

Build on Foundation

“Strengthen the Core”

•Improving resilience of earnings through

economic cycles

•Growth is targeted towards high value

products, diversified materials and value-

added services

•Continue to diversify customer segments

and build scale and footprint in these areas

•Accelerate shift to digital sales

•Primary focus is organic investment,

continue to review direct adjacent sectors

Product & Service Growth

“Diversify Locally”

18
Expand plate processing capability and offer

•Attractive value-added products

•Growing market sector

•Existing footprint with significant opportunity to expand

•Replacement of obsolete equipment with large, high

capacity machinery - commissioning 4Q22

Build share of the steel framed housing market

•Currently major supplier of coil to residential and

commercial manufacturing customers for external

and internal steel framing

•Expand to supporting housing developers with

fabricated frames and trusses

•Steel framing is infinitely recyclable

•New machinery supported by high specification

software - commissioning 4Q22

Other new product growth well advanced

Product

development

and innovation

Identified growth

opportunities in high

value sectors

19
FY22 Guidance

Expect FY22 NormalisedEBIT no less than $45m and NormalisedEBITDA of no less than $64m

Market conditions expected to remain

positive

•Commercial consents building and

increased tender activity

•Infrastructure/Government spending

continuing to build due to significant

prior underinvestment

•Expanding manufacturing sector

•Residential activity expected to moderate

•Headwinds remain – congested supply

chains, rising steel prices, labour and cost

and interest rate pressures

Significant turnaround complete, benefits

locked in, focus strengthening and growth

•Capturing operational leverage, margin

disciplines and digital platform taking hold

•Strong market conditions, secured pipeline of

contract work, and investedin inventory to

support customers

•Growth targeted at high value products and

value-added services

•Expect continued earnings momentum and

dividends, subject to any new COVID-19

variant

20
Our Strengths

•Strong governance and sustainability focus

•Established leadership positions in multiple

categories of the steel market

•Diversity across multiple sectors in the steel

market, reducing exposure to any one sector

and providing ability to cross-sell to

customers

•Turnaround has built a customer centric

culture, resilient underlying cost structure,

streamlined and efficient footprint and

strong balance sheet with capacity to invest

•Building resilience of earnings through

growth in high value product ranges and

value-added services

•Leading the way in the sector with digital

platforms providing efficient access for

customers

•Trusted customer partner –reliability,

methodologies, technical advisory and

safety & quality

•Investment in product quality systems

including Lloyds Register domestic and

offshore steel mill attestation and test

certificate verifications

•People, communities, environment, health,

safety and wellbeing are at our core

21
Group Financial

Update

Richard Smyth

Chief Financial Officer

22
* FY21 results have been restated for the impact of a change in accounting policy in regards to the accounting for Software as a Service arrangements (“SaaS”). FY22 and FY21 Normalised

EBITDA and NormalisedEBIT have been adjusted to exclude non-trading adjustments. Further details included in appendix to this presentation.

•Strong volume and revenue uplift

─Revenue up 24.6%

─Volumes up 7.8%

•Gross Margin continues to

improve

•Structural reduction in operating

expenses locked in

•Significant increase in earnings

$m

FY22

(10 months

Actuals)

FY21

(10 months

Actuals)

Var%

Revenue479.3384.624.6%


EBITDA53.629.581.6%


Normalised EBITDA*54.028.689.2%


EBIT37.914.8156.7%


Normalised EBIT*38.313.8177.9%


Group Financial Summary (10 months)

23
FY2021 (1H21 & 2H21) has been restated for SaaS impact

Group Financial

Performance

•2H20 was significantly

impacted by COVID-19

•Four consecutive half year

periods of strong growth

•Earnings momentum

supported by business

improvements and solid

activity

-30

-10

10

30

50

70

90

0

100

200

300

400

500

1H192H191H202H201H212H211H222H22

F or ecas t

C olu m n1

$m

$m

G ross Margin

Re venue

Normalised

E B IT DA

Normalised

E BIT

24
Volume 136.8Ktonnes, up 10Kt

or 7.8% on pcp

Increasing customer demand for

comprehensive range of products

Revenue $479.3m, up $94.7m

or 24.6% on pcp

Continuing sales momentum,

despite COVID-19 impact

Revenue (10 months)

Strong trading momentum

60

90

120

150

0

100

200

300

400

500

FY21FY22

Tonnage (000’s)

$m

Sales & Volume (10 months)

Sal esTon nage

pcp= prior comparative period

25
Margin (10 months)

Focus on gross margin $/tonne

improvement

•Data driven pricing decisions resulting in

effective price management in a dynamic

environment

•Product mix focused on growing market

share inattractive sectors which offer

higher margins

•Lower variable costs as a percentage of

sales reflecting efficiency improvements

•Relentless focus on cost management

20.8%

23.0%

0

300

600

900

0%

5%

1 0%

1 5%

20%

25%

FY21FY22

Year on Year (10 months) Margin

Improvement

Gross MarginGross Margin$/tonne

Gross margin includes freight, direct and sub-contract labour

26
Significant structural changes delivering long term benefit

completed

•Low fixed cost base has been maintained

•Operational costs as a percentage of sales continues

to decline

•Continued focus on implementing efficiencies and

controlling costs

Increase in FY22 normalised operating expenses of $6.4m

•Inflationary pressure - mostly wage and salary inflation

•Incentive accruals provisioning

•Increase depreciation

Nomalisedoperating expenses (10 months)

Ongoing relentless focus on operating expenditure

NormalisedOpexexcludes Holiday Pay provisions/reversal, as well as non-trading adjustments previously reported

0.0%

5.0%

1 0. 0%

1 5. 0%

20.0%

25.0%

0.0

20.0

40.0

60.0

80.0

FY20FY21FY22

$m

Normalised Opex(10 months)

OpexOpex/Sales%

27
•Normalised Opexhas continued

to decline as a percentage of

sales (2H20 blip due to COVID-

19 lockdown sales impact)

•Dollar increases have been

limited to inflation, depreciation

and a small number of

additional IT staff

Normalised operating

expenses summary

Opexfigures have been normalisedin the current period to exclude Holiday Pay

provision reversal, as well as non-trading adjustments reported in prior years

0.0%

5.0%

1 0. 0%

1 5. 0%

20.0%

25.0%

0.0

25.0

50.0

1H192H191H202H201H212H211H222H22

F or ecas t

$m

Normalised Opex

OpexOpex/Sales%

28
Inventory

•Investment into high demand,

high margin SKUs

•Increase in Inventory a result of:

─Higher prices

─Slightly longer supply chain

resulting in an increase in

Goods in Transit

─Increased sales/customer

demand

•Inventory turns (unit and

tonnes) have remained

consistent with prior periods

Stock on Hand (units)

Average unit price ($)

$152.9

$188.1

$192.4

$16.2

$10.4

$8.6

$4.3

SOH December

2021

Cost Pri ce

Escalation

Local Supply

Ch ain

International

Supply Chain

Additional to

support sales

SOH April 2022

$m

29
Cashflow

•Strong cash inflows reflecting the

increased revenues

•Significant investment in inventory

which has increased $40m in the last

four months

•Dividends paid during FY22

•Expect to start paying Company

Income Tax from FY23

•Extension of existing revolving cash

advance facility from $50m to $80m,

and additional $20m trade loan

Opening Cash

EBITDA

Increase in Inventory

Other Working Capital

movement/timing

Dividend

payments

Capex payments

Lease/ROU payments

Closing Net Debt

30
Governance

•Fully established Board and Sub-Committee Structure:

─Audit and Risk Committee

─Governance and Remuneration Committee

─Quality, Health, Safety and Environment Committee

•Director Skills Matrix

•Code of Ethical Behaviour

•Board and Team Diversity

•Change in External Auditors

3131
Panel discussion

32
Distribution

Marc Hainen

General Manager Distribution

33
Our business divisions

Products sourced from preferred

steel mills and distributed through

our national network

Products processed before sale, typically

on a contract or project basis, including

onsite installation services

Distribution

Infrastructure

SteelPiping SystemsChain & Rigging

FasteningsRural ProductsStainless Steel

RoofingCoil ProcessingReinforcing

PurlinsComFlor/ CFDLMesh

34
Distribution

Performance

•Revenue +37.3%

•GM $ - pricing & improved

product mix + 63.3%

•Tonnesgrowth – little

COVID-19 effect + 11.2%

•Benefits on prior cost

rationalisation

•Earnings growth 3.9x

70

75

80

85

90

95

100

0

50

100

150

200

250

300

350

400

FY21FY22

Tonnage (000’s)

$m

Sales & Volume (10 months)

Sal esTon nage

-

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

FY21FY22

$m

EBIT(10 months)

FY21FY22

35
Procurement

and Shipping

•Mill capacity constraints and

allocations

•Steady rise in steel costs (USD)

•Recent weakening in NZ USD

cross rate

•Recent price announcements

from key suppliers including

NZ Steel

•Strong and supportive supplier

relationships across ANZ and

Asia

800

1000

1200

1400

1600

1800

2000

2200

800

1000

1200

1400

1600

1800

2000

2200

NZ$US$

Asia Hot Dipped GalvanisedCoil Price (excl.

Shipping) US$/TonneMEPS International

US$/TonneNZ$/Tonne

600

800

1,000

1,200

1,400

1,600

600

800

1000

1200

1400

1600

NZ$

US$

Asia Merchant Bar Price (excl. Shipping)

US$/TonneMEPS International

US$/TonneNZ$/Tonne

36
Procurement

and Shipping

•Shipping reliability worsens

and days delayed increased

•Container capacity constraints

•Shipping cost increases (USD)

+ fuel surcharge increases

•Secured full container

allocations + cost security

0%

10%

20%

30%

40%

50%

60%

70%

80%

JanFebM arAprM ayJunJulAugSepOctNovDec

P e rfomance

to Schedule

Vessel Global Schedule Reliability

Sea-Intelligence, GLP Report

20 20

20 21

20 22

$0

$2,000

$4,000

$6,000

$8,000

$10,000

$12,000

U SD Per C onatiner

World (40ft) & Shanghai Containerized (20ft) Freight

Dewy & Macromicro

Drewry World (40ft)

Cont aine r In de x

Sh anghai (2 0ft)

Cont aine riz ed Fr eight I ndex

37
Margin Management

•Disciplined pricing systems, digital analytics and

reporting - optimisingmargin $ achievement

•Active price management in a dynamic

environment

─Margin $ per tonne+46.8%

•Shift in focus to high value customers/market

segments

•Return on inventory focus

•Experienced team – through the cycle

•Forward sell price commitments and mill

“back to backs”

─Mitigates risk for major customers and

Steel & Tube

-

100

200

300

400

500

600

700

800

900

1,000

FY21FY22

Gross Margin $ per Tonne (10 months)

FY21FY22

38
Abandon Rate

Ta r ge t

Average Wait Time

Ta r ge t

Quote Follow-up

Ta r ge t

Customer Service

Performance

•Improving DIFOT 98.2%

•Customer Excellence centreperformance

- strong regional alignment

•Increased sales & service focus on high

value customer segments

•Webshopgrowth - 24 hours access, lower

cost to serve

•Electronic Data Interchange (EDI)

integration with larger customers

•Improved product availability
















39
Growth Trajectory

•Investment in high value, high returning segments

•New plate processing equipment currently

commissioning

•Organic growth in seismic systems (Zipclip) and roofing

screws (Rooffast) launched, acquired Fasteners NZ

•Share of wallet focus on high value customer segment

supported by common ERP and ability to cross range sell

•Major customers report solid forward workloads -strong

infrastructure and steady manufacturing. Residential

expected to moderate

40
Rollforming

Mohammed Afroz

General Manager Rollforming

41
Our business divisions

Products sourced from preferred

steel mills and distributed through

our national network

Products processed before sale, typically

on a contract or project basis, including

onsite installation services

Distribution

Infrastructure

SteelPiping SystemsChain & Rigging

FasteningsRural ProductsStainless Steel

RoofingCoil ProcessingReinforcing

PurlinsComFlor/ CFDLMesh

42
Roofing

Business Context

•Largest revenue contributor for Rollforming

at 60%

•Six branches offering 15 profiles covering

residential and commercial sectors

•Complete roofing and cladding solutions

provider, packaged with accessories and

fasteners, one stop shop

•Specialist curving and custom rainwater

service

Business Performance

•6% Revenuegrowth in roofing with a

buoyant Residential sector

•Four year supply agreement with Kāinga

Ora supplying 1,600 roofs annually, Kāinga

Ora volumes expected to double in FY23

•Investment in new Rollforming equipment

for South Island

•Strong customer focus in a challenging

environment

•Customer Excellence Centre and Web Shop

improvements consistent with the

Distribution Business

•Exploring opportunities to fill two network

gaps in Roofing

43
Sheeting and Coil Processing

•Servicing manufacturers and sheet

metal fabricators

•Same day or 24hr delivery service for

standard and cut to length sheets

•Increased volume in coil processing in

both residential and commercial sectors

•Currently supplying significant volumes

for light steel framing

•Smart throughput reporting software

being implemented for capacity gains

due to increased demands

-15%

-10%

-5%

0%

5%

10%

15%

20%

1H20 2H20 1H21 2H21 1H222H22F

Volume % Growth

44
Purlins

•Significant growth in the last 10 months

•Volume up by 62% with Revenue uplift

of 80%

•Smart procurement planning for stock

availability

•Cross group customer focus is increasing

share of wallet

•Strong secured works pipeline

•Recently implemented investment in

new semi-automatic purlins machine

and stacker, to further grow market share

0%

10%

20%

30%

40%

50%

60%

7 0%

1H202H201H212H211H222H22F

% Volume Growth

45
ComFlor/CFDL

•Exclusive licenceto ComFlorrange of products

•Most specified metal decking system

•Sustainable solution using less concrete per

square meter, meeting fire and acoustic standards

•End to end service - technical support to

installation

•Projects installed by CFDL, market leaders in the

installation space suppling and installing just over

250,000m2 annually

•Unique installation methodology, digital 3D

modelling and collaboration with main contractors

= time and cost savings for customers

CFDL – Composite Floor Decking Limited

46
Steel Framing

•Opportunity identified through mass timber shortage

mainly in the residential sector

•Steel & Tube supplies slit coil for steel framed houses

to Group Home Builders and other fabricators

•As Rollformingspecialist there are synergies to service

the residential sector with fabricated steel frames

•Leverage current strong roofing relationships to build

volume

•Incremental sales through Roofing, Reinforcing,

Distribution and fastening

•Two machines and increased volumes may warrant

further units – opportunity to scale through existing

network

47
Reinforcing

& Wire

Peter Ensor

General Manager Reinforcing

48
Our business divisions

Products sourced from preferred

steel mills and distributed through

our national network

Products processed before sale, typically

on a contract or project basis, including

onsite installation services

Distribution

Infrastructure

SteelPiping SystemsChain & Rigging

FasteningsRural ProductsStainless Steel

RoofingCoil ProcessingReinforcing

PurlinsComFlor/ CFDLMesh

49
Introduction

•Product quality and

traceability

•Strong focus on safety

through manufacturing

and construction

•Customer synergies across

the group

50
Performance

Infrastructure

45%

Commercial 42%

Residential

Construction 12%

Sales by Sector FY21-22

•Mitigating and recovering

from the impacts of COVID-19

•Managing rapidly escalating

pricing in a contracting

environment

•Sector growth outlook strong

and solid order book

•Carefully managing

contracting risk, engaging

where risk/reward balanced

51
Strengths

•Leveraging methodology and

manufacturing capability

•Customer early engagement

a differentiator

•Digital solutions are now

changing the game

•Continued investments in

manufacturing plant

•Highly engaged and

experienced workforce

•Local and Central

Government customers’ client

5252
Panel discussion

53
Customer Value

Proposition

Mike Hendry

Chief Digital Officer

54
•Provide the broadest range of steel solutions in the NZ market

•Have knowledgeable and skilled people to help you with your steel needs

•Be easy to do business with

•Deliver value

•Highly customer focused

•Innovative

•Lead the industry in safety and quality

•Strong “Kiwi” identity

Customer Value Proposition

55
Our client base is highly

diverse with a broad set of

requirements we address via

careful customer targeting

Most

Valuable

Customers in

Their

Segments

High

Potential &

Growth

Orientated

Small

and Medium

Enterprises

ManufacturingConstruction

Merchants

& Resellers

EngineeringTrad e s

Rural

Resellers

&

Merchants

Some are

Exclusively

Project

Work

56
Analytics

E-Commerce

CX

New Digital and Sales

and Service Capability

•Segmentation

•Pricing

•S&OP

•Webshop

•EDI

•CRM

57
Analytics

For illustra tive purposes only

58
E-Commerce

•High Growth “Sticky”

7x24 channel

•Proven convenience

generates excellent NPS

•Exclusive or “Mix and

Match” Customer Use

Direct customer integration

for our largest customers

•Catalogues

•Pricing

•Orders and Invoices

•Test Certificates

EDI

59
Customer Based Performance Measurement

Customer

Score

NPS

Know

Me

Be

Responsive

to Me

Get Me Stuff

I Need

Revenue,

Margin and

Average Share

Primary

Metrics

Secondary

Metrics

Operational

and Role KPI’s

DIFOTISPRODUCT

TRAINING

COMPLETION

QUOTE

CONVERSION

TEST CERT

AVAILABILITY

$$%

The measure of how

we are performing

in the market

How our performance for this customer ranks across

all the dimensions of the Primary Metrics compared

to every other customer. It is a performance index.

Important performance statistics used

to create the Customer Score and

aggregated to create Secondary Metrics

Aggregate performance metrics across

customers, segments, channels, products

and locations over time

Functional, BU and Role Based KPI’s/OKR’s and

SLA’s. These are the levers which drive Primary

Metric Performance. Measured continuously.

Role and

Functional

K PI ’s/SLA’s

The measure as to how well our

customer feels we are performing.

Would they recommend us.

Segment

Performance

Key S&T drivers

for customers

performance

How are we

performing for

the customer

Key Outcomes

60
Supply

Chain

Mark Baker

General Manager Group Supply Chain

& Distribution Centres

61
Group Supply Chain and

Distribution Centres

•Network Backbone and Distribution Centres

•Sales and Operations Planning / Integrated

Business Planning

•Availability and DIFOT

•Inventory profile and performance

62
Network Backbone and Distribution Centres

•Backbone network across the Group –

centred strongly in Auckland / Golden

Triangle

•Distribution Centre / child branch model

optimises inventory, service and Group

freight

•Demonstrated resilience during COVID-19

•Primary initiatives focus on process

standardisation, automation/analytics and

productivity

•Network intensification – optimise today

and create flexibility for future

Primar y steel DC

Primary stainless DC

Primary fastenings DC

Coil Processing

Plate Processing

Roofing

Reinforcing / Wire

South Island DC

(stainless, carbon

and fastenings)

Reinforcing

Roofing

63
Sales and Operations Planning

•Integrated at a Group level

•Anchored to our value

proposition and service promise

•Balances inventory investment

with earnings

•Key focus area for capability

development and digitisation

DIGITAL

SEGMENTS

CATEGORIES

SERVICE

P ROMISE

(AVAILABILITY)

F O RECAST

D E MAND

INVENTORY

LE VELS

P U RC HASING

S T O CK

C O NT ROL

E ND T O END

FRE IGHT

S E RVICE

PERFORMANCE

D IRECT

LABOUR

NE T WORK

CAPACITY

64
Jul-21Aug-21Sep-21Oct-21No v-21Dec-21Jan-22Feb-22Mar-22Apr-22

DIFOT

Availability and DIFOT

•Maintaining high availability on

key / critical lines to target

segments is core to our

proposition

•Consistency of performance is

critical – some out of stocks

inevitable

•Availability impact for hollows

following NZ Steel exit

mitigated and stable, but

longer supply line

98%+

Jun 21Jul 21A ug 21Sep 21Oct 21Nov 21Dec 21Jan 22Feb 22Mar 22Apr 22

Availability

95%+

65
Inventory Profile and Performance

•Cost price inflation and supply

chain disruption drives inventory

value

•Cover at unit and tonneslevel

has remained relatively flat

despite supply chain disruptions

•Period of high unit cost price

inflation evident

Stock on Hand (units)Avera ge unit price ($)

$152.9

$188.1

$192.4

$16.2

$10.4

$8.6

$4.3

SOH December

2021

Cost Pri ce

Escalation

Local Supply

Ch ain

International

Supply Chain

Additional to

support sales

SOH April 2022

$m

66
People &

Culture

Anna Morris

General Manager People & Culture

67
Our People

Main cities through to

small regions

500Operational

Team Members

32Ethnicities

840FTEs excluding vacancies

Average 6.4years service

Average age

42

27%

females

68
Labour Model Efficiency

•Changed Labour model

•Significant FTE reduction

•Capacity for higher outputs

0

200

400

600

800

1,000

1,200

$-

$10,000

$20,000

$30,000

$40,000

$50,000

$60,000

$70,000

1H202H201H212H211H222H22

FTE Information

Av Rev per FTEAverage H eadcount

HeadcountRevenue per FTE ($)

Headcount

Revenue per FTE ($)

69
COVID-19 Response

Committed to our People

•Frequent Communication

•Vaccines Incentives

•Company-wide consultation

on approach to vaccinations

•Mandatory Vaccinations

•Care Packages

•Frontline Recognition Payments

•Paid Isolation leave

•Hardship support

•Booster Programme

•Supply of RATs to families

70
Employee Engagement

•35 ENPS

•Committed to continuous

improvement

5

13

15

19

29

35

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

40

July 20Nov 20Mar 21July 21Dec 21Apr 22

eNPS

SCORE

Employee Engagement

Satisfaction Score 7.8/10

71
Retention is Key

•Record levels of internal

movements

•Employee Engagement

actions

•Reward for Performance

programmes

Recruitment for growth

•Relationships with

alternative sourcing

providers

•Internal referrals

Competing for

Tal e n t

72
Gearing Team around

Customer Experience

•Career path

•Sales and Customer Service

competency

•Expansion of productivity

based incentives

Focus Areas

73
Sustainability

•Work experience/MBIE partnership programmes

•English and numeric literacy

•Back to school funds

•Budgeting and financial wellbeing programmes

•Mates in Construction partnership

7474
Panel discussion

75
Sustainability

Trent Brash

Group Sustainability Manager

76
Sustainable Steel

Steel facilitates the

circular economy:

•Infinitely recyclable

•Reduced construction waste

•Durable

•Thermal capabilities

•Non-toxic and inert

77
ESG Strategy

Steel & Tube are developing

its ESG strategy:

•MBIE feedback

•XRB consultations

•Preparation for NZ CS 1:

Climate-related Disclosures

•Sustainability systems

•Materiality assessment

78
Sustainability at

Steel & Tube

Carbon abatement

opportunities

•Reduction in energy use

•LED lighting

•Waste reduction

•Freight efficiency

•Solar

79
Sustainability

Dr Troy Coyle

Chief Executive Officer, HERA

80
Non-GAAP Financial

Non-GAAP financial information: Steel & Tube uses several non-GAAP measures when discussing financial performance. These

include NormalisedEBIT and Working Capital. Management believes that these measures provide useful information on the underlying

performance of Steel & Tube’s business. They may be used internally to evaluate performance, analysetrends and allocate resources.

Non- GAAP financial measures should not be viewed in isolation nor considered as a substitute for measures reported in accordance

with NZ IFRS.

Non-trading adjustments/Unusual transactions: The financial results for FY22 (10 months) include transactions considered

to be non-trading in either their nature or size. Unusual transactions can be as a result of specific events or circumstances ormajor

acquisitions, disposals or divestments that are not expected to occur frequently. Excluding these transactions from normalisedearnings

can assist users in forming a view of the underlying performance of the Group. The above reconciliation is intended to assistre aders to

understand how the earnings reported in the periods ended 30 April 2021 (10 months) and 30 April 2022 (10 months) reconcile to

normalisedearnings. Non-trading adjustments of $(0.4) million are included in the FY22 (10 months) results.

RECONCILIATION OF REPORTED NORMALISED EBIT

Period ended 30 April Restated Restated

$000sFY22FY21FY22FY21

Reported 53,595 29,521 37,87514,752

Holiday Pay provision release (854) - (854)-

IFRS16 Impairment Revers al (374) (777) (374) (777)

Gain on sale of Properties- (1,215)- (1,215)

Saas expenses 1,683 1,032 1,683 1,032

Normalised 54,050 28,561 38,33013,792

EBITDA (10 Months)EBIT (10 months)

81
This presentation has been prepared by Steel & Tube Limited (“STU”).

The information in this presentation is of a general nature only. It is not a

complete description of STU.

This presentation is not a recommendation or offer of financial products

for subscription, purchase or sale, or an invitation or solicitation for such

offers.

This presentation is not intended as investment, financial or other advice

and must not be relied on by any prospective investor.It does not take

into account any particular prospective investor’s objectives, financial

situation, circumstances or needs, and does not purport to contain all the

information that a prospective investor may require. Any person who is

considering an investment in STU securities should obtain independent

professional advice prior to making an investment decision, and should

make any investment decision having regard to that person’s own

objectives, financial situation, circumstances and needs.

Past performance information contained in this presentation should not

be relied upon (and is not) an indication of future performance.This

presentation may also contain forward looking statements with respect to

the financial condition, results of operations and business, and business

strategy of STU. Information about the future, by its nature, involves

inherent risks and uncertainties. Accordingly, nothing in this presentation

is a promise or representation as to the future or a promise or

representation that an transaction or outcome referred to in this

presentation will proceed or occur on the basis described in this

presentation. Statements or assumptions in this presentation as to future

matters may prove to be incorrect.

A number of financial measures are used in this presentation and should

not be considered in isolation from, or as a substitute for, the information

provided in STU’s financial statements available at

www.steelandtube.co.nz.

STU and its related companies and their respective directors, employees

and representatives make no representation or warranty of any nature

(including as to accuracy or completeness) in respect of this presentation

and will have no liability (including for negligence) for any errors in or

omissions from, or for any loss (whether foreseeable or not) arising in

connection with the use of or reliance on, information in this

presentation.

Disclaimer

Data sourced from publicly available filings. Our datasets may not be complete. Automated analysis can produce errors. If you believe any data on this page is incorrect, please contact us at hello@nzxplorer.co.nz. For informational purposes only. Not investment advice.

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