Nucor's Strength Is Hidden In Plain Sight

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There was a deep steel industry downturn between 2009 and 2016, but you'd hardly know it from the way Nucor Corporation (NYSE: NUE) invested in its business during that span. The company bought steel industry competitors, built new facilities, inked joint ventures, and upgraded its existing steel mills. The goal was to exit the downturn a better company than it entered it. There's only one way a company can do this -- to build from a rock-solid foundation. Now that the steel industry has started to recover, it's a good time to look at how Nucor got where it is today and what's ahead for the steel company.

Strength in numbers

One of Nucor's core focuses is maintaining its financial strength throughout the business cycle. Steel is, after all, a cyclical industry that often goes through painful downturns. For Nucor that means maintaining a low level of debt and ample cash to do whatever it needs to do, whenever it needs to do it. That requires balance-sheet stability, and Nucor has worked hard to maintain financial discipline.

A man standing in front of steel flowing in a steel mill
A man standing in front of steel flowing in a steel mill

Image source: Getty Images

The first thing to look at is debt. At the start of 2018 Nucor had $3.2 billion in long-term debt. That's down roughly 13% from the end of 2016 and around 25% lower than the roughly $4.4 billion in debt the company carried between 2013 and 2015.

Although the trend toward lower long-term debt levels is nice to see, a more compelling number is that long-term debt currently makes up around 30% of Nucor's capital structure. That's a reasonable amount of debt for any company, particularly one in a capital intensive industry like steel. Even when long-term debt hit a recent peak in 2013, it only made up around 35% of Nucor's capital structure. Nucor definitely used the strength of its balance sheet to get through the downturn, but even during the worst of it, the company remained financially strong.

For comparison, long-term debt at AK Steel (NYSE: AKS), which has one of the weakest balance sheets in the industry, makes up around 95% of the company's capital structure. And at Steel Dynamics (NASDAQ: STLD), which is among the strongest names in the industry, long-term debt is roughly 40% of the capital structure.

NUE Current Ratio (Quarterly) Chart
NUE Current Ratio (Quarterly) Chart

NUE Current Ratio (Quarterly) data by YCharts

Another key metric to look at is the current ratio, a measure of how easily a company could pay its near-term bills if it were to encounter financial difficulties. Nucor's current ratio is strong at 2.4. That's better than peers AK Steel at 1.8 and iconic United States Steel Corporation (NYSE: X) at 1.75, although it's less than Steel Dynamics and its enviable current ratio of 4.