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Novolipetsk Steel
View on WikipediaThis article reads like a press release or a news article and may be largely based on routine coverage. (February 2020) |
Novolipetsk Steel, or NLMK, is one of the four largest steel companies in Russia. NLMK's share of domestic crude steel production is about 21%. It primarily produces flat steel products, semi-finished steel products, and electrical steels. NLMK also produces specialty coated steels, as well as high-ductility and micro-alloyed steels. It is the 21st-largest steel maker in the world. The larger NLMK group owns several other steel and mining companies, primarily in Russia.
Key Information
History
[edit]Historically, the Lipetsk area in central Russia has had substantial iron ore deposits. In 1702, Peter the Great ordered the construction of an iron foundry there.
In 1931, Novolipetsk Iron and Steel began construction of a plant on the site of the iron ore mine.[2] Prospering down through the decades, Novolipetsk became a joint-stock company in 1992 and then in 1993 began the process of privatization by distributing company shares to its employees. The company seems to be acquisitive; see the list of related organizations. In 1998, Vladimir Lisin became the chairman. The manufacturing area in Lipetsk covers 27 square kilometers.
Less than half of NLMK's steel output is sold in Russia.
The company's primary source of iron ore is now Stoilensky GOK, a company located 350 km from the mills at Lipetsk.
Business
[edit]Acquisitions
[edit]The largest of NLMK's acquisitions was a 50% stake in a joint venture with the Duferco Group in December 2006. The venture includes one steel plant and five rolling mills in Western Europe and the United States. The joint venture also includes service and distribution facilities located in Europe. In 2021, the company's revenue amounted to 793 billion rubles.[3]
Other acquisitions include:
- OJSC Dolomite, miner and processor of metallurgical dolomite, acquired in 1997
- OJSC Stagdok, miner and processor of fluxing limestone, acquired in 1999
- OJSC Stoilensky GOK, iron ore supplier, acquired in 2004 (97%)
- OJSC TMTP, operator of the Black Sea port of Tuapse, acquired in 2004 (controlling interest)
- License for the large coking coal deposit Zhernovskoie 1 in the Kuzbass region of Russia, acquired at State auction in 2005
- DanSteel A/S, Danish steel rolling company, acquired in 2006
- OJSC Altai-koks, acquired in 2006
- VIZ-Stal, the second-largest Russian electrical steel producer, acquired in 2006
- Sharon Coatings
Ecology
[edit]Since 2007, NLMK has implemented some investment projects on environmental protection. In 2009, it stopped discharges of industrial wastewater into the river Voronezh. As a result of all the activities, the water consumption of the NLMK Group decreased from 120.4 million cubic meters per year in 2008 to 77.2 million cubic meters per year in 2012, and emissions into the atmosphere decreased by 40%.
NLMK reported Total CO2e emissions (Direct + Indirect) for the twelve months ending 31 December 2020 at 33,587 kilotonnes(+1,365/+4.2% y-o-y).[4]
| Dec 2015 | Dec 2016 | Dec 2017 | Dec 2018 | Dec 2019 | Dec 2020 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 32,800[5] | 34,166[6] | 34,765[7] | 35,264[8] | 32,222[9] | 33,587[4] |
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ a b c d e "Consolidated IFRS Financial statements, 2021" (PDF). Novolipetsk Steel. 3 February 2022. p. 67. Retrieved 3 February 2022.
- ^ "History NLMK Steel Novolipetsk Russia historic profile". www.steelonthenet.com. Retrieved June 21, 2023.
- ^ "ПАО "НЛМК"". www.rusprofile.ru (in Russian). Retrieved 2023-10-27.
- ^ a b "NLMK's Annual Report for 2020Q4" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on September 26, 2021. Alt URL
- ^ "NLMK's Sustainability Report for 2019Q4" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on September 26, 2021. Alt URL
- ^ "NLMK's Annual Report for 2020Q4" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on September 26, 2021. Alt URL
- ^ "NLMK's Annual Report for 2020Q4" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on September 26, 2021. Alt URL
- ^ "NLMK's Annual Report for 2020Q4" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on September 26, 2021. Alt URL
- ^ "NLMK's Annual Report for 2020Q4" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on September 26, 2021. Alt URL
External links
[edit]Novolipetsk Steel
View on GrokipediaHistory
Founding and Early Years (1930s–1950s)
The Novolipetsk Iron and Steel Works (NLMZ), later known as Novolipetsk Steel, was established as part of the Soviet Union's first Five-Year Plan for rapid industrialization. Construction of the integrated steel plant began in 1931 in Lipetsk, located near the Kursk Magnetic Anomaly to leverage abundant local iron ore deposits, following a resolution by the Council of People's Commissars of the USSR.[13] The site was selected for its proximity to raw materials and transport routes, with initial infrastructure including blast furnaces designed for pig iron production.[14] The first blast furnace was commissioned in 1934, marking the start of pig iron output at the facility, which initially focused on basic ferrous metallurgy to support Soviet heavy industry needs.[8] By the late 1930s, the plant had expanded to include additional furnaces and steelmaking capabilities, though output remained modest due to technological limitations and resource constraints typical of early Soviet metallurgical projects.[4] World War II severely disrupted operations; in 1941, as German forces advanced, the blast furnaces and power plant were dismantled and evacuated eastward to Chelyabinsk to prevent capture, halting production at Lipetsk.[8] Post-war reconstruction commenced amid the Soviet recovery effort, with the plant fully rebuilt by 1947, restoring pig iron and initial steel production capacities.[8] During the late 1940s and 1950s, NLMZ underwent modernization under Stalin's and subsequent Five-Year Plans, emphasizing increased output for reconstruction and military-industrial growth. By 1957, the plant commissioned an electric arc furnace (EAF) steel shop and pioneered the world's first 100% continuous casting technology for steel slabs, enhancing efficiency and reducing waste in slab production.[8] These advancements positioned the facility as a key contributor to Soviet steel self-sufficiency, with annual pig iron production reaching several million tons by decade's end, though exact figures varied with state planning priorities.[15]Soviet Industrialization and Expansion (1960s–1980s)
During the 1960s, the Novolipetsk Metallurgical Plant expanded significantly as part of the Soviet Union's emphasis on heavy industry development under successive five-year plans. In 1962, Blast Furnace No. 3 was commissioned with a volume of 2,000 cubic meters and an annual capacity of 1.6 million tonnes of pig iron. This was followed in 1966 by the launch of the basic oxygen furnace (BOF) shop, introducing advanced steelmaking technology that integrated with continuous casting methods already in use, enhancing efficiency and output quality.[16][8] Further growth in the late 1960s and 1970s solidified the plant's role as a key producer. Blast Furnace No. 4 came online in 1967, boasting a similar 2,000 cubic meter volume but increased capacity to 2.1 million tonnes per year. By 1971, Soviet planners designated Novolipetsk as the nation's largest steel mill, reflecting its strategic importance in central Russia for specialty steel production.[16][17] In the 1960s, the plant also intensified sinter and pig iron production to support the new converter facilities.[18] The 1970s saw continued capacity buildup with larger furnaces. Blast Furnace No. 5, with a 3,200 cubic meter volume and 2.9 million tonnes annual capacity, was launched in 1973, followed by No. 6 in 1978 at 3.4 million tonnes. These additions elevated the plant to third-largest in the USSR by the late 1970s, producing approximately 8.5 million tonnes of pig iron annually and contributing critically to Soviet steel output for machinery and construction.[16][19] In 1983, the facility was renamed Novolipetsk Steel, underscoring its specialization in steel products.[8]Privatization and Post-Soviet Restructuring (1990s–2000s)
In the early 1990s, amid Russia's transition from a centrally planned economy, Novolipetsk Steel (NLMK) underwent privatization as part of the broader denationalization of state-owned enterprises. On December 31, 1992, the company was reorganized into an open joint-stock company, followed by formal privatization on January 28, 1993, which initially distributed shares primarily to employees through voucher-based mechanisms typical of the era's mass privatization program.[20][21] This process aligned with government decrees aimed at transferring ownership to workers and small investors, though it often resulted in fragmented shareholding vulnerable to later consolidation by larger stakeholders. By the mid-1990s, share ownership began consolidating among strategic investors, reflecting the competitive dynamics of post-Soviet asset allocation where insider knowledge and financial resources enabled buyouts from dispersed employee holders. In 1996, Vladimir Lisin, a metallurgical executive with prior experience at NLMK and ties to industry networks, acquired an initial 13% stake, marking the start of concentrated control.[22][23] Further acquisitions followed, including purchases from international investors such as George Soros and the Chandler brothers, culminating in Lisin securing majority ownership by 2000 and full control through Fletcher Group Holding by 2001, amid challenges from competing bidders like Mikhail Prokhorov.[24][25] Post-privatization restructuring in the late 1990s and 2000s emphasized vertical integration to mitigate raw material vulnerabilities and enhance efficiency in a volatile market. Key moves included the 1997 acquisition of OJSC Dolomit for flux materials and the 2004 purchase of Stoilensky GOK, achieving 100% self-sufficiency in iron ore and reducing dependency on external suppliers.[8] Concurrently, production upgrades addressed Soviet-era inefficiencies, such as the April 2000 reconstruction of gyratory crushers at Stoilensky, boosting ore processing capacity. These efforts, coupled with investments in slab and transformer steel output—where NLMK held over 10% and 20% of respective global markets by the mid-2000s—positioned the company for export growth amid Russia's economic recovery.[26][27]Recent Developments and Modernization (2010s–Present)
In the 2010s, NLMK advanced its Technical Upgrade Program, with the second stage (2007–2012) focusing on expanding liquid steel capacity by 40% to 17 million tonnes per annum through investments in ladle furnaces and other steelmaking equipment at the Lipetsk site.[28] The company also revamped its basic oxygen furnace (BOF) shop #1, investing RUB 6.7 billion to enhance operational efficiency and add bag filter systems for capturing secondary emissions and dust across all three converters.[29] Concurrently, upgrades to the hot strip mill included state-of-the-art automation, new roll stands, drives, and motors, improving product quality and output.[8] Environmental modernization gained prominence, with cumulative investments exceeding $1.3 billion since 2000, halving specific emissions from 43.3 to 19.8 kg per tonne of steel by 2020.[30] Internationally, NLMK invested €150 million in a hot strip mill upgrade at its Belgium facility in 2019 and opened a service center in South Africa in 2018.[8] Domestic enhancements included the commissioning of a new logistics complex at Lipetsk under the Customer Service Development Programme.[26] Entering the 2020s, NLMK prioritized sustainability, achieving its Environmental Strategy 2023 targets by reducing specific atmospheric emissions.[31] Geopolitical tensions following Russia's 2022 invasion of Ukraine prompted Western sanctions, leading to significant asset restructuring; in 2023, NLMK divested its NLMK Long division, including steelmaking plants and parts of its scrap network, altering the group's asset composition.[32] Despite challenges, domestic operations continued with upgrades such as the slitting line for hot-rolled steel (capacity 800,000 tonnes per year) and overseas facilities like the 2024 electric arc furnace overhaul at NLMK Indiana.[33][34] In Belgium, efforts included proposals for electric arc furnace adoption tied to sanctions relief requests for slab imports to support green transitions.[35]Ownership and Leadership
Major Shareholders
Vladimir Lisin, holding a metallurgical engineering degree from the Siberian Metallurgical Institute in Novokuznetsk (1978) and early career experience as a steelworker in plants such as Tulachermet, along with expertise in transport developed through ownership of major logistics firms, ports, and railway operators like Freight One and UCL Holding,[22][36] the chairman of NLMK's board of directors, is the controlling shareholder, holding approximately 79% of the company's shares indirectly through Fletcher Group Holdings Limited as of 2024.[37][23] This stake provides Lisin with dominant influence over strategic decisions, reflecting his long-term involvement since acquiring significant control in the early 1990s during privatization.[36] The remaining shares, comprising about 21%, are held by a mix of institutional investors and public float traded on the Moscow Exchange under the ticker NLMK. Notable minority holders include BlackRock, Inc. (0.86%) and The Vanguard Group, Inc. (0.78%), though these stakes are minor compared to Lisin's controlling interest.[37] No other individual or entity holds more than 1% of the shares, underscoring the concentrated ownership structure typical of post-Soviet Russian industrial firms.[38]Key Executives and Governance
The corporate governance framework of Novolipetsk Steel (NLMK Group) centers on three primary bodies: the General Meeting of Shareholders as the supreme authority for approving strategic decisions, dividends, and electing the Board of Directors; the Board of Directors, responsible for overseeing strategy, risk management, and executive appointments; and the Management Board, tasked with operational execution and implementing approved plans.[39] This structure aligns with Russian public joint-stock company requirements under Federal Law No. 208-FZ, emphasizing shareholder value creation through transparent decision-making and internal controls.[40] The Board comprises a mix of executive, non-executive, and independent directors elected annually by cumulative voting at the General Meeting, with a focus on balancing interests amid the company's vertically integrated operations.[41] Vladimir Lisin has served as Chairman of the Board of Directors since 1998, providing continuity in strategic oversight as the company's founder and largest shareholder.[42] Other notable Board members include Oleg Bagrin as Deputy Chairman, Nikolai Gagarin as a non-executive director, and independent directors such as Joachim Limberg, ensuring diverse expertise in finance, operations, and international markets.[43] The Board's committees, including audit and remuneration panels, conduct regular reviews to mitigate risks like commodity price volatility and geopolitical factors affecting steel production.[44] On the executive side, Sergey Mikhailovich Karataev was elected President, CEO, and Chairman of the Management Board on January 6, 2024, succeeding Grigory Fedorishin and bringing prior experience in finance and logistics from within NLMK and external roles.[45] [46] Karataev oversees day-to-day operations, including production optimization and supply chain management across NLMK's global assets. Key supporting executives include Nikolay Vladimirovich Ivanov as Vice President of Finance, handling financial strategy and reporting, and other Management Board members focused on specialized functions like steelmaking and logistics.[1] This leadership emphasizes efficiency in a challenging environment marked by sanctions and raw material dependencies, with governance practices audited annually for compliance.[47]Operations
Production Capacity and Processes
Novolipetsk Steel's primary production facility in Lipetsk maintains a steelmaking capacity of 14.3 million tonnes per year.[48] This capacity supports the site's role as the core asset of NLMK Group, enabling high-volume output of crude steel primarily through integrated processes.[2] The steel production at Lipetsk follows a conventional integrated route, commencing with the preparation of raw materials via sintering plants and coke batteries to produce sinter and coke, respectively.[4] Blast furnaces then smelt iron ore, coke, and fluxes to generate molten pig iron; the site operates several such furnaces, including the recently commissioned Blast Furnace No. 7, which has an annual capacity of 3.4 million tonnes and incorporates advanced technologies for efficiency and reduced emissions.[49] This pig iron is transferred to basic oxygen furnaces (BOF), where it is refined into steel by blowing oxygen to remove impurities; upgrades have expanded BOF capacity to support 12.4 million tonnes of steel production annually.[50] Molten steel from the BOF is continuously cast into slabs using modern casting machines, followed by reheating and processing in hot-rolling mills to form coils and plates.[4] Additional cold-rolling and coating lines enable the production of value-added flat products, such as galvanized and coated steels.[2] The facility has implemented manufacturing execution systems (MES) for end-to-end automation, optimizing process control from iron-making to rolling.[51] Ongoing technical upgrades, including aspiration systems for BOF shops, ensure compliance with environmental standards while maintaining operational efficiency.[52]Raw Materials and Supply Chain
NLMK Group achieves significant vertical integration in its raw materials supply chain, controlling upstream mining and processing to secure inputs for steel production. The company's primary raw material, iron ore, is predominantly sourced from its subsidiary Stoilensky GOK in Belgorod Oblast, Russia, located about 350 kilometers from the Lipetsk steel mills. Stoilensky GOK supplies over 90% of NLMK's iron ore requirements, producing high-grade concentrate via open-pit mining and beneficiation processes tailored for blast furnace use.[53][54] Coking coal, essential for metallurgical coke production, is not produced captively at scale, with NLMK lacking major in-house coal mining operations. Instead, coking coal is procured from domestic and international suppliers, processed at facilities including the Altai-Koks coke plant in Altai Krai—which handles all stages from coal concentrate to coke output—and the integrated coke batteries at NLMK Lipetsk. This setup supports blast furnace operations but exposes the supply chain to external price volatility and sourcing disruptions, particularly amid geopolitical tensions affecting imports.[55][56][57] Auxiliary materials such as fluxes (e.g., dolomite) are sourced domestically through assets like Dolomit LLC, enhancing overall self-sufficiency in non-core inputs. NLMK's model prioritizes domestic mining for iron ore to minimize logistics costs and risks, while pulverized coal injection technologies at Lipetsk reduce reliance on traditional coke volumes.[58][59] The group's raw materials strategy has historically emphasized expansion in captive iron ore output, with Stoilensky GOK's capacity supporting annual production exceeding 20 million tonnes of ore.[60]Products and Technological Innovations
Novolipetsk Steel specializes in flat steel products, including hot-rolled coils, cold-rolled coils, hot-dip galvanized steel, pre-painted steel coils, and electrical steels such as non-grain-oriented (NGO) and grain-oriented electrical steel (GOES).[61] These products support applications in construction, automotive manufacturing, appliances, and electrical equipment, with hot-rolled steel serving as a base for downstream processing and electrical steels optimized for transformers and motors due to their magnetic properties.[61] Semi-finished products like slabs, produced with strict quality controls for customizability and low tolerances, enable the manufacture of diverse steel grades and constitute a significant portion of output for internal and external supply.[62] Technological innovations at Novolipetsk Steel emphasize premium and high-value products, which account for about 11% of the plant's sales and 16% of revenues excluding slabs supplied within the NLMK Group.[63] Notable developments include high-ductility galvanized steels like DX57D, designed to advance manufacturing processes in sectors requiring enhanced formability.[63] In electrical steel production, the plant introduced patented techniques such as decarburisation, nitriding, and laser machining of GOES to reduce magnetic losses and boost induction levels, improving efficiency in power transformers.[63] A landmark innovation is the commissioning of Russia's first grain-oriented electrical steel laser treatment unit in September 2021, with an annual capacity of 54,000 tonnes; this system refines magnetic domains to minimize energy losses, representing the fourth such line in the NLMK Group and enhancing premium product output.[64] Further advancements include the deployment of an end-to-end Manufacturing Execution System (MES) for steelmaking in February 2024, which integrates planning, real-time monitoring, and adjustments to optimize production efficiency and quality control.[65] These efforts align with upgrades like Blast Furnace No. 7, Russia's most advanced, contributing to a 36% increase in site steel output to 12.4 million tonnes annually through improved process integration.[50]Business Expansion
Domestic Acquisitions
In 2006, NLMK acquired a 100% interest in VIZ-Stal, a rolling facility in Yekaterinburg specializing in electrical steel production, with the agreement signed in June and completion in mid-August, enabling consolidation from that period to enhance NLMK's specialty steel capabilities.[66][67] Later that year, on March 29, NLMK announced and subsequently completed the purchase of an 82% stake in Altai-Koks, a coke producer in Russia's Altai region, to secure coking coal supplies critical for blast furnace operations.[68] In November 2007, NLMK agreed to acquire a 51% controlling stake in Maxi Group, a Russian steel producer with facilities including rolling mills and metalware plants, from its owners, strengthening vertical integration in domestic long products and downstream processing.[69] This included subsequent increases in ownership, such as a 25% additional stake in NSMMZ, a Maxi subsidiary focused on metal structures, from Metallurgical Holding.[70] On May 14, 2010, NLMK purchased a 100% stake in CJSC Kaluga Electric Steelmaking Plant (KNPEMZ) in Russia's Kaluga region from LLC Metallurgical Holding, a Maxi-Group entity, for an undisclosed sum, later commissioning it as NLMK Kaluga with a 1.5 million tonne annual capacity for efficient electric arc furnace production of long products.[71][72] In October 2010, NLMK further expanded scrap sourcing by acquiring LLC VMI Recycling Group, a domestic scrap processing firm, for USD 28.4 million from its shareholders.[73] These acquisitions primarily targeted upstream raw materials, specialty products, and efficient downstream capacity within Russia, reducing reliance on external suppliers and aligning with NLMK's strategy for integrated domestic operations amid post-Soviet industry consolidation.[8]International Ventures
NLMK initiated its international expansion in the mid-2000s to diversify production and access global markets, focusing on downstream processing and high-value-added steel products. In April 2006, NLMK International BV, a Dutch subsidiary, completed the acquisition of 100% stakes in Novexco Limited (Cyprus) and Novex Trading SA (Switzerland), two steel trading firms that bolstered the group's export and logistics network across Europe and beyond.[74] A pivotal move came in December 2006 with the formation of a joint venture with the Duferco Group, in which NLMK acquired a 50% stake in European rolling mills located in Belgium, France, and Italy, enabling localized production of long steel products for regional customers.[75] By April 2011, NLMK secured full ownership of these rolling assets through a restructuring that involved transferring non-core holdings to Duferco in exchange for canceling approximately €230 million in shareholder loans, consolidating control over facilities producing beams, sections, and merchant bars.[75] In the United States, NLMK targeted flat-rolled steel capacity with the 2008 acquisition of Beta Steel, a producer of hot-rolled coils, followed by the purchase of John Maneely Company from The Carlyle Group for $3.53 billion in August 2008, adding steel pipe and tube manufacturing capabilities in Pennsylvania.[76] These assets evolved into NLMK USA, encompassing facilities at NLMK Indiana (hot-rolled and cold-rolled steel), NLMK Pennsylvania, and Sharon Coating for galvanizing operations, serving North American automotive and construction sectors with an emphasis on customized flat products.[2] NLMK Europe's operations, spanning four countries including Belgium (La Louvière for plates) and Denmark, focus on high-value-added items such as quenched and tempered plates for energy and machine-building applications, with production geared toward European standards and sustainability requirements.[77] Combined, NLMK's international divisions—NLMK Europe and NLMK USA—maintain roughly 6 million tonnes per annum of flat steel processing capacity, representing a strategic shift from raw slab exports to finished goods integration.[53]Financial Performance
Revenue and Profit Trends
NLMK Group's revenue grew significantly from 683.7 billion Russian rubles in 2020 to a peak of 1,029.4 billion rubles in 2021, driven by elevated global steel prices and strong demand.[78] This was followed by a decline to 900.8 billion rubles in 2022, attributable to Western sanctions imposed after Russia's invasion of Ukraine, which restricted exports to Europe and the United States, alongside volatile commodity prices.[78] [79] Revenue partially recovered to 933.4 billion rubles in 2023 and further to 979.6 billion rubles in 2024, reflecting redirection of shipments to Asian markets and sustained domestic sales in Russia.[80] [81] Net profit mirrored revenue trends, benefiting from cost efficiencies and operational adjustments amid sanctions. In 2023, net income attributable to shareholders rose 26% year-over-year to 209 billion rubles, despite ongoing export challenges.[80] Earlier, 2021 saw robust profitability from high-margin sales, estimated at around 370 billion rubles based on USD equivalents and exchange rates, while 2022 profits fell to approximately 166 billion rubles due to sanction-related disruptions and higher logistics costs.[82]| Year | Revenue (billion RUB) | Net Profit (billion RUB, approx.) |
|---|---|---|
| 2020 | 683.7 | N/A |
| 2021 | 1,029.4 | ~370 |
| 2022 | 900.8 | ~166 |
| 2023 | 933.4 | 209 |
| 2024 | 979.6 | N/A |
Key Financial Metrics and Efficiency
NLMK Group's return on equity (ROE) stood at 10.31% on a trailing twelve-month (TTM) basis as of late 2024, reflecting the company's ability to generate profits from shareholders' equity amid volatile steel markets and geopolitical pressures.[84] Return on assets (ROA) was 7.49% over the same period, indicating moderate efficiency in utilizing total assets to produce earnings.[85] These metrics benefited from the company's vertically integrated operations, which minimized external dependencies, though they remained below pre-2022 peaks due to reduced export revenues from Western sanctions.[86] Profitability margins included a net profit margin of 9.44% TTM, supported by cost controls in raw materials and energy despite ruble fluctuations.[85] EBITDA reached 256.89 billion RUB for the period, implying an EBITDA margin of approximately 28.5% on revenues of around 900 billion RUB, driven by domestic sales focus and operational optimizations.[84] The low debt-to-equity ratio of 7.71% underscored conservative leverage, enabling resilience against interest rate hikes and funding restrictions, with net debt maintained at levels allowing strong interest coverage.[84] Efficiency ratios highlighted steady asset utilization, with total asset turnover at 0.84x TTM, meaning the company generated 0.84 RUB in revenue per RUB of assets.[86] Inventory turnover was 3.58x, reflecting effective management of steel stockpiles amid supply chain adaptations to sanctions-induced import substitutions.[86] Receivables turnover stood at around 4.97x, indicating prompt collection from primarily domestic and non-Western customers.[87] Liquidity remained robust, with a current ratio of 3.62, providing buffer against short-term obligations.[87]| Metric | TTM Value (as of late 2024) |
|---|---|
| ROE | 10.31% |
| ROA | 7.49% |
| Net Profit Margin | 9.44% |
| Debt-to-Equity | 7.71% |
| Asset Turnover | 0.84x |
| Inventory Turnover | 3.58x |
| Current Ratio | 3.62 |