Lourenco Goncalves
Analyst · Goldman Sachs
Thank you, Celso, and good morning, everyone. During the past quarter, order release rates from our automotive clients were the strongest and the most consistent we have seen since becoming a steel company 3 years ago. Also, service center buying behavior in Q1 came back to more normal levels. These 2 factors, combined with reduced imports of flat-rolled steel forced the buyers to increase their order levels with domestic producers. In addition, the excess scrap and metallics inventories that were built by other steel companies in response to the war in Ukraine were ultimately drawn down, forcing scrap prices back to what we believe are higher but is still acceptable and sustainable levels. We used all of these factors in our favor to implement several spot price increases, which have ultimately driven index pricing higher. Our conviction that this country's prime scrap and metallic shortage will continue to tighten over the coming years is at the core of our strategy. Last year's strange scrap movement in the second half of the year has been proving to be an outlier and the prime scrap market is back in a shortage position. There is less than 20 million tons of annual prime scrap and metallic supply in North America currently. And unless you are a producer of only rebar and nothing else, you need prime scrap and metallics. Our in-house production of 2 million tons of HBI per year at Cleveland-Cliffs is an integral part of our own internal supply chain. We use our HBI primarily to feed our own blast furnaces to reduce coke rate and CO2 emissions, and that results in very limited availability to sell HBI to third parties. We anticipate that with the new electric arc furnace coming online, demand for prime scrap and metallics will be at 30 million tons by 2026. This will require significant levels of imported metallics. The largest sources of these imports up until last year were Russia and Ukraine. More than a year after the invasion of Ukraine, that import avenue remains heavily disrupted. Said another way, unless one is rerouting Russian supply through other countries for transshipment, which is, by the way, illegal, they cannot get all the feedstock they need. Because prime scrap is a byproduct of manufacturing, and we, as a country, have been moving manufacturing offshore. Prime scrap supply has been shrinking in this country for over 50 years, bringing more manufacturing back to the United States over the coming years should help alleviate the situation, but that will take time. The alternative to address the scrap shortage would be additional metallics production, but that requires iron ore. As the largest producer of iron ore pellets in North America, this plays right into our favor. For the majority of the last 3 decades, flat-rolled steel production with EAFs took advantage of cheap and plentiful prime scrap. This historical situation is changing fast. Greenfield flat-rolled production from EAFs also plays into our favor in the automotive market. As some EAF start-ups have been demonstrating for a few quarters now, the metallurgical challenge in automotive is too big for them. This fact, along with our customer service and our R&D capabilities are the 3 main reasons why Cleveland-Cliffs remains the supplier of choice to the automotive industry in the United States. That also helped us achieve annual price increases from all and each one of our major automotive clients. Some of this price increase will only show in our Q2 results as they are effective April 1. Our shipments in the first quarter to our direct automotive customers were the highest they have ever been in our 3 years as a steel company and at higher prices. This was the biggest reason for our strong quarterly shipment number of 4.1 million tons and why we are running all of our steelmaking shops at full capacity. Our higher levels of steel production have led to the partial restart of some operations at our iron ore mining and pelletizing swing facility at North Shore earlier this month. As you may recall, North Shore has been totally idle since the spring of last year. We will continue to treat that facility as our swing operation. And at this time, we still do not expect to operate North Shore in full any time this year. The remarkable improvement in automotive demand is a combination of the easing of their supply chain issues and the American consumers' growing appetite for new cars. Out of sales seasonally adjusted annual rates usually called SAAR in the United States averaged about 15.2 million units during Q1, a massive uptick after averaging 13.7 million units during all of 2022. As such, our forecast for North America automotive builds in 2023 of 15.5 million light vehicles is the best in 4 years, with one car equaling roughly 1 ton of steel and with Cleveland-Cliffs representing nearly half of the flat-rolled market for automotive steel, you can do the math on the additional volume this will bring. The auto sales and production increases we have been seeing are further confirmation of our view on how steel demand in the U.S. will shift in our favor. For the last couple of years, nonresidential construction has been the outperformer in the steel market with automotive lagging significantly behind. As you know, Cleveland-Cliffs is not a big player in non-res. That said, given the massive backlog that has been created as a result of supply chain issues over the past few years and with the Federal Reserve reaching the end of their interest rate hike in Marathon going forward, all signs point to automotive being the outperformer. Cleveland-Cliffs is ready to accommodate any improvements in demand from the automotive sector, whether that be from internal combustion engine vehicles or EVs. And our clients know that very well. At Cleveland-Cliffs, we are agnostic to whatever ways that demand materializes over the coming years as we are the clear-cut leader in supplying steel for both types, electric or conventional vehicles. That said, earlier this month, President Biden's administration put forth the latest push to drive large-scale EV adoption in the United States. The proposal includes a projection that 2 out of every 3 new cars sold in the United States in 2023 -- 2032, I'm sorry, in 2032 will be electric compared to about only 7% today in 2023. This is a structural reset that we have dedicated our research and innovation center efforts toward since we acquired AK Steel in March of 2020. Put simply, due to our size as a supplier of automotive steel in the United States and also due to our unique technical capabilities, these goals of the U.S. government cannot be reached without Cleveland-Cliffs. We are an integral part of this transition from ICE vehicles to EVs in the United States, regardless of whether it happens at a fast or at a slow pace. This includes our supply of exposed body parts, structural cages, battery support and oriented electrical steels for Motors. Regarding oriented electrical steels, we call NOES, and responding to growing demand from our existing customer customers, we have already deployed $30 million as CapEx into our Zanesville, Ohio facility to increase our production capacity of NOES by another 70,000 tons annualized. We should start operating this new capacity in the third quarter of this year. Also as a reminder, Cleveland-Cliffs is the sole producer and a well-established supplier of both GOES, grain-oriented electrical steels and NOES in our country. That's our technology originally from ARMCO, the A in AK Steel. The market for these products is huge. But any new entrants to this market will have to first learn the products and then perfect the manufacturing process. Then the producer will have to qualify these products with each one of the clients. That's not our case. We are already in the house with all of these clients. A couple more things before we open for Q&A. Earlier this month, we published our 2022 sustainability report. We are pleased to report that as of 2022, our absolute Scope 1 and 2 greenhouse gas emissions were already below our aggressive target for 2030 of 25% reduction, in compared to our emissions in 2017. That was when we made our decision to build our state-of-the-art Direct Reduction Plant. This early accomplishment of our target was made possible primarily by the use of massive amounts of HBI in our blast furnaces, helped by hot metal stretching through the increased utilization of scrap in our BOFs and natural gas injection in our blast furnaces. We also reported that our Scope 1 and 2 emissions intensity from our blast furnace and BOF operations in 2022 was down to 1.60 metric tons of CO2 per metric ton of steel. This number puts Cleveland-Cliffs in the third percentile of integrated steelmaking emissions worldwide and compares extremely favorably to the global average of tons of CO2 per metric ton of steel. Because of the metrological requirements and quality needs of our automotive customer base, we remain committed to the blast furnace [indiscernible] is still making route, and we will continue to work to make it less carbon intensive. In order to further reduce these already low-emission numbers, we are pursuing potentially high IRR projects in emerging technologies, particularly carbon capture and storage and iron reduction by hydrogen. As things progress on these fronts, we will continue to keep you informed. With that, I'll turn it over to Daryl for questions.