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Steel Dynamics to Buy Joist-Making Assets from Commercial Metals

Steel Dynamics, Inc. (SDI) has agreed to acquire from affiliates of Commercial Metals Co. (CMC) certain facilities and assets of CMC's former steel-joist manufacturing operations. These assets will become a part of SDI's wholly owned subsidiary, New Millennium Building Systems. The transaction is expected to close within the next 30 days.
 
In February 2010, CMC announced its exit from the joist business and began the process of closing down all its operations that had produced and marketed these products.
 
The purchase will include three joist-manufacturing plants that New Millennium intends to reopen and begin operating in the coming months. These plants are located at Hope, Ark.; Fallon, Nev.; and Juarez, Mexico. They will facilitate and accelerate New Millennium's expansion to serve construction markets in the Southwest and the West.
 
The agreement also includes the purchase of complementary assets, primarily production and material handling equipment from the other plants that were shut down by CMC. In total, Steel Dynamics is paying $17 million for the purchase of the CMC joist-making facilities and assets.
 
"With our purchase of these assets, New Millennium will become the nation's second largest provider of steel joists and decking," said Keith Busse, Chairman and CEO of Steel Dynamics.
 
"Although the nonresidential construction markets that New Millennium serves remain weak this year, we believe the long-term prospects for this business are sound and, as a consumer of steel, the fabrication business is very complementary to our steel business,” Busse continued. “Our purchase of these assets from CMC will give New Millennium an opportunity to immediately begin implementing geographic expansion plans that have been on the back-burner during the economic crisis."
 
Gary Heasley, Executive Vice President of Steel Dynamics and President of New Millennium Building Systems, said, "The addition of these plants to the New Millennium network will allow us to efficiently reach markets we could not previously serve and will allow us to better serve our customers that have a nationwide footprint, such as major retailers, structural-steel fabricators, and design-build firms whose projects span the continent. Previously, our more limited regional coverage has made serving these accounts more challenging.
 
"With this transaction, we are buying hard assets and some of the intellectual property of the former business," Heasley added. "We are not acquiring any ongoing operations. Because of current market conditions, we expect the re-staffing of the reopened plants to be gradual. We look forward to bringing jobs back to our plants' communities as the nonresidential markets recover. Over time, we plan to upgrade the three plants that we're buying to streamline their operations. Some of the equipment we're acquiring from the idled CMC plants, as well as existing equipment from currently idled New Millennium facilities, will be redeployed to allow us to improve manufacturing capabilities and efficiencies in the remaining plants, while minimizing the need for new capital investment."