Good morning, ladies and gentlemen, and welcome to our First Quarter 2022 Earnings Conference Call for Russel Metals. Today's call will be hosted by Martin Juravsky, Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer, and John Reid, President and Chief Executive Officer of Russel Metals, Inc. Today's presentation will be followed by a question-and-answer period. At any time, if you have a question, please press star one on your telephone keypad. I will now turn the conference over to Martin Juravsky and John Reid. Please go ahead, gentlemen.
Great. Thanks, Melody. Good morning, everyone. I plan on providing an overview of the Q1 2022 results, and if you wanna follow along, I'll be using the PowerPoint slides that are on our website. Just go to the investor relations section. If you go to page three, you can read our cautionary statement on forward-looking information. Before I go into the detail on the quarter, let me put a little bit of a context around it for a second. We were really pleased with a very strong start to the year. We've seen very good market conditions in terms of customer demand, our price realizations and our margins. We generated record quarterly revenues with strong contributions by each of our three business segments, and the outlook remains favorable.
Let me go to page five now and give a little bit of a context around the market conditions. As you can see from the chart that is on the top left, steel prices are strong and remain above historical frames of reference. Even though sheet moderated down in late 2021 and early 2022, as we talked about during our last conference call, it has since rebounded. Overall, prices have remained at an attractive level for an extended period of time. If you look at the charts on the right side of the page for service center inventories with Canada on the top and the U.S., being at the bottom, and you look at both in terms of absolute level of inventory and months of inventory and supply chain, both came down over the last couple months.
This is likely due to some cautious buying activity in the industry as steel prices were settling out. From a Russel perspective, we are always prudent on inventory management, and our service center tonnage came down by about 10% from year-end. The key thing from our standpoint, though, really focuses on demand as it remains strong across our regions and across most of our end markets. As we look at our geographies coast to coast in Canada, as well as Midwest in the U.S. and U.S. South, we cover a cross-section of industries, non-residential construction, general manufacturing, infrastructure, and we are seeing very good demand across most of our business units.
From a Russel standpoint, the other key thing that's an important takeaway for us is when we look at the portfolio changes that have taken place over the last couple years, they've really positioned us well to generate higher average returns over the cycle. Regardless of whether the cycle is good, bad or otherwise, we think we've positioned ourselves much better on a going forward basis than historically. If we go to historical results on page six. If we start at the top of the page, on the income statement for a second. As I said earlier, record quarterly revenues, about CAD 1.3 billion in Q1. It's nice to have the top line, but most importantly, we generated on the bottom line.
Even though margins in percentage terms moderated, the revenues translated into total margin dollars, EBITDA, EBIT and earnings that were similar in Q1 to what they were in Q4. There were a few notable items in Q1 within the results. The income from a full quarter of Boyd was a very nice contribution. As a reminder, we completed that acquisition at the end of November, so we had one-month contribution in Q4, but a full three months of contribution in Q1. We are very pleased with how the acquisition has performed, both financially and operationally. To put a little bit of context around it added about 10% to our service center business for the quarter from both a top line and a bottom line perspective.
We picked up CAD 6 million from the TriMark joint venture in quarter one, which was up from CAD 3 million in Q4. This arrangement has worked out extremely well for us. When we closed that transaction in July of 2021, it allowed us to repatriate over CAD 100 million worth of capital and keep some skin in the game. As circumstances evolved, the businesses, as they come together, have performed well, and the picking up of our earnings from that joint venture has worked out well in that we have the earnings pickup, but we've insulated ourselves from the balance sheet issues associated with that part of the business.
Stock-based comps had a mark-to-market expense of nil for Q1 as our stock price was flat from the end of December through the end of March, give or take, versus a CAD 3 million expense in Q4. If we move down the page to cash flow. We used about CAD 50 million for net increase in working capital, and this was a function of a build in AR because of the higher revenues and business activity, which was offset by a pull down of inventories. As we look across our three business segments, service centers was up, steel distributors was down, and energy was mostly flat. From a cash flow perspective, in the quarter, there was also around CAD 83 million tax payment in Q1, both related to 2021 balances due as well as 2022 installments.
We also completed a sale of Apex Western Fiberglass Inc. for CAD 10 million, which was part of our Canadian energy business. It was sold for book value, so there's no gain or loss associated with the transaction, and it's a relatively small transaction for us. That business segment, its return profiles were not acceptable to us. It didn't meet our return thresholds. As we've illustrated in the past, we are very focused on our return on capital over the cycle and the divestiture illustrates our discipline in keeping with our financial metrics and our targets. CapEx at CAD 8 million was a little bit higher than at this time last year, and it should pick up in the latter part of 2022 and into 2023 as we continue to advance our value-added equipment projects.
From a balance sheet perspective, at the bottom of the page, our net debt declined from CAD 162 million at the end of the year to CAD 149 million at the end of March, as we continue to generate good cash flow. Our liquidity of over CAD 450 million and our credit metrics are extremely strong and it gives us tremendous flexibility as we have within our capital structure to continue to look at opportunistic M&A situations. Lastly, we've declared a quarterly dividend of CAD 0.38 per share. If we go to page seven, we have our segmented P&L information. Starting with the service centers, they did very well. Again, revenues were up to CAD 929 million in Q1 as demand remained strong.
Tons were up 19% or 13% on a same store basis versus Q4. As I said earlier, the Boyd acquisition was a nice contribution to us, both in terms of top line tonnage as well as bottom line perspective. The improvement in tonnage was interesting in that it was in spite of losing some shipping days early in the quarter in January and February to weather-related issues and Omicron-related constraints. Average price realizations for the quarter were comparable in Q1 versus Q4. They did, however, start to pick up towards the latter end of the quarter. When we look at March, price realizations, they picked up, and that trend has continued into April. As we talked about on our last conference call, we expected margins to moderate down, and they did.
They moderated down to 22%, which is still above historical levels in percentage terms, and well above historical terms in terms of dollars per ton. The bottom line results for service centers, another strong earnings quarter with EBIT of CAD 95 million. In energy, we are continuing to see positive market sentiments. Our energy revenues were up 9% versus Q4. Margins were down slightly from Q4, but at 25% remain very strong. As we discussed in the past, this margin is well above historical levels as the divested OCTG line pipe businesses were a drag on results. We expect to continue to generate margins north of 20% from this segment versus the mid-teens in the past. Distributors had another very good quarter with revenues up 17% versus Q4.
The margins did moderate down, but the net result was earnings of CAD 24 million, which was similar to that of Q4. We go to page eight. This is a new chart, and we wanted to use it to illustrate a little bit more detail around how we think about inventory management and our discipline associated with it. The way this chart is set up, and I apologize for all the color coding on this, quarter-over-quarter, with each of the bars representing our segments, energy in red, service centers being in green, steel distributors being in yellow, and then the black line that cuts across the page is represented the average for Russel as a whole across all of our business units. A few observations.
If you look at the energy segment that is in the red part, the bars to the left, the historical frames of reference from 2019 and early 2020, 2021, turns were in the 2-2.5 turns per year range, as it was held back by the OCTG line pipe businesses that tied up a lot of inventory, and that inventory was also very lumpy and quite seasonal. Since the divestitures and liquidations in mid-2021, you can see how we are now turning that energy inventory around 4.5 turns per year. That level is very similar to the turns that our service center business, as you can see in green, has historically been able to realize.
For steel distributors in yellow, the inventory turns picked up substantially in Q1 as a sizable amount of in-transit inventory moved through our system to our customers. When we look at the black line on this page, which again is total company inventory turns, we've improved the company-wide average turns from what was plus or minus 3 turns in 2019 to over 4.5 turns in this past quarter, which is frankly a record for us that we haven't seen for the last 20-plus years. Again, I think a lot of this is really driven off of the changes that we've made in terms of our portfolio.
Keeping a high level of turns is a key focus to our strategy of avoiding secular inventory positions, and it really gets to maximizing returns on capital through the best inventory management in the industry. If we go to page nine you can see the impact of that inventory turns on our absolute inventory dollars. Total inventory of CAD 894 million on March 31st came down by about CAD 92 million from year-end. This was driven by energy remaining in check, a reduction of tonnage at service centers, which I mentioned earlier, and the translation of backlog of business at our distributors as well, and you can see that inventory came down over the quarter as well.
As we step back and look at the Q1 profitability with this level of inventory versus a lower level of profitability a few years ago and a similar level of inventories of over CAD 1 billion, it is translating to much improved capital utilization and a much better return on assets deployed. You can see that on page 10 in terms of the capital utilization and returns. Our capital deployed is up to around CAD 1.4 billion-CAD 1.5 billion, which is similar to 2018, 2019, early 2020. However, that capital is being used much more effectively today.
As previously discussed, the improvement in inventory turns, the divestiture of the OCTG line pipe businesses, the reinvestment in acquisitions and the investments in value-added processing equipment has resulted in very strong returns, which, as you can see from this chart, has averaged nearly 50% over the past 12 months. This level is attractive by historical comparisons as well versus our competitors. I think this also provides a frame of reference for what John and I have been saying over the past 18 months. We think that our portfolio change will continue to evolve and our margins and returns through this cycle should be higher and with lower volatility going forward than they have been in the past.
In closing, on behalf of John and the other members of the management team, I'd again like to just express our much greater appreciation and gratitude to everyone within the Russel family for all their hard work and tremendous efforts in generating these results. We had a really nice start to 2022, and we look forward to continuing our progress on our key initiatives. Operator, that concludes my introductory remarks. If you'd now like to open the line to questions, we're available.
Thank you, sir. Ladies and gentlemen, if you would like to ask a question, please slowly press star followed by one on your touchtone phone. You will then hear a three-tone prompt acknowledging your request. If you would like to withdraw yourself from the question queue, please press star followed by two. Lastly, if you're using a speakerphone, you will need to lift the handset before pressing any keys. Please go ahead and press star one now if you have any questions. Your first question will be from Frederic Bastien at Raymond James. Please go ahead.
Good morning, everyone, and great quarter.
Thanks, Fred.
Question on your service center. The volumes have been modestly exceeding those of the industry in recent years, but this outperformance appears to have picked up recently. Is this observation right? If so, can you tell us what's been driving that? Thank you.
No, Fred, that's exactly right. Really, it's a reflection of the value-added processing initiatives continuing to grow that are out there for us in our individual markets. We're seeing that just gradually continue to pick up share as we move through kind of through this five or six-year journey on the value add.
You mentioned markets. The strength you're seeing in the markets right now, really, you know, does it really help the product segments that you're focusing on? Seems like energy obviously has picked up, but the plate business has been quite solid. Prices have held up across the industry. Is that really benefiting your business right now?
End-use demand is good across most of our end markets, if not all, especially that you just mentioned there. Plate is very strong right now. Plate is a challenging product to get. That's growing that market share. We've seen probably more growth in other products other than plate. You know, we're getting all of our allocation plus a little bit more than we've gotten in the past. Again, plate is not as readily available to the marketplace right now as the other products are.
Fred, just to supplement the first part of your question as well about market share. That was a focus on the service center side of it. The other interesting thing for us is within our energy businesses, our field store businesses, they've continued to gain market share over the past period of time as well. When we benchmark them against the publicly traded peers that are out there that focus on that market, they actually have done very well. Sometimes it gets lost in the context of the macro energy market environment, but that business has done well and has gained market share over the past period of time as well.
Okay, great. I know that the board discusses the dividend every quarter of your meeting. Were the discussions this go around a little longer, a little more intense, or just curious where you're standing right now. Obviously, your balance sheet is quite strong. You have lots of optionality with respect to potentially doing an M&A and all that stuff. Just wondering if you could give us your thoughts on where you stand with respect to allocation right now.
Fred, that's. It's a great observation. The way you characterize it is in some ways the way the discussions have evolved, which is our focus is really around deploying capital opportunistically. More of the discussion is around both internal investment opportunities as well as being opportunistic on the M&A landscape. We like having our dry powder to focus on those attractive opportunities that are out there, both internally as well as externally. That's where a disproportionate amount of the discussion has taken place, not just in this last board meeting, over the last couple of board meetings as well.
Okay, thanks. That's all I have. I'll sign it back.
Thanks, Fred.
Thank you. Next question will be from Michael Doumet at Scotiabank. Please go ahead, sir.
Hey, good morning, guys.
Hey, Mike.
Hey, very nice quarter. You talked about how the market condition changed intra-quarter. You know, in addition to price, can you speak to how maybe the supply shock impacted demand and purchasing patterns across the space? Also with metal prices fading somewhat, I would say, you know, following the late quarter surge, maybe at least in the futures curve. Do you have a sense for how Q2 service center margins could shake out versus Q1?
Thanks, Michael. Yeah, you talked about the supply shock and then going through again, as you saw January, February, you're looking at pricing was declining. If you look at the service center trends, I think some of the graphs that Marty had there for both the industry in Canada and the U.S., you saw people were pulling back on inventory, anticipating lower prices in both the service center industry and probably in the customer base as well. When we had the Russian invasion of Ukraine take place, obviously limited pig iron, which is a large supply on the world market, comes from the Ukraine. It drove the pig iron price up, drove scrap pricing up, which immediately went into steel pricing.
Late February, early March, we saw the prices jump, and the industry's caught on the very low side of inventory from the service center side, which means the supply chain is getting very thin, so it allows pricing to move quickly through that. Seems like we're coming to a peak now. If you're reading any of the industry rags out there right now, anticipation that scrap will come off now maybe up to $100 a ton in May. However, I think with the recent pullback on pricing, you know, paramount, that's already baked into the price. So I don't think we'll see any supply shocks that are out there for the second quarter. We'll anticipate our service center margins to look probably a little better, but similar to Q1.
Thanks, John. That's helpful. On the steel distributors, inventories there are still somewhat high. Do you expect to deliver that largely in Q2? I guess given the recent supply shock, does that, in your view, extend the runway for more imports and kind of like a larger profit opportunity for the remainder of 2022 for that segment?
The other turns were again they were up at a very high turn rate. I would anticipate that normalizing somewhat, maybe pulling back to a more historical level. Again, lots of opportunity as we're coming through right now. We've had things clearing the dock went immediately into sales, and so we're in a very good position on inventory. Again, we're not seeing any dramatic shifts other than we're coming out of the St. Lawrence Seaway being frozen, so we're getting transportation back through again. That's a natural thing that happens every year. Again, I wouldn't say we're seeing any big disruptions to the import market that would cause us unusual opportunity from there.
Understood. Thanks.
Michael, the one frame of reference too on the inventories when you look at steel distributors as examples, about CAD 150 million in dollars at the end of March, which was lower than it was at the end of December, but higher than it had been historically. We're talking about inventory that's at a price point that is very different than it had been a few years ago. In tonnage terms, it's not all that different at the end of the quarter for what it might have been, you know, 2020, 2019 type timeframe.
Got it. Many turns here is more important than dollar amount. Understood. Then maybe just one last one. You know, on capital allocation, maybe a little different from Fred's question, but, you know, it looks like the setup for this year is for another, you know, strong free cash flow year. Presumably, you'll get another one next year. With the shares and the book value of the shares going up quite a bit, you know, what's your view on kind of supplementing M&A with a buyback at this point?
You know, it's a fair question, and all options are on the table for us, and it's really about being opportunistic. I mentioned, as you referenced Fred's question before, that was around internal investments as well as M&A. Share buybacks are something that we'll contemplate as well as we look forward over the course of time. You know, whether it is internal investments, whether it is M&A, whether it's deploying capital and returning to shareholders in different forms, those options are all on the table, and we'll consider them. To your point, I think it's spot on, which is we're looking at a generally favorable outlook this year. Frankly, who knows what next year gonna look like because there's always gonna be volatility. This has been an extended play already, and the circumstances related to the market are continuing.
We're in a very good free cash flow position, and we look forward to continuing to have that flexibility to deploy, whether internally, externally, return to shareholders, deployed in a variety of forms. Those options are all on the table.
Great. Again, nice quarter. Thanks for the answers, guys.
Thanks, Michael.
Thank you. Next question will be from Michael Tupholme at TD Securities. Please go ahead.
Thank you. Good morning.
Hey, Mike.
Good morning.
First question is regarding service centers and the demand outlook. It sounds like you're quite constructive on demand, and as you pointed out, you did see a nice improvement in the same-store ton shipped on a quarter-over-quarter basis. I guess I'm wondering if you can just talk about how you see same-store ton shipped demand evolving in service centers as the year progresses. Although you're up on a sequential basis, if we look year-over-year, down a little bit, at what point do you think we could see the year-over-year ton shipped turn positive?
I think if you look quarter-over-quarter, I should say next quarter, I think we'll be positive again. I think demand, again, if you look at the ABI index, is very strong. It's turned up, so we're seeing construction be out 8-9 months for the fabricators. If you look at Purchasing Managers' Index, again, very positive again. We're seeing good pull-through from our OEM customers and then other equipment manufacturers that are out there. Really, we're hitting on all cylinders there. Energy side's positive for both the service centers and for the energy side. I think you'll see a continued increase up to, say, positive from 0% to 2%-3% in the quarter. Again, we're at a very good demand level right now, so we're pretty happy with it.
Mike, I know this wasn't the nature of your question because you're probably focused more on same-store basis as well. If we look sequentially, including the pro forma impact of the acquisitions, volume is up. As we're looking both at the market dynamics being strong as well as potential things that we are doing to add to our business, we are seeing volume pick up when you put that all together on a year-over-year basis.
Okay, perfect. I think, John, just to clarify, you were talking quarter-over-quarter, so the zero to up maybe 2%-3%, this is Q2 relative to Q1, right?
That's correct.
Yeah. Okay, perfect. Can you talk about the extent to which the market as a whole and/or Russel has started to see any demand pull from the infrastructure spending package in the US? I know it's still fairly early, and other companies are talking about that sort of ramping up as the year progresses and really being more of an impact next year. But what have you seen there?
Very limited at this point. More of the stage that we're looking probably for Q4, if we see any of it this year, I would think.
Got it. Next question's on margins. You addressed sort of the near-term outlook for service center margins as we look ahead to Q2 and where they may land versus Q1. I guess a similar question on the energy products side. We did see the margins there come down a little bit, but still very strong, 24.5% gross margin in energy products. How should we think about those margins evolving, I guess, both over the near term and then with the changes in the business, what do you see as sort of a normalized margin for energy products?
Yeah. Well, it's a great question, Mike, because in some ways it gets to our path forward on the energy business looks an awful lot different than our historical frame of reference. If you look to the service center margin profile historically, which was, you know, in a reasonably narrow band, not a lot of volatility in that, you know, 20%-25% zone. That's actually a frame of reference for what our field store businesses has historically generated. It just got diluted down by the OCTG line pipe. As we've seen, you know, that, you know, mid-20, 20% type gross margins for the last couple quarters, we should see energy segment now that it's really just the field stores looking very similar to service centers on a go-forward basis. Not necessarily precise, but within the same within spitting distance of one another.
Certainly north of 20% margins on a go-forward basis.
Okay, thanks. Sorry, just as far as the Q2, like you mentioned in service centers, you think you could actually see maybe a little bit of an improvement quarter-over-quarter in service centers gross margins. Would the same thing apply to energy products?
I think energy products probably would be flat to maybe slightly up, but I would feel more comfortable saying flat on those margins for second quarter.
Okay. All right. I'll get back in the queue. Thank you.
Great.
Thanks, Mike.
Thank you. Next question will be from Troy Sun at Laurentian Bank Securities. Please go ahead.
Good morning, gentlemen.
Troy.
Morning.
Maybe just a quick follow-up on you know, going back to the comment on the value-added products that you guys are investing in. I'm just trying to get a sense of how we should be thinking about the pricing sensitivity for those items from a client's perspective. Just trying to gauge, are these typically the items that clients have to order, like, regardless of the pricing environment, or this is something that you know, they do have some leeway in terms of deferring the purchases? Just any color there, please.
Well, they'll have leeway, obviously, based on their volumes, and so it's not a take or pay situation. When you're looking at it from the value add and the pricing perspective, keep in mind there's a labor component and there's a steel component, and on a percentage of the total part. When we're looking at parts that are made, and that can swing wildly. That labor component is pretty fixed. The steel price will move up and down. That does normalize the margin some, that's out there. As far as them having to take things for demand, it's just whatever order they've got in the queue at the time or in purchase order with us, they're responsible to take.
if they're out 2, 3, 4 months on those orders, they're responsible for that, but it's not a long-term contractual basis with them.
One thing that's also interesting, somewhat related, is that one of the fascinating dynamics of the linkage or lack of linkage between pricing and demand over the last year and a half. We've seen an elevated pricing environment for steel over an extended period here, and steel prices went from CAD 500 to CAD 2,000, CAD 1,000 back to CAD 1,500. It really hasn't changed the model on demand during that period of time. I think a lot of people are really having a revisiting of the elasticity or inelasticity of demand. Pricing hasn't really been a big factor.
I see. No, that's super helpful. Yeah, no, I definitely have seen some very similar commentary from some of the peers that recorded early on in this cycle. Maybe just a quick follow-up on, again, the value-added products here. Any difference in terms of the payment terms, like any meaningful impact on, you know, just the collection schedule in general versus, I guess, more commoditized products?
No, very, very much the same.
Okay. Okay, great. No, that's super helpful. I guess maybe just the last one for me, more of a bigger picture question. Obviously, you know, the pricing remains very elevated at the moment. Supply chain is still very tight. Any major capacity addition in North America that you are anticipating over, let's call it the next 6-12 months?
There is more capacity coming on in both plate and flat-rolled, throughout the year. Again, that'll be welcome capacity because, again, we are running at very tight supply right now. Imports are very limited, so I think it's something that can be absorbed in the North American market on what comes out over the next year.
I see. That's super helpful. That's it for me. Thank you.
Great. Thanks, Troy.
Next question will be from Alexander Jackson at RBC Capital Markets. Please go ahead.
Yeah. Morning. Thanks, guys. Most of my questions have been asked, but I'm just curious, are you still expecting to spend about CAD 50 million CapEx this year? Could you remind us what the split is or between more sustaining versus more value-add equipment additions? Thank you.
Yeah. Hey, Alex. Yeah, that's still our target for this year. As I mentioned earlier, it's gonna be year-weighted. There's always a possibility that something we planned for Q4 slip into Q1 next year. It goes to our broader theme, which is we are increasing the components of value-add, and that's not just a 2022 or frankly, we did a bunch over the last number of years as well. This is a multiyear path for us, so we're gonna see continuing spending on those three-year type payback projects over an extended period of time. For planning purposes, CAD 50 million is still a good frame of reference for 2022.
In terms of the component, there's probably a maintenance element within our CapEx spending that's probably call it CAD 10 million-CAD 15 million, and the discretionary component is on top of that that has the return component attached to it.
Got it. That's helpful. Maybe just one more quick one. Are there any more divestments coming, like the Apex Western Fiberglass business, do you guys expect?
No. That was frankly. It was a little bit unique. It was a little bit opportunistic. But no, we've cleaned stuff up a fair amount, primarily on the OCTG line pipe side of it, as you're well aware. This was a one-off, and it was relatively small by comparison.
Got it. Thanks. That's all for me.
Great. Thanks, Alex.
Thank you. Once again, a reminder to please press star one if you do have a question. Next will be Ian Gillies at Stifel. Please go ahead.
Morning, everyone.
Morning.
With respect to the value-added, processing and the upgrade capital, is there any gating factors to or reasons why you wouldn't accelerate that given the strength of the balance sheet and it's helping you capture market share?
It's again. We're moving at a pretty quick pace, but it's a hub and spoke process. You develop the hub, and you take it out to the spokes in our field. We're dealing with different supply chains as well, so as we're educating both our customer base going through the engineering desk instead of the purchasing desk. There's a step process. It's almost the franchise process that we've developed now, if you will. It just takes a time. It's not quite as easy as going and grabbing a copier and plugging it in and starting to make copies. You know, we have to go out and develop the market, develop the customer base slowly, and as we do, we add the additional equipment.
We're pretty much through phase one of initiating all the hubs, and now we're going back through and developing the spokes behind it to determine what machines are appropriate there and to make sure we have the right infrastructure. It's just really a timing of how fast the market can absorb it.
Got it. No, that's helpful. With respect to the field stores and energy products, if we go back to a more normalized year in the energy patch, call it 2019, is the unit pricing for the products you sell out of the stores, is it up in a commensurate amount as the change in steel prices, or are there other things impacting what you might be selling those products for? I'm just trying to get a sense of what the lift may be or could be over that period of time.
You won't see as much price volatility in the field stores because it's a highly engineered product. You're gonna have a lot more of it. Again, it's more highly engineered than a raw component. It will have some swing, but not as much as you will see in steel pricing, so it'll be a much more narrow bandwidth. When we looked at our energy portfolio, when you pulled out OCTG and line pipe, again, you had the pulsating rate with the rig count. This business, again, it's gonna have a more narrow bandwidth of earnings because there is a maintenance component of maintaining the rigs long-term, whether new rigs are being built or not, and they do get the increase in lift when new rigs and drilling rig count is increasing.
As far as the cost of material, again, it's highly engineered, so it's not as volatile as steel.
Okay. That's very helpful. Then, Marty, there's obviously a large tax catch up in the first quarter. As we move through the remainder of the year and given the outlook, do you think there's gonna be larger tax installments on the cash flow statement this year when we compare it to last year? Or how are you thinking about planning for that? Just trying to sort out how it may impact free cash flow.
Well, to be honest, it's directly related to earnings. The payments that were made in Q1 was really a true-up of the 2021 balance that was outstanding, plus the normal course installments that would be due and based upon estimates for 2022. Or the bad news, good news is if earnings are up, taxes are up. As of right now, we've made an estimate of what they might be for run rate, and we'll adjust the year up or down as earnings move around. The lumpy pieces are typically in Q1 because that's the time of year where there's both. It's a bit of a double whammy, catch up for last year if there's any true-up plus the first installments that start kicking in for the current tax year.
Okay. That's useful. I'll turn the call back over. Thanks very much.
Thanks, Ian.
Thank you. Next, we follow up from Michael Tupholme at TD Securities. Please go ahead.
Thank you. Haven't talked much about steel distributors. The revenues in that segment, CAD 199 million, I think that's a record for that segment from what I can tell. How should we think about the revenue progression in that particular segment, and revenue potential moving forward here over the next several quarters?
I think you'll see that'll normalize some, Michael. There are two things going on. One, you've got steel prices are really running at a high level. That's obviously helping even if they're selling the same amount of tonnage. There is an increase there. They also had some pent-up demand just due to issues coming in at the port. Once it came in, it was immediately out the door. They had some backup there that was probably 2-3 months long, and it all came flushed out. We saw some pickup in the quarter on that. There'll be a little bit flushed out in this quarter, but I would say that will come back down in the second quarter.
Okay. I guess along the same lines, the margins in that segment, any help on how we should think about those, moving forward? They seem to be quite elevated still in the first quarter.
I think they were in the 17% range in the first quarter. Probably can maintain in that range, maybe drift a little bit, but I think they're gonna maintain in that range. Because keep in mind, we're usually selling well in advance there. A lot of our stuff, especially in Canada, is already pre-sold for the quarter, so we've got a fixed margin.
Okay. Two more. The share of earnings from the TriMark joint venture, I think Marty mentioned earlier in the call, up CAD 6 million this quarter. That was a nice step up. Is that the kind of level we should be thinking about going forward? Any help on that front would be great.
No. I mean, it was a really, really strong quarter, and a whole bunch of things came together. The business combination between the two predecessor entities is working out well, and the timing of the market has worked out very well. That's a pretty elevated level.
Okay. Lastly, I mean, there was talk over the course of a few of the questions just about capital allocation, and M&A was obviously mentioned, but I'm not sure we got a lot of details. Just wondering if you can comment on the pipeline. How do things look now as far as the opportunity set? And do you see an opportunity to potentially execute some transactions over the balance of the year?
The pipeline's still very active. Seems, you know, some things that we're kicking some tires on. There's some other things we're absolutely passing on. It's, I wouldn't say anything's imminent right now. There is a lot of things that are attractive out there to look at. You know, I would probably be remiss to talk about anything for the end of the year just because I don't want to shadow anything. Again, I would think that we will be taking a serious look at some things over the next 90 days.
Great. Thank you.
Thanks, Mike.
Thank you. At this time, I would like to turn the call back over to our host for closing comments.
Great. Thanks, operator. Well, again, really appreciate everybody for turning in and good questions and look forward to staying in touch. If there are any follow-ups, please feel free to reach out at any time, and look forward to connecting again. Thanks, everyone.
Thank you, sir. Ladies and gentlemen, this does indeed conclude your conference call for today. Once again, thank you for attending. At this time, we do ask that you please disconnect your lines.