While global steel players argue about Chinese dumping and oil & gas capex cycles, Scoda Tubes is busy doing something far less dramatic — quietly sweating its machines at near-full utilization.
Q2 didn’t deliver fireworks on revenue, but profits decided to show some spine. Management sounded less like storytellers and more like factory supervisors explaining why the next six quarters matter more than the last six.
Capacity is expanding, welded tubes are lining up for their big debut, Europe is getting a local trading arm, and China is still not invited to the party.
If this sounds boring, good. Boring in manufacturing usually means cash, scale, and operating leverage are warming up backstage.
Stick around — the real action begins when utilization kicks in.