Trey Grooms — Analyst, Stephens
Hey, good morning, everyone. Hey, Tom. First, I want to say congratulations, Ronnie, on your new role.
Well deserved.
It has been a pleasure working with you, Tom.
Over the last several years, we.
Wish you the best on your next chapter.
Tom Hill — Chairman and CEO, Vulcan Materials Company
Thanks, pal.
Trey Grooms — Analyst, Stephens
Sure. Ronnie, maybe if you could highlight some of your top priorities that you have for the Vulcan Materials team here as you take the reins and transition into your new position.
Ronnie Pruitt — COO, Vulcan Materials Company
Sure. Thanks, Trey, for the question. First and foremost, I'm going to continue to build on the culture that Tom has grown through his leadership of Vulcan. Our culture is based on safety, which is our foundation. Our people own and drive our results. Our strategic approach will continue to focus on enhancing our core through Vulcan Way of Operating and Vulcan Way of Selling. Strategically, we'll continue to expand our reach through disciplined aggregate-centric acquisitions, as well as greenfield initiatives that are going to continue to complement our aggregate leading positions in our network.
Trey Grooms — Analyst, Stephens
Excellent. Thank you, Ronnie.
Ronnie Pruitt — COO, Vulcan Materials Company
Thanks, Trey.
Tyler Brown — Analyst, Raymond James
Hey, good morning, guys.
Tom Hill — Chairman and CEO, Vulcan Materials Company
Hey, Tyler.
Tyler Brown — Analyst, Raymond James
Hey.
First off, congrats, Ronnie. Congrats, Tom. This quarter's volumes were obviously great, benefited from some pretty calm weather. We have the Wackestone comp, and you guys are guiding kind of towards the low end for the full year. Can you just talk about the trends into Q4?
What.
What's kind of driving towards the low?
End there and then.
I appreciate the look on 2026, but when you say modest improvement, can you put a finer point there? Maybe talk about some of the puts and takes in the three, call it the three big end markets.
Tom Hill — Chairman and CEO, Vulcan Materials Company
Yeah, I think you got to look back a little bit at the third quarter before we go to Q4. Weather definitely cooperated. Third quarter volumes were up, obviously double digit. The big jump in volume was a combination of pent up demand from the first half of the year, easy comps from last year, and then importantly strong and growing public demand and improving non-residential demand. Now, Q4 weather last year was very good, so tough comps in Q4. We predict 3% volume growth for the full year. With the exception of single family construction, we see demand in other sectors getting better. I would tell you that October supported the full year guide of 3%, but Ronnie, why don't you talk a little bit about 2026.
Ronnie Pruitt — COO, Vulcan Materials Company
Yeah, Tom, thanks. You know, as Tom said, I think single family will continue to be challenging until we get some of the affordability issues behind us. Public's quite strong, and as we look into public into 2026, we'll continue to see improved funding, and I think the more mature DOT execution from the states to get that money put in play. On the private non-res side, our starts have been positive in our markets for the previous 6 months, and as we look internally, our bidding activity, our bookings, and our backlog really support demand growth as we go into next year.
Tyler Brown — Analyst, Raymond James
Perfect. Thanks, guys.
Ronnie Pruitt — COO, Vulcan Materials Company
Thank you.
Garik Shmois — Analyst, Loop Capital
Oh, hi.
Thanks.
Congratulations to you both on your new roles moving forward. I wanted to ask, just on the pricing, both the growth in the quarter and your confidence in the outlook in 2026, it ticked down sequentially.
Is there anything specific driving that?
How should we think about pricing a little bit more detail into 2026?
Tom Hill — Chairman and CEO, Vulcan Materials Company
Good morning. I would call pricing as expected. 5%, 150 basis points of mix in there, which we talked about last quarter. Obviously acquisitions have been a drag on prices, but pricing in those markets continues to improve. I'd call it as planned. In the quarter we had 20% more base driven by really good highway work and data centers. While base is lower price, it's also lower cost. We kept our unit margin momentum. I'm very pleased with our ability to take that price to the bottom line and then some. As you saw, costs go down in the quarter. If you look, looking forward, I think growing highway demand and improvements in non-res will support higher prices and unit margins in 2026. Ronnie, why don't you talk a little bit about 2026.
Ronnie Pruitt — COO, Vulcan Materials Company
Yeah, Tom's correct. I mean, improving demand in public and private non-res will definitely support 2026 pricing. We sent out our letters in September for effective January 1st. We're in the middle of having those conversations now. I've been encouraged with those conversations, and that's really around the fixed plants. 40% of our business, you know, on the bid work, our trailing 3-month backlog process is showing acceleration, and most of that work will ship in next year. There is still work to be done. This, coupled with our operating performance, should still provide us with continued superior unit margin growth over historical norms.
Andrew Maser — Analyst, Stifel
Hey, this is Andrew on for Brian.
Thank you for taking my call.
I had a question about the unit costs.
Down 2% in the quarter. How much of that was Vulcan Way of Operating versus lower inflation versus volume benefits? Additionally, as you're looking at next year, do you have any preliminary thoughts on how you're thinking about inflation or the cost piece into 2026 following such a phenomenal year this year?
Tom Hill — Chairman and CEO, Vulcan Materials Company
Thanks. Yeah, short answer. We've got no relief on inflation. I mean, things, no prices have come down, they're not going up as fast. I would really point to the Vulcan Way of Operating. If you look at the whole year, I'm very pleased with our operators' performance in our 2025 cost in the quarter and the year. We're seeing improved operating efficiencies, but still early innings of Vulcan Way of Operating. Remember, in the first half of the year we had weather issues, we had volume issues that actually hurt costs. Ronnie and his team were still able to keep the cost down in Q3. We probably had some tailwinds from efficiencies, volume, and more base sales. I think Ronnie and his operators have worked very hard at the Vulcan Way of Operating, and he should be pleased with its performance.
Ronnie Pruitt — COO, Vulcan Materials Company
Yeah, thanks Tom. I know our operators will appreciate those comments. First and foremost, our safety performance is really good and it's continuing to improve. When I look at our disciplines and our investment in technology, they're working and that's the Vulcan Way of Operating. There's still improvement ahead, so we'll continue to focus on those disciplines as we get into 2026. I've got confidence in our people, our processes, our disciplines, and our technology, and I think it'll be exciting to watch the Vulcan Way of Operating as we continue to go selling as far as growing our margins. I think our margin growth will continue to be even more dependable in the future.
Andrew Maser — Analyst, Stifel
Great.
Thank you.
Tom Hill — Chairman and CEO, Vulcan Materials Company
Thank you.
Asher Sohnen — Analyst, Citi
Hi, this is Asher Sohnen on for Anthony. Thanks for taking my question and congratulations all around. You guys talked about stronger backlogs, but I was wondering if you could maybe walk through some of your key geographies and what you're seeing there.
an individual or regional basis?
Tom Hill — Chairman and CEO, Vulcan Materials Company
Yeah, actually it's pretty widespread. I can't think of any that are down at this point. Probably the healthiest is going to be the Southeast, which is a benefit for us because that's probably where the higher unit margins are. We've really seen a turn in the non-res side of the business. Data centers have helped that and really strong growth in public demand. I think that growth continues to accelerate for the next two or 3 years. A good story. Obviously, single family is still a drag for us and probably will be for a while. Hopefully that turns next year, but in the meantime the other sectors are taking up for that.
Asher Sohnen — Analyst, Citi
Great, thanks.
I'll turn it over.
Tom Hill — Chairman and CEO, Vulcan Materials Company
Thank you.
Tom Hill — Chairman and CEO, Vulcan Materials Company
Hi, Kathryn.
Kathryn Thompson — Analyst, Thompson Research Group
Hi, good morning and thank you for taking my question today. First off, Tom, it's been a pleasure working with you over the years. I look forward to keeping up with you. Ronnie, we go back a couple of companies and congratulations on starting in the CEO role in January.
Ronnie Pruitt — COO, Vulcan Materials Company
Thank you.
Tom Hill — Chairman and CEO, Vulcan Materials Company
Thank you.
Kathryn Thompson — Analyst, Thompson Research Group
Looking forward, you did a great job of shaping a portfolio as was highlighted in the quarter you just reported. How are you thinking about what fits in your portfolio and maybe what may not or who may be a better owner? Can you approach it from thinking about either a product type, which we saw this quarter, or a geographic focus, and just maybe thinking bigger picture about how you're thinking about that portfolio shaping going forward. Thanks very much.
Ronnie Pruitt — COO, Vulcan Materials Company
Yeah, Kathryn, this is Ronnie. I'll take that question. I'm continuing to be really pleased with the downstream business that we have in the asphalt business. Those businesses are really heavily influenced by the public funding and the strength in public funding. We're going to continue to focus on one safety as well as our financial performance. We talk about the concrete and the divestiture that we announced this week. I mean that's our strategy. We said early on when we bought Superior that we were going to evaluate that business and we would decide whether that was a business that we wanted to be in long term. We continue to see challenges on the private side in California. We thought the acquirers, it was a business that was going to be more valuable to them. I'll remind you that since the acquisition of U.S.
Concrete, we now only have a couple of plants left in the Virginia D.C. area that are integrated with a very successful Vulcan Legacy concrete business. We've also retained all those aggregates. It complements our strategy of being aggregate led. We're going to keep the expertise of both the asphalt and the concrete business. If those businesses, as we look in the future and M&A presents those to us, we're not scared of that. It's going to continue to be aggregate led and I think that's our strategy. You'll see us continue to be focused heavily on those aggregate led businesses.
Kathryn Thompson — Analyst, Thompson Research Group
Thank you so much, and good luck.
Ronnie Pruitt — COO, Vulcan Materials Company
Thank you.
Jesse Barone — Analyst, Jefferies
Hey, good morning, guys. This is Jesse on for Phil.
Congrats to Tom and Ronnie.
Just real quick on M&A.
Can you just kind of help us?
How you're thinking about the pipeline? You obviously will have quite a bit.
Of dry powder given where your leverage.
Is and post the divestitures. Just any geographies that you're particularly targeting. Thanks.
Ronnie Pruitt — COO, Vulcan Materials Company
Yeah, this is Ronnie. I would tell you, one, we have a number of greenfields that are still in process. Greenfields for us is a strategy of growth. It takes time. Those will be timed with both market driven as well as the timing of permits. We still have that going when we talk about M&A opportunities. It's been a quiet year. We continue to have a really good list of targets out there. The timing of those targets is really driven twofold, one by the seller and their readiness and then also by the market conditions. I would tell you M&A this year is not surprising to us. We knew through some of the uncertainties with tariffs and other pauses in the interest rates that M&A was going to be paused. I can assure you that we're still very active.
We have a really strong list and those M&A opportunities are going to continue to be aggregate led.
Jesse Barone — Analyst, Jefferies
Great, thanks. I'll turn it over.
Keith Hughes — Analyst, Truist
Thank you. Congratulations, Tom, on a tremendous run here. I do have a question for Ronnie. You had talked about 2026 kind of from a high level of continuing this just wonderful run of cash gross profit per ton. Just from a general level, would we, from what you know today, in the
Market, will we see something similar to?
The last couple of years.
With the numbers you've been putting up?
What could potentially take that higher?
Ronnie Pruitt — COO, Vulcan Materials Company
What was the last part of that, Keith?
Keith Hughes — Analyst, Truist
What would take it higher? What kind of things would you need to see, something that would set, you know, even better what we've seen the last couple of.
Years,
Ronnie Pruitt — COO, Vulcan Materials Company
Look, we're coming off 3 years of muted demand in our markets. What we've been able to accomplish over the last 3 years with growing our cash gross profit has been twofold. One, the inflationary stuff helped our pricing early on. This year we've had some momentum on the cost side of our business. As we said earlier, demand is going to help, some recovery in demand is going to help our pricing story and we look forward to that. The Vulcan Way of Operating, the Vulcan Way of Selling both support that from a cost side as well as a commercial side. I would tell you, as I said earlier in my comments, I think our cash gross profit will continue above historical norms. I think both sides of it, the cost and the commercial efforts, will play a role into that.
Some demand will definitely help the pricing side of our story.
Keith Hughes — Analyst, Truist
Okay, great.
Thank you.
Ronnie Pruitt — COO, Vulcan Materials Company
Thank you.
Brent Thielman — Analyst, D.A. Davidson
Hey, thanks.
Congrats to all of the team as well, I guess.
Bit of a two part question.
Guess just in terms of thinking about that mid-single-digit pricing improvement in 2026.
Part of the question is just, is.
that consistent with the annual price increases you're planning for next year? The other thing I was wondering is just around that, how much sort of volume do you bring into 2026 from acquisitions that, for lack of a better word, are underpriced? You're pushing towards that Vulcan Way.
Of sort of selling.
Ronnie Pruitt — COO, Vulcan Materials Company
Yeah. I would tell you the 5.5% to mid-single-digit % is a combination of what we're seeing both with our backlog as we go into the year. Our bidding work, which accounts for about 60%, as well as the announced letters that we have out with our fixed plants, which is about 40% of our business. Those conversations, like I said, are happening now. Those letters were sent out in September. Those fixed plant increases will go into effect in January. When I look overall at how that is going to shape up, I think our backlogs, and I said on a trailing 3 months, our bookings prices have been accelerating. It's a combination of that bid work and what opportunities we're seeing, especially around the private non-res side, as well as we still need some help on single family. I feel good about our pricing going into next year.
I think there's opportunities on both sides, on the public and private side, but that's where we're at. I think those conversations are going well. As far as acquired volumes, I think it's about 10 million tons of acquired volume coming out of last year, which was both Wake and Superior. As we've said before, it's taken us time. We're on that campaign. It's going as expected as far as North Carolina goes. I would anticipate that gap being made up with our normal Vulcan markets and what we're seeing in Raleigh. That gap will continue to be made up over the next 12 months.
Brent Thielman — Analyst, D.A. Davidson
Very good, thank you.
Ronnie Pruitt — COO, Vulcan Materials Company
Thank you.
Steven Fisher — Analyst, UBS
Thanks. Congrats Tom and Ronnie.
Just first, a clarification.
Have you changed your pricing expectation for the full year of 2025?
Not sure if I missed that.
The volume % reduction is.
That basically just single family, and within your 2026 outlook, are you starting if.
It is single family affecting 25%.
You assume that.
Tom Hill — Chairman and CEO, Vulcan Materials Company
Yeah, on pricing I would call fourth quarter probably very similar to third quarter as we continue to enjoy the big base volumes. Like I said, while they are at lower price, they're also at lower cost and very good margins. Happy to have that, happy to have that work with the data centers and the big highway work. If you look at non, if you look at non-res going forward, I think it continues to grow. Public is very good. I think we probably see headwinds from res for a while, but it probably starting to bottom sometime in 2026.
Steven Fisher — Analyst, UBS
Okay, thank you.
Angel Castillo — Analyst, Morgan Stanley
Thanks, and good morning everyone.
Ronnie.
Tom, I echo everyone's congratulations and well wishes, and looking forward to working with you.
Ronnie,
Ronnie Pruitt — COO, Vulcan Materials Company
thank you.
Angel Castillo — Analyst, Morgan Stanley
You're welcome. Just regarding your quoting activity and projects pipeline, the acceleration you talked about, I was wondering if you could kind of dive a little deeper into that, maybe just kind of as a starting point, just putting a finer point on the magnitude of what you saw in October versus perhaps the EQ levels I know you've given kind of last few months.
If we could kind of.
Split that up, and then maybe if you could expand also just on what's driving or what you think is driving kind of the acceleration here in activity. The reason I ask is because I feel like we've kind of heard about project backlogs and quoting activity being robust the last couple of years, and conversion rates and delays, shipments have kind of disappointed a little bit. Trying to understand, I guess, what gives us confidence that, you know, something has changed that will result in kind of the letting of projects moving faster and within private. If you could expand a bit more, like is that data, are you seeing it happen outside of data centers and semiconductors as well, or is it primarily just those two?
Tom Hill — Chairman and CEO, Vulcan Materials Company
Yes. Look, we talked some in the first part of the year about projects, U.S. pricing projects and then kind of getting postponed or pushed a pause button. We're not seeing that anymore. In fact, we've seen a lot of those projects actually go at supporting growth in our backlogs. If we put it in our backlogs, we're pretty sure it's going to happen. It's very rare that once we put them in there that projects don't go. I have very good confidence that our backlogs will be shipped and that growth will support growth as we look at 2026. I think that if you look forward, I think the nonresidential continues to grow. Ronnie, why don't you talk a little bit about kind of volume drivers in 2026 and the momentum we carry into that?
Ronnie Pruitt — COO, Vulcan Materials Company
Yeah, I mean when I look at starts on the private non-res side, as Tom said in Vulcan-served markets in September, on a trailing six months we're up 7%, trailing three, we're up 8%. That momentum continues. As I look at the subsegments of our private non-res, office, data, stores and warehouses, institutional are all up and our quoting activity and our bidding are on the same trajectory. As we look at it, there is a lot of data center work out there. That subcategory itself is up 26%. We've also booked two LNG projects, we've booked a couple of manufacturing projects, we booked some retail and it is a combination. Data centers have definitely been a very good tailwind for us. There are other sectors within the private non-res that also give us confidence as we look in 2026.
Tom Hill — Chairman and CEO, Vulcan Materials Company
Yeah, I would tell you that I think that is Ronnie, Mary Andrews, as we all look at 2026, pretty good confidence. We'll see volume growth. The public side, I can't tell you how strong the public side is. It's very, very good. We've seen the turn. We think in non-res, data centers is bigger than what we thought it was going to be. We think warehouses is now probably turning to growth in most of our markets. As we talk a lot about single family, it's still a headwind, but I think it continues to probably it will get better as we march through next year. I think our confidence level, that's pretty good.
Angel Castillo — Analyst, Morgan Stanley
Very helpful, thank you.
Joe Nolan — Analyst, Longbow Research
Hey, good morning, this is Joe Nolan on for David. Congrats on a nice quarter.
Tom Hill — Chairman and CEO, Vulcan Materials Company
Thank you.
Joe Nolan — Analyst, Longbow Research
I was just wondering on public infrastructure, slide five shows a nice acceleration in contract awards. I was just hoping you could break it down in some of your key markets and give any detail on how fiscal year 2026 DOT budgets look there.
Tom Hill — Chairman and CEO, Vulcan Materials Company
Yeah, I would tell you in our markets it's very widespread. The public side, I can't underscore it. It's good and getting better. Remember we're in year four of IIJA and it took two years to really get that started, which frustrated everyone, including us. To be as expected. Now we're seeing the state DOTs mature into substantially increased federal and state funding. All of our best, our top 10 DOTs are all up for fiscal year 2026. Trucking 12-month highway starts, as we said, are up 17% in Vulcan states and 5% in other states. We are where the DOTs are growing. I think, simply put, the DOTs are putting that money to work now and they continue to get better at it. Remember, only 40% of the IIJA funds have been spent. There's a long tail to this past 2026.
Ronnie Pruitt — COO, Vulcan Materials Company
Yeah, I think as Tom said, those funds will carry us well into 2026 and 2027 and beyond. I would tell you there's three rules around reauthorization. One, it never happens on time. Two, it will happen. Three, it's historically always been larger than the bill before. We're anticipating that. We think public will continue to remain strong. If you think about the infrastructure of the country, we still got a lot of work to do. We're happy with where we're at on the public side, and we think that's going to continue strong in the future.
Joe Nolan — Analyst, Longbow Research
Okay, very encouraging. Thanks. I'll pass it on.
Tom Hill — Chairman and CEO, Vulcan Materials Company
Michael, we can't hear you.
Adrian Huerta — Analyst, JPMorgan
Thank you. Hi Tom.
Congrats and best wishes.
was a pleasure to work with you all these years. Welcome, Ronnie. I know you for a few years since U.S. Concrete, and I'm sure you're going to deliver very good results as well.
Ronnie Pruitt — COO, Vulcan Materials Company
Thank you.
Adrian Huerta — Analyst, JPMorgan
Quick question.
On the cost, it's been quite impressive what you guys have been doing on the cost per.
Ton side over the last couple of quarters.
I think you mentioned that you're still.
In the early innings on many.
Of these measures that you're taking, can you give us a sense on the action being taken and for how many more quarters we can see very good performance on cost as we have seen in the last few quarters?
Ronnie Pruitt — COO, Vulcan Materials Company
Yeah, thank you for the question. I would tell you we're still in the early innings and we've talked about, you know, Vulcan Way of Operating. The technology investment is complete within our top 127 plants, which represents over 70% of our production as a company. Where we're at today is really in the final stages of the human behavioral side. We have a lot of training going on with our plant operators using the tools, the process intelligence, the scheduling systems with our labor focus. My anticipation is we've got a long ways to go, but it's really exciting to watch.
I would tell you that as I look at what's transpired this year and then what we're forecasting for next year, these tools, these investments we've made and the processes that we go through around our operations and focusing on our critical size, production and the yield on that and the labor side, labor savings, I think we've got a lot of room and I'm excited about it. I think more importantly, our operators are the ones that are driving this and a lot more to come. I would tell you my anticipation is 2026 is going to be even more momentum than it was in 2025.
Tom Hill — Chairman and CEO, Vulcan Materials Company
I would say that it's not just a quarter thing. This is years of marching forward with operating efficiency improvements. I think that Ronnie and his team, as I said earlier, should be very proud of their performance this year. They got help from weather and volume in Q3, but they did not in Q1 and Q2. In fact, it's surprising how good the cost was given the conditions. I think they have years of improvement ahead of them.
Adrian Huerta — Analyst, JPMorgan
Great.
Congrats. Thanks, Tom and Ronnie.
Tom Hill — Chairman and CEO, Vulcan Materials Company
Sure.
Ivan Yi — Analyst, Wolfe Research
Yes, good morning. First, congrats to Tom and Ronnie. Just want to go back to the aggregate pricing again. Price per ton in Q3 was the smallest in a few years. I get that there's some negative mix in there, but why has the year-over-year growth decelerated in recent quarters? It had been double digits and now you're guiding to 5% in 2026. Just some color there.
Tom Hill — Chairman and CEO, Vulcan Materials Company
Thank you. I think that a couple of things there. Obviously, we had headwinds from acquisitions we had in the first part of the year. We had headwinds from lower volumes in the Southeast driven by weather. That got back more normal in Q3. You're sitting here on 3 years of negative volume, and that does put some pressures on price. I think that's probably at a low point. I believe that the continued acceleration in public and now visibility to the private non-res going up really helps our conversations for pricing and our backlog pricing as we look into 2026. Ronnie called that out that we've put out January 1 price increases. We're having those conversations, and they are going well. Importantly, before that, over the last few months, we're seeing acceleration in our backlog pricing, which is a very good foreshadowing for what's going to happen in 2026.
Ivan Yi — Analyst, Wolfe Research
Thank you.
Tom Hill — Chairman and CEO, Vulcan Materials Company
Thank you.
Michael Dudas — Analyst, Vertical Research
Yeah, I hope the mute's off here.
Good.
Good morning. Mary Andrews and Ronnie and Tom.
Tom Hill — Chairman and CEO, Vulcan Materials Company
Good.
To hear from you.
Michael Dudas — Analyst, Vertical Research
Yeah, congrats to Tom and Ronnie. Also, congrats to Mary Andrews for the great cash generation and the great cash.
Flow numbers you've been putting up here.
Congratulations to all.
Maybe just as we get close to.
Wrap up here for Ronnie. As you look into your.
Tenure here for the next several years, maybe even decade or so.
As you look out maybe past 2026, how much different or not will Vulcan look like, and is the sense the seeds of the industry fundamentals and where we are, given what you're seeing from competitors and from clients.
That this type of growth and sustainability.
Ronnie Pruitt — COO, Vulcan Materials Company
Yeah, great question. I mean, I think if you look out past 2026, 2027, 2028 in the future, Vulcan is going to look very similar. I would tell you we're going to continue to be led by our strategy around enhancing our core, which is really investing in continuing to invest in the Vulcan Way of Operating and Vulcan Way of Selling, which is going to really complement our margin growth, and it gives us confidence in that margin growth with those tools that we've invested in on the strategic side. When we talk about expanding our reach, we're going to stay aggregate focused, both within the markets that we serve and building the franchise that we have. Also, as we look, geographical expansion is still going to be an aggregate-led company.
I wouldn't tell you that as you look in the future, you're going to see anything different than what Vulcan has continued to execute on. Those growth opportunities will be there, and we'll be right in the middle of it. We're going to be very disciplined on what we look like and how we, what those businesses are going to be led by is always going to be aggregates.
Michael Dudas — Analyst, Vertical Research
Thank you, Ronnie.
Tom Hill — Chairman and CEO, Vulcan Materials Company
Thank you. Thank you all for your time this morning. As I step back and look at Vulcan's future, I feel both pride and excitement. Vulcan has fantastic talent and bench strength throughout the organization and particularly in leadership. Ronnie and Mary Andrews and their teams are seasoned, talented industry experts who are armed with a superior set of tools and disciplines embedded in the Vulcan Way of Selling and the Vulcan Way of Operating. Putting that together with our continuous improvement culture will take Vulcan to remarkable heights. I'm very proud to have represented the men and women of Vulcan, and I look forward to supporting Ronnie and Mary Andrews in the future. Thank you all for your interest in Vulcan and your friendships. Keep you and your family safe and healthy.
Thank you.