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Investor Presentation

November 2014
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Disclosure Statement
Statements made in the course of this presentation that state the Company's or management's
intentions, hopes, beliefs, expectations or predictions of the future are forward-looking statements.
It is important to note that the Company's actual results could differ materially from those
projected in such forward-looking statements. Additional information concerning factors that could
cause actual results to differ materially from those in the forward-looking statements is contained
from time-to-time in the Company's filings with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission. Any
decision regarding the Company or its securities should be made upon careful consideration of not
only the information here presented, but also other available information, including the
information filed by the Company with the SEC. Copies of these filings may be obtained by
contacting the Company or the SEC.

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2014 COPYRIGHT DISTRIBUTIONNOW

Transaction Overview
Ticker

DNOW

Exchange

NYSE

Exchange ratio

1 share of DNOW stock for every 4 shares of NOV stock

Expected number of shares

107 million

When-issued trading begins

May 20, 2014

Record date

May 22, 2014

Distribution of NOW shares

May 30, 2014

First day of regular-way trading

June 2, 2014

Form 10 registration statement for NOW Inc. declared effective by SEC

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2014 COPYRIGHT DISTRIBUTIONNOW

Vision
DistributionNOW will be recognized as the
market Leader in Supply Chain Management
through superior customer service by
leveraging the strengths of our employees,
processes, suppliers and information.

Countries
20+
Locations
330+
Employees 5,300+
ERP System SAP

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Company Snapshot

One of the largest distributors to the energy industry


Legacy of over 150 years operating
Support major land and offshore operations for all the
key energy producing regions around the world
Comprehensive network of more than 270 Energy
Branches and more than 60 Supply Chain locations
2013 revenue of $4.3 billion and EBITDA of $239 million
Operates under the DistributionNOW and Wilson Export
brands
More than 300,000 stock keeping units (SKUs)
Thousands of vendors in approximately 40 countries
Presence in over 20 countries supporting customer
operations in more than 90 countries
Key markets include North America, Latin America, the
North Sea, the Middle East, the Commonwealth of
Independent States and Southeast Asia

2013 Revenue by Segment


Canada
18%

United States
67%

2013 Revenue by Channel


Supply Chain
17%

>270 Energy Branches


>60 Supply Chain locations

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International
15%

Energy
Branches
83%

Global Customer Reach


Company Locations

NORWAY

Energy Branches

Edmonton CANADA

Sales Offices
Distribution Centers

NETHERLANDS

Estevan
Los Angeles

Distribution
Centers:
United States
Houston, TX
Los Angeles, CA
South Plainfield, NJ
Canada
Edmonton, Alberta
Estevan, Saskatchewan

USA

EGYPT

COLUMBIA

KAZAKHSTAN

POLAND

South Plainfield

Houston
MEXICO

PERU

RUSSIA

UK
Aberdeen

AZERBAIJAN
CHINA
KUWAIT
UAE
SAUDI
Jebel INDIA
ARABIA
Ali
OMAN
SINGAPORE
Jurong

BRAZIL

INDONESIA

Europe
Aberdeen, Scotland
MENA
Jebel Ali, U.A.E.

Asia
Jurong, Singapore
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AUSTRALIA
SOUTH AFRICA

Global Customer Reach


Export by Country
Aberdeen

U.S. Wilson Export


UK Export
Dubai Export
Export Country Crossover

Houston
Dubai

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Comprehensive Product Offering and Balanced Revenue Mix

DNOW carries a broad range of products to meet rapid and critical deliveries to customers in remote areas of service
Limited exposure to commodities
Oil country tubular goods (OCTG) comprise a small portion of sales and inventory (<2%)

2011

2013

Mill Tool,
MRO, Safety
and Other
29%

Fittings and
Flanges
12%

Drilling and
Production
38%

Mill Tool,
MRO, Safety
and Other
22%

2012:
Acquisitions of
Wilson and
CE Franklin

Valves
12%

Pipe
9%

Drilling and
Production
23%

Fittings and
Flanges
15%

Pipe
20%
Valves
20%

Wilson and CE Franklin acquisitions have further diversified DNOWs product offering
Expanded PVF volumes and supply chain solutions for the midstream, downstream and industrial end markets

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Value Proposition
Product Offering

A Critical Link Through Leading


Supply Chain Technology
Knowledgeable people

Customer
Product
Application
Materials management
Proven processes

Quality management
Supply chain expertise
Extensive infrastructure

United States
Canada
International
Procurement

advantage

Broad supplier base


Single source provider
Global sourcing
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Market Segments

Blue-Chip Customers and Suppliers


Suppliers

Customers

Drilling Contractors

Exploration & Production

Midstream

Downstream & Industrial

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Flexible Operational Model

BRANCHES

REGIONAL
DISTRIBUTION CENTER

EXPORT

CAPITAL PROJECTS
& VALVE ACTUATION

SUPPLY CHAIN SERVICES

Branch network model


supported by Distribution
Centers to ensure inventory
is maintained locally.
Right inventory in right place
at the right time

Distribution centers ensure


replenishment of branches
and direct shipment to
customer facility

Broad sourcing capability to


consolidate customer
requirements on multiple lower
value or non-core items

Global sourcing and expediting


capability to ensure correct
product is delivered to the job
site in accordance with
project requirements

Vast offering of supply chain


services to increase efficiency
and lower cost within the
supply chain

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Quality-Triple Impact Supplier Program


SUPPLIER AUDITS
Assessment and qualification of
new suppliers
Reassessment of existing suppliers
Follow up on supplier quality issue
Rotational on-site physical audits
Foundry evaluation on key valve
manufacturers

SAMPLING STANDARD
Monitoring and measuring
Daily audit of incoming products
QA/QC inspection (MTR review,
PMI on SS and alloys, threading,
dim. and visual)
Full traceability (marking check)
Acceptable Quality Limit (AQL) 1.5

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QUALITY CHECKPOINTS
Supplier performance reporting (KPIs)
Trial order lab testing
Quarterly enhanced lab testing
Manufacturer pre-ship inspection
Overstock return inspections
Verification of supplier corrective
action

Key Investment Highlights


1 Leading distributor in a large, growing and highly fragmented market
2 Focused growth strategy as an independent company
3 Unmatched IT capabilities underpin efficient operations and differentiated value proposition
4 Operational initiatives and scalability drive margin improvement
5 Macro industry trends favor players with extensive scale
6 Key end markets still strong
7 Demonstrated successful acquisition and integration track record
8 Attractive cash generation and returns through the cycle
9 Experienced management team
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Leading Distributor in a Large, Growing and Highly


Fragmented Market

DistributionNOW is one of the largest distributors to


the energy industry worldwide
Over $850 million in inventory to support customers
More than 300,000 SKUs
Thousands of vendors in approximately 40
countries
Quality offering ensured through AML
Network of over 330 locations worldwide
Presence in 20+ countries

230+ locations in the U.S.

70+ locations in Canada

30+ international locations


Supported by 8 distribution centers

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$20bn+ addressable market in North America


DNOW
19%

MRC
24%

Other
57%

Global market estimated to exceed $50bn


Highly fragmented market

DistributionNOW differentiated by scale and global reach


Majority of competitors are small, local/regional players

Growth Strategy through Capital Allocation

2
1

Energy Branches:
Organic Growth

Increase presence in nonconventional energy plays


Continued market share gains in
the U.S. and Canada
Further expansion to and within
new markets outside of the U.S.
and Canada

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Supply Chain Services:


Growth through Capital Allocation

Further penetrate downstream


and industrial channel
Expand product lines such as
valves / actuation, safety
services and electrical
Rapidly grow market share with
manufacturing customers

Future Opportunities

Broaden scope and reach of


industrial offering
Industrial MRO
OEM supply
New product lines
New end markets
Logistics
Equipment rentals

Unmatched IT Capabilities Underpin Efficient Operations


and Differentiated Value Proposition

DNOW has implemented a single integrated ERP system linking global branches, customers and suppliers
Greatly enhances operational efficiency
Enables immediacy of decision-making
Reduces total procurement costs for DNOW and customers
Supports planning and optimization of supply chain processes

System Highlights

Integrated with customer ERP


Approximately 3 billion electronic
transactions processed in 2013
In-house support allows DNOW
to tailor its system to better meet
customers needs and increase
operational efficiency

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Sample Applications

Demand management, statistical forecasting and lifecycle planning


expedite decision making and allow flexible assortment planning
An integrated warehouse management system; voice and wireless bar
code scanners increase warehouse efficiencies
MetalTrace (MT) allows for the storage and retrieval of manufacturer
documentation such as Safety Data Sheets (SDS) and Mill Test Reports
(MTRs) in a consolidated, indexed environment. MT is integrated with
DNOWs ERP system for enhanced traceability
of material and faster order processing

Operational Initiatives and Scalability


Drive Margin Improvement

Operational
Excellence

Highly
Scalable
Business
Model
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Highly flexible model


One global ERP system
Centralized pricing discipline
Leveraged international sourcing
Distribution center supported inventory
replenishment

Low fixed costs


Incremental margins well in excess of total
margins
Limited capital needs to support expansion
Integration of acquisitions
Incentives tied to profitability

Target:
Return to
previously
achieved 8%+
EBITDA margin

Macro Industry Trends Favor Players With Extensive Scale

DNOW has sophistication, scale and geographic reach to serve an increasingly consolidated and global customer base

Trend

Customer centralizing procurement


functions and consolidating suppliers to
enhance operational efficiency

Trend

Industry consolidation of customer base


through acquisitions and international
expansion

DNOW
Capability

Integrated supply model and comprehensive


supply services to manage customer
procurement and inventory

DNOW
Capability

Size and geographic reach to serve global


customer need in existing and new
geographies

Case Study
Privately owned independent, vertically integrated oil and gas company
Operations in South Texas and Northern Mexico (Eagle Ford)
and Colombia
Customer consolidating spending for core products previously sourced
from several supply companies
Customer engaged DNOW in materials management program to
support Eagle Ford and Colombian assets
Warehouse and inventory management, material identification
and product consolidation to reduce operations cost
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Case Study
Large public independent oil and gas company
DNOW is preferred material management partner within
Customers Regional Distribution Concept (RDC)
Provide full cycle material management solutions across Customers
assets in U.S. and Canada
Customer recently made acquisition in South Texas (Eagle Ford)
DNOW implementing of the RDC model at new Eagle Ford assets
Displaces current suppliers

Key End Markets Still Strong


Upstream Development Capex Spending

GDP Growth

($ in billions)

$431

6%

$430

$408

$439

$222

$253

$249

$242

$223

$54

$50

$45

$44

$47

$132

$136

$137

$144

$154

2012A

2013A

2014E

2015E

2016E

$424
4%
2%
0%
(2%)
(4%)

United States

Canada

2003

2005

Top 10 Countries (ex-U.S. and Canada)

2007

2009

2011

United States

2013

Canada

2015

World

Source: Wood Mackenzie


Note:
Top 10 Countries include Australia, Brazil, Canada, China, Iraq, Mexico, Norway, Russia, U.K. and U.S.

Source: IHS Economics

Average Annual Rig Count

Industrial Capacity Utilization and Production

(number of rigs)

908

836

458

369
1,190

1,380

1,079

925

1,005

470

343

379

1,648

1,768

1,878

1,094
997

1,086

1,541

84%

110

81%

105

1,167

1,234

1,296

1,344

78%

100

423

365

355

371

75%

95

72%

90

1,875

1,919

1,761

1,845

69%

85

351

221

66%

80
2003

Canada
Source: Baker Hughes, Inc.
Note:
YTD2014 includes rig count through September 2014

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2017

2005

2007

2009

Capacity Utilization

International
Source: U.S. Federal Reserve

2011
Production

2013

Demonstrated Successful Acquisition


and Integration Track Record
Selected Historical Acquisitions

Wilson and CE Franklin Highlights

Date

Acquisition

Country

December 1998

Dominion Oilfield Supply (DOSCO/TS&M)

Canada

June 1999

Continental Emsco Company (via Wilson)

United States / Canada

July 1999

Dupre Supply

United States

January 2000

Texas Mill Supply (via Wilson)

United States

January 2000

Republic Supply Company

United States

November 2000

Hart Sales Company

United States

January 2001

Van Leeuwen Pipe & Tube (via Wilson)

United States

March 2001

DEMIJ-Rotterdam

The Netherlands

June 2001

Rye Supply

United States

August 2001

Texas Oil Works Supply

United States

August 2001

AMTEX Pump & Supply

United States

June 2002

STS Supply

United States

January 2003

LSI Specialty Electrical Products

United States

August 2003

WTM Sales

United States

August 2003

Neven Handelsonderneming

The Netherlands

October 2004

Roma General Welding Services

Australia

December 2008

Sakhalin Outfitters

Russia

March 2010

PLT

United States

August 2010

Group KZ

Kazakhstan

February 2011

Capital Valves

United Kingdom

May 2012

Wilson Distribution

U.S., Canada, International

June 2012

Engco

Canada

July 2012

CE Franklin

Canada

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Expanded DNOWs end market offering with immediate entry into


midstream, downstream and industrial markets

New customer base provided increased


selling opportunity

Strengthened brand and existing customer relationships

Expanded DNOWs capabilities in vending and tool crib supply


chain solutions

M&A Strategy

Utilize strong balance sheet to allocate capital towards


strengthening market positions

Enhance product offering and geographic reach in Energy Branches

Accelerate expansion in downstream & industrial segments

Expand eCommerce and supply chain


solutions technologies

Attractive Cash Generation and Returns Through the Cycle


Free Cash Flow and EBITDA
($ in millions)

$264
$239

$235

$224

$246
$184

2013 Financial Snapshot


Revenue: $4.3 billion
Gross margin: ~19%
EBITDA: $239 million
5.6% margin
Free cash flow: $184 million
ROCE(1): 15%

2011 (2)

Free Cash Flow (3)

EBITDA (4)

Continued to reinvest in the business to improve operations and


support future growth

Flexible cost structure and disciplined working capital management


underpin cash flow generation through the cycle
(1)
(2)
(3)
(4)

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2013

Robust free cash flow despite headwinds in 2013 from a down year in
the broader energy sector

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2012 (2)

ROCE excludes goodwill, which is primarily associated with the acquisitions of Wilson and CE Franklin
Estimated, Pro Forma
Free Cash Flow is defined as EBITDA less capital expenditures
EBITDA is defined as earnings before Interest, Taxes, Depreciation and Amortization

Experienced Management Team


21-year average tenure of Operations team, including NOV and its predecessor entities
Extensive industry experience
Focus on results, process and relationships
Merrill A. Pete Miller, Jr.
Executive Chairman

Burk L. Ellison
President, Energy Branches

Daniel L. Molinaro
Chief Financial Officer

18 years at DNOW / NOV

34 years at DNOW / NOV

46 years at DNOW / NOV

Robert R. Workman
President and Chief Executive Officer

Raymond W. Chang
General Counsel

David A. Cherechinsky
Chief Accounting Officer

23 years at DNOW / NOV

13 years at DNOW / NOV

25 years at DNOW / NOV

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Note:

Tenure at DNOW / NOV includes predecessor entities

Financial Overview
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Financial Highlights

Solid organic revenue growth underpinned by strong end market

Robust cash flow generation through the cycle

Substantial operating leverage drives margin improvement

Low capital intensity business model requires limited investment

Cost savings to be realized from integration of Wilson and CE Franklin

Capital structure provides significant financial flexibility


Debt free; $750 million undrawn revolver
~$200 million of cash on hand

Conservative financial profile and highly disciplined management team

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Historical Financial Summary (Pro Forma)


Revenue

Gross Profit and Margin

($ in millions)

($ in millions)

$4,613

$4,260

$4,296
$843

$769

2011

2012

2013

18.1%

18.3%

18.6%

2011 (1)

2012 (1)

2013

Gross profit

EBITDA and Margin


($ in millions)

$797

% Margin

Net Income and Margin


($ in millions)

$264

$239

$235

$164

$147

$141
5.7%

5.5%

5.6%
3.3%

2011 (1)

2012 (1)
EBITDA

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2011 (1)

2013
% Margin

3.6%

2012 (1)
Net Income

(1)

Estimated, Pro Forma

3.4%

2013
% Margin

Low Capital Intensity Business Model


Requires Limited Investment
Capital Expenditures

Working Capital

($ in millions)

($ in millions)

$1,491

1.3%

$1,299

$1,188
27.9%

0.4%

0.3%

32.3%
30.2%

$45
$10
$8

$11
2011

(1)

2012

$10
(1)

2013

2011

Spin / Integration Related Investments


Maintenance Capex
Total Capex as a % of Sales

Global SAP ERP system implementation


New corporate headquarters and warehouse
Distribution Centers in Edmonton, Estevan and Dubai
Expansion of integrated warehouse management system
Global rebranding to DistributionNOW from NOV Wilson
Spin-related systems and software

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2012
Working Capital

Spin / Integration Related Investments

(1)

(1)

Estimated, Pro Forma

(1)

2013
% of Sales

Disciplined and focused approach to manage working capital


Improving receivables collection and customer contracts
Elevated inventory levels post acquisition will normalize postintegration and benefit from ERP system implementation
Strong liquidity profile
Debt free; $750 million undrawn revolver
~$200 million of cash on hand

Attractive Cash Generation and Returns Through the Cycle


Free Cash Flow and FCF Conversion

Capital Employed and Pretax ROCE

($ in millions)

($ in millions)

$1,982
$1,820

$246
$224

$1,420

$184
95%

93%
15.7%

77%

2011 (1)

2012 (1)
FCF (2)

FCF Conversion (3)

12.3%

2012 (1)

2013

Capital Employed

Pretax ROCE (4)

Strong cash flow generation to support growth

2013 ROCE of 15%, excluding goodwill(5)

Disciplined working capital management


across all business units

High returns on investments driven by strategic


capital allocations, continuous investments in
growth opportunities and opportunistic
acquisitions

Substantial non-recurring investments in 2013


and 2014

27

2011 (1)

2013

12.8%

(1)
(2)
(3)
(4)
(5)

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Estimated, Pro Forma


Free Cash Flow (FCF) is defined as EBITDA less capital expenditures
FCF Conversion is defined as FCF as a percentage of EBITDA
Pretax ROCE is defined as EBIT as a percentage of Capital Employed
Average goodwill of $338 million in 2013

YTD September 2014 Summary Results (Unaudited)


Revenue

Gross Profit and Margin

($ in millions)

($ in millions)

$3,255

$3,099

$614

$600

19.8%
18.4%

9M13

9M14

9M13

9M14
Gross profit

EBITDA and Margin

Net Income and Margin

($ in millions)

($ in millions)

$186

5.4%

9M13

9M14
EBITDA

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$113

$168

5.7%

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% Margin

% Margin

$100

3.5%

3.2%

9M13

9M14
Net Income

% Margin

Short-term Outlook

Stabilization: Completion of spin and ERP rollout


Q214
Perfect storm of disruptions
Q314
Beginning of top line recovery and the completion of public expense buildout
Q414
Continued recovery from spin and ERP implementation, but P&L still noisy as we complete projects

Q115
Should mark end of integration distractions

Capital: Anomalous trends ending


Completion of majority of one-time, large cap-ex projects
Resumption of capital allocated to M&A
Exhibit significant progress of reducing DSOs by 15+ days

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Outlook

Growth target: organic market share gains of 3 5% each year


Energy Branch segment revenues will track well completions and rig count
Supply Chain solutions intended to be the largest beneficiary of capital
allocations

Margin target: return to previously achieved 8%+ EBITDA as Wilson and CE


Franklin are fully integrated
Incremental EBITDA margins exceed current profitability

Run-rate maintenance Capex of approximately $10 $20 million annually

Generally, capital allocated to M&A will be consistent with cash flow

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