RYERSON TULL INC
DEF 14A, 1997-04-16
METALS & MINERALS (NO PETROLEUM)
Previous: RUTHERFORD-MORAN OIL CORP, DEF 14A, 1997-04-16
Next: CARDIOVASCULAR DYNAMICS INC, DEF 14A, 1997-04-16



<PAGE>
 
                           SCHEDULE 14A INFORMATION

          Proxy Statement Pursuant to Section 14(a) of the Securities
                    Exchange Act of 1934 (Amendment No.  )
        
Filed by the Registrant [X]

Filed by a Party other than the Registrant [_] 

Check the appropriate box:

[_]  Preliminary Proxy Statement         [_]  CONFIDENTIAL, FOR USE OF THE
                                              COMMISSION ONLY (AS PERMITTED BY
                                              RULE 14A-6(E)(2))

[X]  Definitive Proxy Statement 

[_]  Definitive Additional Materials 

[_]  Soliciting Material Pursuant to Section 240.14a-11(c) or Section 240.14a-12

                              Ryerson Tull, Inc.
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
               (Name of Registrant as Specified In Its Charter)

                                 
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
   (Name of Person(s) Filing Proxy Statement, if other than the Registrant)

      
Payment of Filing Fee (Check the appropriate box):

[X]  No fee required

[_]  Fee computed on table below per Exchange Act Rules 14a-6(i)(4) and 0-11.

   
     (1) Title of each class of securities to which transaction applies:

     -------------------------------------------------------------------------


     (2) Aggregate number of securities to which transaction applies:

     -------------------------------------------------------------------------


     (3) Per unit price or other underlying value of transaction computed
         pursuant to Exchange Act Rule 0-11 (Set forth the amount on which
         the filing fee is calculated and state how it was determined):

     -------------------------------------------------------------------------
      

     (4) Proposed maximum aggregate value of transaction:

     -------------------------------------------------------------------------


     (5) Total fee paid:

     -------------------------------------------------------------------------

[_]  Fee paid previously with preliminary materials.
     
[_]  Check box if any part of the fee is offset as provided by Exchange
     Act Rule 0-11(a)(2) and identify the filing for which the offsetting fee
     was paid previously. Identify the previous filing by registration statement
     number, or the Form or Schedule and the date of its filing.
     
     (1) Amount Previously Paid:
 
     -------------------------------------------------------------------------


     (2) Form, Schedule or Registration Statement No.:

     -------------------------------------------------------------------------


     (3) Filing Party:
      
     -------------------------------------------------------------------------


     (4) Date Filed:

     -------------------------------------------------------------------------

Notes:


<PAGE>
                                                                         [LOGO] 
 
 
RYERSON TULL, INC.
 
Robert J. Darnall
Chairman
 
Neil S. Novich
President and Chief Executive Officer
 
                                             April 17, 1997
 
Dear Stockholder:
 
  On Wednesday, May 28, 1997, we will hold our first Annual Meeting of
Stockholders as a public company. The meeting will begin at 2:00 p.m., Chicago
time, at the First Chicago Center, One First National Plaza, Chicago, Illinois.
We hope you will join us.
 
  At the meeting we will discuss the Company's strategic initiatives and
financial results and you will have an opportunity to ask questions. The
attached notice of meeting and proxy statement describe the formal business of
the meeting.
 
  We look forward to seeing you on May 28. Whether or not you expect to attend
the meeting, please complete and return the enclosed proxy card in the
envelope provided. Your vote is important to us.
 
Cordially,
 
Robert J. Darnall                      Neil S. Novich
Chairman                               President and Chief
                                       Executive Officer
 
                 2621 West 15th Place, Chicago, Illinois 60608
                                                                           LOGO
<PAGE>
 
RYERSON TULL, INC.
2621 WEST 15TH PLACE
CHICAGO, ILLINOIS 60608
 
NOTICE OF ANNUAL MEETING OF STOCKHOLDERS
TO BE HELD ON MAY 28, 1997
 
To the Stockholders of RYERSON TULL, INC.:
 
  The Annual Meeting of Stockholders of Ryerson Tull, Inc., a Delaware
corporation, will be held at the First Chicago Center, One First National
Plaza, Chicago, Illinois, on Wednesday, May 28, 1997, at 2:00 p.m., Chicago
time, for the following purposes:
 
  1.  To elect two directors of the Company to hold office for a three-year
      term;
 
  2.  To consider and vote upon the Ryerson Tull 1996 Incentive Stock Plan;
 
  3.  To consider and vote upon the Ryerson Tull, Inc. Annual Performance
      Improvement Incentive Plan;
 
  4.  To elect a firm of independent public accountants to audit the
      accounts of the Company and its subsidiaries for the year 1997; and
 
  5.  To transact any other business that may properly come before the
      meeting.
 
  The close of business on April 2, 1997 has been fixed as the record date for
determination of stockholders entitled to notice of and to vote at the Annual
Meeting.
 
  A Proxy Statement with respect to the Annual Meeting accompanies and forms a
part of this Notice. The Annual Report of the Company for the fiscal year
ended December 31, 1996 was previously mailed to stockholders.
 
                                       By order of the Board of Directors,
 
                                       CHARLES B. SALOWITZ
                                       Corporate Secretary
 
April 17, 1997
Chicago, Illinois
 
 Stockholders are cordially invited to attend this meeting. Each
 stockholder, whether or not he or she expects to be present in person at
 the Annual Meeting, is requested to SIGN, DATE AND RETURN THE ENCLOSED
 PROXY in the accompanying envelope as promptly as possible.
 
<PAGE>
 
 
                              RYERSON TULL, INC.
                             2621 WEST 15TH PLACE
                            CHICAGO, ILLINOIS 60608
 
                                PROXY STATEMENT
 
  The enclosed proxy is solicited on behalf of the Board of Directors of
Ryerson Tull, Inc. (the "Company"). Such solicitation is being made by mail
commencing approximately April 17, 1997, and also may be made by directors,
officers and regular employees of the Company. The expense of such
solicitation will be paid by the Company. In addition, the Company has
retained Kissel-Blake Inc. to assist in the solicitation of proxies for a fee
of $3,000 plus out-of-pocket expenses. Brokers, banks and similar
organizations will be reimbursed for out-of-pocket and reasonable clerical
expenses incurred in obtaining instructions from beneficial owners.
 
  The Company first became publicly held on June 26, 1996 with the issuance of
5,220,000 shares of its Class A Common Stock, par value $1.00 per share (the
"Class A common stock" or "common stock") in a public offering (the
"Offering"). Prior to that time, the Company was a wholly owned subsidiary of
Inland Steel Industries, Inc. ("Inland").
 
  Shares represented by an effective proxy given by the holder thereof will be
voted as directed by such holder. The voting securities of the Company
outstanding on the record date (April 2, 1997), together with the vote to
which each is entitled, consist of 5,280,763 shares of the Company's Class A
common stock (one vote per share), and 34,000,000 shares of its Class B common
stock (four votes per share). All such shares vote together without regard to
class on the matters expected to be voted upon at the Annual Meeting. A
stockholder giving a proxy may revoke it at any time prior to the voting of
the proxy. Inland, through its ownership of the Company's Class B common
stock, is able to ensure adoption of all matters to be voted upon at the
Annual Meeting.
 
  It is the policy of the Company that proxies, consents, ballots and voting
materials that identify the vote of specific stockholders are kept
confidential, except in a contested proxy or consent solicitation or to meet
applicable legal requirements. All such documents are returned to the
tabulator and are available to the inspectors of election to enable them to
certify the results of the vote. Harris Trust and Savings Bank acts as the
tabulator, and one or more officers or employees of the Harris Bank will serve
as inspectors of election. Comments written on or accompanying proxy cards
will be provided to the Company without indication of the vote of the
stockholder except where the vote is included in the comment or is necessary
for an understanding of the comment.
<PAGE>
 
  The Company's Restated Certificate of Incorporation requires that when any
shares of the Company's Class A common stock are outstanding, at least one-
third of the members of the Board of Directors be "Independent Directors,"
except under specific limited circumstances. The Restated Certificate of
Incorporation also requires that the Board of Directors consist of three
classes, with the Independent Directors allocated as evenly as possible among
the classes. The Company's Restated Certificate of Incorporation and By-laws
allow the directors to increase or decrease the size of the Board, to elect
directors to fill vacancies created by an increase in the number of directors
and to assign elected directors to a class. Pursuant to that authority, in
June 1996 the Board of Directors assigned Jean-Pierre Rosso to serve in the
class of directors whose terms expire at the 1997 Annual Meeting of
Stockholders, James A. Henderson and Neil S. Novich to serve in the class of
directors whose terms expire at the 1998 Annual Meeting of Stockholders, and
Robert J. Darnall and Donald S. Perkins to serve in the class of directors
whose terms expire at the 1999 Annual Meeting of Stockholders. In July 1996,
the Board of Directors elected Ronald L. Thompson, Richard G. Cline and Jerry
K. Pearlman as Independent Directors to serve in the classes of directors
whose terms expire, respectively, at the 1997, 1998 and 1999 annual meetings
of stockholders. An "Independent Director" is defined as someone who is not,
and within the previous 12 months has not been: (a) an officer or employee of
the Company, (b) an officer, director or employee of Inland or any other
subsidiary or affiliate of Inland, or (c) an owner of more than five percent
of the outstanding common stock of Inland or of any other subsidiary or
affiliate of Inland.
 
                             ELECTION OF DIRECTORS
 
  The Board of Directors has nominated Jean-Pierre Rosso and Ronald L.
Thompson for election as directors at the 1997 Annual Meeting of Stockholders.
Each of the nominees is currently a director of the Company. No other
candidates are eligible for election at the 1997 Annual Meeting. Proxies not
limited to the contrary will be voted for Messrs. Rosso and Thompson as
directors of the Company for terms expiring on the date of the Annual Meeting
of the Company in 2000 and until their successors are duly elected and
qualified. Directors shall be elected by a plurality of the votes of the
shares present in person or by proxy at the Annual Meeting and entitled to
vote in the election, and the outcome of the election will therefore not be
affected by shares of stockholders who abstain from voting or withhold
authority to vote in the election, or by broker non-votes. If any nominee
should become unavailable for election (an event that is not anticipated),
proxies may be voted for the election of such other person or persons as may
be designated by the Board of Directors of the Company, or the Board may
reduce its membership. The Board of Directors held seven meetings during 1996.
All incumbent directors attended at least 75% of the combined total number of
meetings of the Board of Directors and committees on which they served.
 
 
                                       2
<PAGE>
 
INFORMATION CONCERNING NOMINEES FOR ELECTION AS DIRECTORS
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------
DIRECTOR 
[PHOTO]      Jean-Pierre Rosso                              Director since 1996
 
             Mr. Rosso, age 56, is Chairman, President and Chief Executive
             Officer of Case Corporation, a worldwide designer, manufacturer
             and distributor of farm and construction machinery, and was
             President and Chief Executive Officer of that company from April
             1994 to March 1996. Prior to joining that company, he was
             President of the Home and Building Control Division of Honeywell
             Inc., a producer of advanced technology products, from 1991 to
             1994 and President of Honeywell Europe from 1987 until 1991. He
             is a member of the Company's Compensation and Nominating and
             Governance Committees. Mr. Rosso also is a director of ADC
             Telecommunications Inc., Case Corporation, Crown Cork & Seal
             Company, Inc., Inland, Inland Steel Company and Principal Mutual
             Life Insurance Company.
 
DIRECTOR  
[PHOTO]      Ronald L. Thompson                             Director since 1996
 
             Mr. Thompson, age 47, has been Chairman of the Board, Chief
             Executive Officer and President of Midwest Stamping Co., a metal-
             stamping and assembly firm serving principally the automotive
             original equipment industry, since March 1993. From 1980 to 1993,
             he was Chairman of the Board and President of The GR Group, Inc.,
             a diversified holding company with interests in manufacturing and
             service activities. He is a member of the Company's Audit
             Committee. Mr. Thompson also is a director of the Illinois Power
             Company, Illinova Corporation, McDonnell Douglas Corporation and
             the Teachers Insurance and Annuity Association.
 
INFORMATION CONCERNING DIRECTORS CONTINUING IN OFFICE
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
DIRECTOR  
[PHOTO]      Richard G. Cline                               Director since 1996
 
             Mr. Cline, age 62, is Chairman of Hawthorne Investors, Inc., a
             private management advisory services and investment firm. He
             served as Chairman of the Board of NICOR, Inc., a diversified
             holding company with subsidiaries engaged in natural gas
             distribution and containerized liner shipping, from 1986 through
             December 1995. He also was NICOR's Chief Executive Officer from
             1986 to May 1995 and its President and Chief Operating Officer
             from 1985 to 1988 and from 1990 to 1994. He is Chairman of the
             Company's Audit Committee and a member of its Executive
             Committee. Mr. Cline also is a director of K-mart Corporation and
             Whitman Corporation.
 
                                       3
<PAGE>
 
INFORMATION CONCERNING DIRECTORS CONTINUING IN OFFICE (CONTINUED)
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
DIRECTOR
[PHOTO]      Robert J. Darnall                              Director since 1986
 
             Mr. Darnall, age 59, has been Chairman of the Company since April
             1995, a position he also held from November 1990 to June 1994. He
             has been Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of Inland since
             1992 and its President, Chief Operating Officer and a Director
             since 1986. He is also Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of
             Inland Steel Company, which he joined in 1962, and has served as
             Chairman since 1992, as a Director since 1983, as Chief Executive
             Officer from 1992 to 1995 and since April 1996, and as President
             for various periods ending most recently in May 1996. He is
             Chairman of the Company's Executive Committee. Mr. Darnall is
             also a director of Cummins Engine Company, Inc., Household
             International, Inc., Inland, Inland Steel Company and the Federal
             Reserve Bank of Chicago.
DIRECTOR 
[PHOTO]      James A. Henderson                             Director since 1996
 
             Mr. Henderson, age 62, is Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of
             Cummins Engine Company, Inc., a manufacturer of diesel engines.
             He joined that company in 1964, was elected Executive Vice
             President in 1971, and was elected Executive Vice President and
             Chief Operating Officer in 1975. In 1977 he was elected President
             and Chief Operating Officer, was elected President and Chief
             Executive Officer in 1994, and assumed his present position in
             1995. He is a member of the Company's Audit Committee. Mr.
             Henderson is also a director of Cummins Engine Company, Inc.,
             Ameritech Corporation, Inland, Inland Steel Company and Rohm and
             Haas Company.
DIRECTOR 
[PHOTO]      Neil S. Novich                                 Director since 1994
 
             Neil S. Novich, age 42, has been President, Chief Executive
             Officer and Chief Operating Officer of the Company, President of
             Joseph T. Ryerson & Son, Inc. ("Ryerson") and Chairman of J. M.
             Tull Metals Company, Inc. since June 1994. Mr. Novich was also
             appointed a Director of the Company in June 1994. He served as
             Chairman of Ryerson from June 1994 to April 1995 and since June
             1996. He was a Senior Vice President of Inland from January 1995
             to May 1996 and served as a Vice President of Inland from June
             1994 to January 1995. Prior to joining Inland in 1994, he led the
             Distribution and Logistics Practice at Bain & Company ("Bain"),
             an international management consulting firm, from 1987 and was
             employed by Bain beginning in 1981. He is a member of the
             Company's Executive Committee.
 
                                       4
<PAGE>
 
INFORMATION CONCERNING DIRECTORS CONTINUING IN OFFICE (CONTINUED)
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
 
DIRECTOR     Jerry K. Pearlman                              Director since 1996
[PHOTO]
             Mr. Pearlman, age 58, was Chairman of Zenith Electronics
             Corporation, a manufacturer of consumer electronics and cable
             television products, prior to his retirement in November 1995. He
             was also Chief Executive Officer from 1983 through April 1995. He
             is Chairman of the Company's Compensation Committee and a member
             of its Executive and Nominating and Governance Committees. Mr.
             Pearlman is also a director of Stone Container Corporation.
 
DIRECTOR     Donald S. Perkins                              Director since 1996
[PHOTO]
             Mr. Perkins, age 70, was Chairman of Jewel Companies, Inc., a
             diversified retailer, prior to his retirement in 1980. He is
             Chairman of the Company's Nominating and Governance Committee and
             a member of its Compensation and Executive Committees. Mr.
             Perkins is also a director of Aon Corporation, Cummins Engine
             Company, Inc., Illinova Corporation, Inland, Inland Steel
             Company, LaSalle Street Fund Incorporated, LaSalle U.S. Realty
             Income and Growth Fund, Lucent Technologies, Inc., the Putnam
             Funds, Springs Industries, Inc., and Time Warner Inc.
 
                           COMPENSATION OF DIRECTORS
 
  Prior to the consummation of the Offering, the directors were not
compensated for their services in such capacity. After consummation of the
Offering, pursuant to the terms of the Directors' Compensation Plan, each
director who is not an employee of the Company or any of its subsidiaries or
affiliates will receive an annual retainer of $40,000, which will be paid 50%
in shares of Class A common stock and 50% in cash, provided that a director
may elect to receive all or any part of the cash portion of such retainer in
shares of Class A common stock. The cash portion is paid quarterly for service
(prorated in whole months) as a director during the quarter. The stock portion
is issued at the beginning of the director's term as restricted stock and
vests in monthly increments over the period during which the director serves,
with directors entitled to any dividends on the restricted portion. Such
directors will also receive $1,000 for each special meeting of the Board of
Directors, and for each special committee meeting not held in conjunction with
a regular or special meeting of the Board of Directors, attended by them. No
fees will be paid for any meeting of the Executive Committee, and membership
on the Compensation and Nominating and Governance Committees is regarded as
membership on only one committee for purposes of payment of fees for special
meetings. Each director who serves as chairman of a standing committee of the
Board of Directors will receive an additional annual retainer of $4,000.
Pursuant to the terms of the Directors' Compensation Plan, each such director
may also elect, prior to January 1 of each year, to defer payment of all or
any portion of the retainer and fees to which he or she would otherwise become
entitled during such year as a director of the Company.
 
                                       5
<PAGE>
 
If a director becomes a director during a calendar year, the deferral election
may be made within 30 days after he or she becomes a director and will be
effective for the remainder of that year subsequent to the election. Deferred
amounts will be distributed in a lump sum or installments in cash or shares of
Class A common stock, all as elected by the director at the time of the
deferral. Interest on cash deferrals will be credited at the prime rate in
effect from time to time at The First National Bank of Chicago (or its
successor). Stock deferrals will be credited with dividends paid on shares of
Class A common stock from time to time. A total of 100,000 shares of Class A
common stock has been reserved for issuance under the Directors' Compensation
Plan, subject to adjustment for certain corporate transactions affecting the
number or type of outstanding shares. The Company also pays the premiums on a
business accident insurance policy insuring each non-employee director for
amounts up to $500,000.
 
                     COMMITTEES OF THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS
 
  Among the standing committees of the Board of Directors, the Company has an
Audit Committee, a Compensation Committee and a Nominating and Governance
Committee. The members of these three committees, none of whom is an employee
of the Company or any of its subsidiaries, are identified above under
"Election Of Directors."
 
  The duties of the Audit Committee are to review the proposed scope of the
annual audit and the results and recommendations of the independent auditors
on completion of the annual audit; to review the Company's systems of internal
accounting and operating controls, as well as the performance of its internal
auditors; to review the proposed scope of annual and five-year internal audit
programs and the reports and recommendations of the internal auditors; to
review the financial review section of the Company's annual report to
stockholders and annual report on Form 10-K; to review the minutes of the
quarterly audit review of the independent auditors; to nominate a firm of
independent auditors to be submitted to the stockholders for election at the
annual meeting; to approve all non-audit services to be performed by the
independent auditors; to approve the compensation of the independent auditors;
to monitor compliance with policies relating to conflicts of interest,
sensitive payments and similar matters; to review registration statements
prepared in connection with financings by the Company or its subsidiaries; and
to review major transactions and relationships with affiliates, and duties of
the independent directors. The Audit Committee held two meetings in 1996.
 
  The duties of the Compensation Committee are to review management
recommendations regarding the Company-wide compensation plan; to make
recommendations to the Board of Directors with respect to the salaries of the
senior officers and key employees of the Company; to administer the Ryerson
Tull 1996 Incentive Stock Plan; and to make recommendations to the Board of
Directors to establish or modify executive compensation plans and programs.
The Compensation Committee held two meetings in 1996.
 
  The duties of the Nominating and Governance Committee are to prepare and
maintain a list of qualified candidates to fill vacancies on the Board of
Directors and recommend to the Board of
 
                                       6
<PAGE>
 
Directors candidates to fill any such vacancies; to recommend to the Board of
Directors a process for evaluating the Board of Directors and overseeing such
process; to recommend to the Board of Directors annually a slate of candidates
for election as directors by the stockholders at the annual meeting; to
recommend the establishment or modification of compensation of non-employee
directors, including managing and administering the Directors' Compensation
Plan; and to monitor corporate governance issues, including recommending to
the Board of Directors policies and procedures for corporate governance and
assuring compliance with policies and procedures as adopted. The Nominating
and Governance Committee held two meetings in 1996.
 
  The Nominating and Governance Committee will consider qualified candidates
recommended by the stockholders for designation as nominees for election at
the Annual Meeting of Stockholders to be held in 1998 and subsequent years. In
order for a candidate recommended by a stockholder to be considered by the
Nominating and Governance Committee for designation as a nominee for election
at the Annual Meeting of Stockholders to be held in 1998, the name of such
candidate, together with a written description of his or her qualifications,
must be received by the Corporate Secretary of the Company prior to January 1,
1998.
 
  The By-laws of the Company provide a formal procedure, including an advance
notice requirement, for nominations by stockholders of persons for election as
directors at annual meetings of the Company.
 
                                       7
<PAGE>
 
                SECURITY OWNERSHIP OF DIRECTORS AND MANAGEMENT
 
  The following table presents, as of March 31, 1997, the Company and Inland
equity securities beneficially owned (as that term is defined by the
Securities and Exchange Commission) by all directors of the Company, the other
named executive officers of the Company and the directors and executive
officers of the Company as a group, in each case with sole voting and
investment power except as indicated. Company Class A common stock and Inland
common stock each include certain preferred stock purchase rights. The shares
of Inland Series E ESOP Convertible Preferred Stock (the "Inland Series E ESOP
Preferred Stock") shown as beneficially owned by the executive officers are
held for their respective accounts in the Inland Steel Industries Thrift Plan
and, under such Plan, could be converted upon retirement or other termination
of employment into an equal number of shares of Inland common stock (subject
to adjustment in certain events). Excluded from the number of shares of Inland
Series E ESOP Preferred Stock listed as beneficially owned are unallocated
shares of Inland Series E ESOP Preferred Stock that the ESOP Trustee is
required to vote or dispose of in the manner and proportion in which allocated
shares are directed to be voted or disposed of.
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                           COMPANY CLASS A       INLAND       INLAND SERIES E ESOP
                          COMMON STOCK(/1/) COMMON STOCK(/2/) PREFERRED STOCK(/3/)
                          ----------------- ----------------- --------------------
<S>                       <C>               <C>               <C>
Directors
 Richard G. Cline.......         4,212(/4/)           --                 --
 Robert J. Darnall......        11,754           300,124              2,070
 James A. Henderson.....         2,212(/4/)        2,546                 --
 Neil S. Novich.........        95,615               130                459
 Jerry K. Pearlman......         6,424(/4/)           --                 --
 Donald S. Perkins......         6,212(/4/)        4,046                 --
 Jean-Pierre Rosso......         3,424(/4/)        1,061                 --
 Ronald L. Thompson.....         4,424(/4/)           --                 --
Named Executive Officers
 Jay M. Gratz...........         3,061            41,880              1,307
 Timothy L. LaPerre.....        43,960             1,697              1,289
 Carl G. Lusted.........        55,606             2,890              1,450
 Stephen E. Makarewicz..        39,104             1,999                592
All Directors and
 Executive Officers as a
 Group..................       378,371(/4/)      407,075             13,764
</TABLE>
- --------
(1) Messrs. Novich and Lusted individually own 1.81% and 1.05%, respectively,
    of the Company's common stock (including restricted stock and options
    exercisable within 60 days of March 31, 1997). No other director or named
    executive officer individually owns 1% or more of such outstanding common
    stock. All directors and executive officers as a group own 7.2% of the
    outstanding common stock of the Company. Includes shares which the
    following have the right to acquire under options exercisable within 60
    days after March 31, 1997: Mr. Novich--75,359, Mr. LaPerre--38,324, Mr.
    Lusted--48,396, Mr. Makarewicz--33,425, and all directors and executive
    officers as a group--272,613; and shares held under restricted
 
                                       8
<PAGE>
 
    awards as follows: Mr. Darnall--3,654, Mr. Novich--18,156, Mr. Gratz--
    1,461, Mr. LaPerre--3,636, Mr. Lusted--5,210, Mr. Makarewicz--4,179, and
    all directors and executive officers as a group--51,617. Also includes
    2,400 shares held directly or indirectly by family members of an executive
    officer, for which beneficial ownership is disclaimed. Excludes shares of
    Company Class B common stock owned by Inland. (See "Additional Information
    Relating to Voting Securities.")
(2) Excludes shares of Inland common stock into which Inland Series E ESOP
    Preferred Stock may be converted. Each director or named executive officer
    of the Company individually owns, and all directors and executive officers
    of the Company as a group collectively own, less than 1% of the
    outstanding Inland common stock. Includes shares held jointly with other
    persons, as follows: Mr. Darnall--290, and all directors and executive
    officers as a group--2,927; shares which the following have the right to
    acquire under options exercisable within 60 days after March 31, 1997: Mr.
    Darnall--221,000, Mr. Gratz--35,680, and all directors and executive
    officers as a group--301,660; and shares held under restricted stock
    awards, as follows: Mr. Darnall--15,000, Mr. Gratz--3,200, and all
    directors and executive officers as a group--20,200.
(3) Each director and named executive officer of the Company individually
    owns, and all directors and executive officers as a group collectively
    own, less than 1% of the Inland Series E ESOP Preferred Stock.
(4) Includes shares of Company Class A common stock payable under the terms of
    the Ryerson Tull Directors' Compensation Plan which are subject to
    forfeiture or the receipt of which has been deferred as follows: shares
    subject to forfeiture, Mr. Cline--101 and Mr. Rosso--202; and deferred
    shares, Messrs. Henderson and Perkins--1,212 shares each and Messrs.
    Pearlman and Thompson--2,424 shares each, of which 101 and 202,
    respectively, are subject to forfeiture.
 
                                       9
<PAGE>
 
             ADDITIONAL INFORMATION RELATING TO VOTING SECURITIES
 
  The following table sets forth, as of December 31, 1996, the only holders
known to the Company to own beneficially more than 5% of its common stock.
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                      NUMBER OF SHARES
NAME AND ADDRESS OF                     OR AMOUNT OF     PERCENT OF
BENEFICIAL OWNER                      SECURITIES OWNED     CLASS
- -------------------                   ----------------   ----------
<S>                                   <C>                <C>
Class A Common Stock
 FMR Corp.                                  581,900(/1/)   11.1%
 82 Devonshire Street
 Boston, MA 02109
 MacKay-Shields Financial Corporation       371,210(/2/)    7.1%
 9 West 57th Street
 New York, NY 10019
 
 Vanguard/Windsor Funds, Inc.
 100 Vanguard Boulevard
 Malvern, PA 19355
 Wellington Management Company, LLP.      1,450,500(/3/)   27.8%
 75 State Street
 Boston, MA 02109
 
Class B Common Stock
 Inland Steel Industries, Inc.           34,000,000         100%
 30 West Monroe Street
 Chicago, IL 60603
</TABLE>
- --------
(1)  FMR Corp., on behalf of itself, Edward C. Johnson 3d, Abigail P. Johnson,
     Fidelity Management & Research Company and Fidelity Value Fund, reported
     sole dispositive power as to 581,900 shares of the Company's Class A
     common stock.
(2)  MacKay-Shields Financial Corporation reported shared voting and
     dispositive power as to all such shares and reported that the interest of
     The MainStay Funds, a registered investment company, relates to more than
     5% of the Company's Class A common stock.
(3)  Vanguard/Windsor Funds, Inc. reported sole voting power and shared
     dispositive power as to 1,450,500 shares. Wellington Management Company,
     LLP, in its capacity as investment advisor to its clients, including
     Vanguard/Windsor Funds, Inc., also reported beneficial ownership of these
     shares with shared dispositive power.
 
                                      10
<PAGE>
 
                CERTAIN RELATIONSHIPS AND RELATED TRANSACTIONS
 
GUARANTOR ARRANGEMENT
 
  Joseph T. Ryerson & Son, Inc. ("Ryerson"), a wholly owned subsidiary of the
Company, is the Guarantor of $101,500,000 of the Inland Steel Industries
Thrift Plan ESOP notes. The notes are payable in installments through July
2004 and bear interest rates ranging from 7.96% to 8.80%. Ryerson could be
required to make payments pursuant to the guarantee after a failure by Inland
to provide funds to cover any deficiency in the Thrift Plan ESOP Trust. There
have been no deficiencies in the ESOP Trust. No payments were made under such
guarantee arrangement in 1996 and none are expected in 1997.
 
SUPPORT SERVICES; INDEMNIFICATION AND CORPORATE SEPARATENESS
 
  During 1996, the Company and Inland entered into a corporate separation
agreement (the "Corporate Separation Agreement") relating to, among other
things, the provision of support services by Inland to the Company,
participation in a joint marketing program, indemnification by and between the
Company and Inland, and procedures intended to maintain separation between the
Company and Inland.
 
  Inland has provided certain support services to the Company in the following
areas: finance (including tax administration, cash management, pension and
employee benefit plan administration, auditing and corporate communications),
legal (including public affairs and corporate secretary), human resources and
information technology, as well as senior management services. The Corporate
Separation Agreement provides that Inland will continue to provide these
services to the Company for a period of five years, and is cancelable by
either party upon 60 days' written notice to the other party or immediately by
mutual consent of the parties. The Corporate Separation Agreement provides
that, consistent with past practice, specific distinguishable costs incurred
by Inland in providing services to the Company will be charged to the Company
and that other support costs not specifically allocated to Inland or other
Inland subsidiaries will be allocated to the Company based on the percentage
of Inland consolidated operating assets attributable to the Company. The
percentage of Inland consolidated assets attributable to the Company is
expected to fluctuate from one period to another. At December 31, 1996, such
percentage was 27.9%. Charges by Inland to the Company for these services
amounted to $6,400,000 in 1996.
 
  The Corporate Separation Agreement provides that the Company and Inland will
cooperate in joint marketing efforts currently referred to as the "red diamond
program." The red diamond program involves a team approach to maximizing
customer satisfaction by involving personnel from both the Company and Inland
with various areas of expertise to provide an integrated solution to a
customer's needs. The obligations of the Company and Inland to cooperate in
the joint marketing efforts will continue for a period of five years,
cancelable by either party upon 60 days' written notice to the other party or
immediately by mutual consent of the parties.
 
 
                                      11
<PAGE>
 
  The Corporate Separation Agreement also provides that the Company on the one
hand, and Inland and its other subsidiaries on the other, will indemnify each
other for losses, claims and damages that they may suffer or for which they
may become liable, including those relating to tax, environmental, ERISA and
pension liabilities, that arise out of the relationship of the parties prior
to the Offering or as a result of Inland's control of the Company.
 
  Provisions intended to maintain the existence of the Company and Inland as
separate corporate entities also are included in the Corporate Separation
Agreement. Such provisions provide that, among other things: no more than one-
half of the Company's executive officers, other than the Company's Chairman
and Chief Executive Officer, will be officers or employees of Inland or any of
its other subsidiaries; the Company and Inland each will maintain its assets
separate from those of the other and the other's subsidiaries; the Company and
Inland each will account for and manage its liabilities separately from those
of the other and the other's subsidiaries; the Company will maintain offices
separate from the offices of Inland and Inland's other subsidiaries; and,
other than the ESOP Guarantee and certain Inland guarantees of the Company's
equipment leases, neither the Company nor Inland will pledge its assets for
the benefit of or grant guarantees or otherwise hold out its credit as being
available to satisfy the obligations of the other or any of the other's
subsidiaries. These provisions automatically terminate at any time that the
number of outstanding shares of Class B common stock represents less than 50%
of the total number of outstanding shares of Class A common stock and Class B
common stock.
 
TAX-SHARING ARRANGEMENTS
 
  During 1996 the Company and Inland entered into a tax-sharing agreement
(documenting prior tax-sharing policies) under which current and deferred
federal income tax provisions are determined for each company in the Inland
group on a stand-alone basis. Under the agreement, current tax liability for
any member of the Inland group, including the Company, is paid to Inland. If
the Company is unable to use all of its allocated tax attributes (net
operating loss and tax credit carryforwards) in a given year but other
companies in the consolidated group are able to utilize them, then Inland will
pay the Company for the use of such tax attributes. The agreement also
contains state tax-sharing arrangements, similar to the arrangements described
above with respect to federal taxes, for those states in which the
consolidated group is charged state taxes on a unitary or combined basis. The
Company paid Inland approximately $42,700,000 pursuant to such agreement for
1996.
 
CROSS-LICENSE AGREEMENT
 
  During 1996 the Company and Inland entered into a cross-license agreement
(the "Cross-License Agreement") pursuant to which the Company licenses on a
royalty-free basis its "Ryerson" name and know-how for use by Inland and its
affiliates outside North America and pursuant to which Inland licenses on a
royalty-free basis its "red diamond" trademark for use by
 
                                      12
<PAGE>
 
the Company. Pursuant to the Cross-License Agreement, the Company and Inland
are each required to reimburse the other for the reasonable costs incurred by
the other in providing its respective license property pursuant to the
agreement. The Cross-License Agreement terminates automatically at any time
that the number of outstanding shares of Class B common stock represents less
than 50% of the total number of outstanding shares of Class A common stock and
Class B common stock. The Cross-License Agreement may also be terminated by
either party upon 60 days' written notice to the other party or immediately by
mutual consent of the Company and Inland. The Cross-License Agreement provides
that following termination of the agreement, the Company and Inland each has a
right to a license (which may be exclusive) of any part of the other's
property that is then subject to the agreement for a transition period of up
to two years at a fair market value license fee and upon such other terms as
may be mutually agreed upon by the Company and Inland. Upon a failure to
mutually agree on a license fee and other terms, provision is made for
determination by a qualified independent expert. No payments were made under
such arrangement in 1996 and none are expected in 1997.
 
PENSIONS
 
  Effective April 30, 1996, that portion of the Inland Pension Plan covering
the Company's current and former employees was separated and became the
Company's Pension Plan. The Company's Pension Plan assumed the liabilities of
the Inland Pension Plan attributed to current and former Company employees and
a corresponding percentage of the assets. If the Company's Pension Plan had
been in existence at September 30, 1995, the most recent valuation date of the
Inland Pension Plan prior to April 30, 1996, the Company's projected benefit
obligation would have been $266,000,000 and the Company's share of the Inland
Pension Plan assets would have been $249,000,000, resulting in an under-
funding of $17,000,000 for financial reporting purposes. However, under ERISA
funding guidelines, which take a longer-term view in determining the interest
rate to use in valuing liabilities, no contribution was required for the
Inland Pension Plan or the Company's Pension Plan in 1996 and none will be
required in 1997.
 
TRANSACTIONS WITH INLAND STEEL COMPANY
 
  During 1996, the Company purchased approximately $202,000,000 of material
from Inland Steel Company ("ISC"), a wholly-owned subsidiary of Inland, on
arm's-length terms. The terms of these arrangements were negotiated between
the Company and ISC and are similar to other large supply arrangements that
the Company has with other suppliers and that ISC has with other purchasers.
The Company expects to continue purchasing significant amounts of material
from ISC. ISC also buys material from the Company, which purchases amounted to
approximately $11,300,000 in 1996, and may continue to buy material from the
Company in the future. Any future transactions will continue to be on an
arm's-length basis. Pursuant to the Company's Restated Certificate of
Incorporation, the Company's Independent Directors reviewed and reported to
the Board of Directors that the transactions were conducted on terms at least
as favorable as those that could be obtained from an unaffiliated third party.
 
TRANSACTIONS WITH I/N TEK AND I/N KOTE
 
  Inland and Nippon Steel Corporation ("NSC") have entered into two joint
venture arrangements located near New Carlisle, Indiana. A steel cold-rolling
facility, I/N Tek, is owned
 
                                      13
<PAGE>
 
60% by a subsidiary of ISC and 40% by a subsidiary of NSC. A second joint
venture, I/N Kote, owned equally by subsidiaries of ISC and NSC,
electrogalvanizes and hot-dip galvanizes cold-rolled steel. In addition, as of
April 2, 1997, NSC or its subsidiary companies owned voting notes of Inland
representing approximately 5.5% of the voting power of Inland and 352,400
shares of common stock of Inland representing approximately 0.7% of the voting
power of Inland. During 1996, subsidiaries of the Company purchased
approximately $2,100,000 of electrogalvanized and hot-dip galvanized steel
from I/N Kote. During the same period, subsidiaries of the Company sold I/N
Tek and I/N Kote various metals products valued at approximately $58,000 and
$81,000, respectively. The Company expects to enter into similar transactions
with I/N Tek and I/N Kote during 1997. All such transactions have been and
will continue to be made on an arm's-length basis.
 
                            EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION
 
  The following table presents the compensation for 1995 and 1996 to the two
individuals who served in the position of chief executive officer during 1996
and the four other most highly compensated executive officers of the Company.
The table shows compensation earned by such named executive officers in all
capacities in which they served and includes compensation paid or accrued by
Inland, the Company and subsidiaries of the Company.
 
                          SUMMARY COMPENSATION TABLE
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                      LONG-TERM
                                                   ANNUAL COMPENSATION           COMPENSATION AWARDS
                                                -------------------------      ------------------------
                                                                   OTHER                    SECURITIES      ALL
NAME AND                                                          ANNUAL       RESTRICTED   UNDERLYING     OTHER
PRINCIPAL                                                         COMPEN-         STOCK       STOCK       COMPEN-
POSITION(/1/)                              YEAR  SALARY   BONUS   SATION       AWARDS(/2/) OPTIONS(/3/) SATION(/4/)
- -------------                              ---- -------- -------- -------      ----------- ------------ -----------
<S>                                        <C>  <C>      <C>      <C>          <C>         <C>          <C>
Robert J. Darnall                          1996 $684,996 $316,100      0        $104,488     100,000      $33,833
Chairman and Director                      1995  690,961  515,800      0         169,500      30,000       30,122
Neil S. Novich                             1996  400,095  386,600      0          70,625      42,000       18,845
President, Chief Executive                 1995  387,113  400,400      0          84,750      14,000       18,788
 Officer and Director
Jay M. Gratz                               1996  224,274  104,200      0          54,900      36,000       11,097
Vice President--Finance and                1995  173,752  104,200      0          28,250       4,000        8,696
 Chief Financial Officer
Timothy L. LaPerre                         1996  177,124   95,200      0          16,950      12,000        8,848
President--Ryerson Coil                    1995  171,914   84,600      0          28,500       4,000
 Processing
Carl G. Lusted                             1996  232,667  200,500      0          25,425      21,000       11,639
President--Ryerson Central                 1995  223,384  206,250      0          39,550       7,000       11,181
Stephen E. Makarewicz                      1996  181,041  100,000      0          21,188      18,000        7,352
President--Tull                            1995  167,504  125,500 13,333(/5/)     33,900       6,000        2,533
</TABLE>

 
                                      14
<PAGE>
 
- --------
(1) Messrs. Darnall and Gratz are also executive officers of Inland, as was
    Mr. Novich prior to the Offering. Amounts shown for Messrs. Darnall,
    Novich and Gratz represent their total compensation for 1996 and 1995. All
    of Mr. Darnall's compensation was paid by Inland, as was Mr. Novich's
    compensation prior to consummation of the Offering, and Mr. Gratz's after
    the consummation of the Offering. The Company reimbursed Inland for 27.9%
    of Mr. Darnall's compensation and that portion of Mr. Novich's and Mr.
    Gratz's compensation paid by Inland. Such percentages are based on the
    ratio of the Company's operating assets to Inland's consolidated operating
    assets and were used to determine the percentage of Inland's overhead
    expenses allocable to the Company.
 
(2) Awards for 1996 consist of Company common stock, except for Mr. Gratz,
    whose award consisted solely of Inland common stock, and Mr. Darnall,
    whose awards included both Company common stock and Inland common stock.
    Awards for 1995 consist of Inland common stock. All awards are valued at
    the aggregate market value as of the date of grant, based on the closing
    market price on such date. Dividends are paid on such shares to the extent
    paid on Class A common stock or Inland common stock, as applicable. The
    vesting schedule for restricted stock awards to the executives identified
    in the table provides that all shares will vest at the end of a three-year
    period commencing on the date of grant, except for a July 24, 1996 grant
    for 3,000 shares of Inland common stock made to Mr. Darnall that will vest
    on May 20, 1999. Vesting of Company common stock or Inland common stock
    may be accelerated at the discretion of the Company's or Inland's
    Compensation Committee, respectively, in the event of exceptional
    individual performance and/or significant progress by the Company, Inland
    or the appropriate business unit in meeting its operating and financial
    objectives. For all named executive officers except Messrs. Darnall and
    Gratz, shares of restricted Class A common stock of the Company were
    substituted for all outstanding Inland restricted stock awards as
    described below under "Substitution of Outstanding Stock Awards and
    Options." Mr. Gratz received substitute Class A common stock of the
    Company for 50% of his outstanding 1996 Inland restricted stock award and
    Mr. Darnall's outstanding Inland stock awards and options were not
    replaced with Company common stock. The number and value of the aggregate
    restricted stock holdings of Company Class A common stock and Inland
    common stock at December 31, 1996, based on the closing market price on
    that date, were: Company common stock, Mr. Darnall--3,654 shares/$49,329;
    Mr. Novich--18,156 shares/$245,106; Mr. Gratz--1,461 shares/$19,724; Mr.
    LaPerre--3,636 shares/$49,086; Mr. Lusted--5,210 shares/$70,335; and Mr.
    Makarewicz--4,179 shares/$56,417; and Inland common stock, Mr. Darnall--
    15,000 shares/$300,000; and Mr. Gratz--3,200 shares/$64,000.
 
(3) Includes options to purchase Inland common stock granted prior to the
    Offering. After the Offering, options for Company Class A common stock
    were substituted for outstanding options to purchase Inland common stock
    for all named executive officers except Messrs. Darnall and Gratz, as
    described below under "Substitution of Outstanding Stock Awards and
    Options" below.
 
                                      15
<PAGE>
 
(4) Amounts represent the value of vested and unvested employer contributions
    and allocations to the Inland Thrift Plan and the Inland Non-Qualified
    Thrift Plan (or, in the case of Mr. Makarewicz, the J. M. Tull Metals
    Company, Inc. Employees' Profit Sharing Plan).
(5) Represents reimbursement of relocation expenses and related tax gross-up.
 
SUBSTITUTION OF OUTSTANDING STOCK AWARDS AND OPTIONS
 
  Following consummation of the Offering, shares of restricted stock under the
Ryerson Tull 1996 Incentive Stock Plan (the "Incentive Stock Plan") were
substituted for outstanding shares of Inland restricted stock that had been
granted to employees of the Company under the Inland 1995 Incentive Stock Plan
and prior Inland plans (collectively, the "Inland Incentive Plans"). The
number of restricted shares of Company Class A common stock substituted bore
the same ratio to the number of restricted shares of Inland common stock held
by the employee as the average value (defined below) of a share of Inland
common stock bore to the average value of a share of Class A common stock,
which ratio was 1.218254. Average value with respect to a share of Inland
common stock or of Company Class A common stock means the average closing
price of such stock for the first ten trading days following the date of
substitution. Similarly, options granted under the Incentive Stock Plan
("Substitute Options") were substituted for outstanding options for Inland
common stock granted to employees of the Company under the Inland Incentive
Plans, with the number of shares of Company Class A common stock subject to
the Substitute Options and the exercise price thereof determined in accordance
with Section 424 of the Code and regulations thereunder. The Compensation
Committee had discretion to determine, however, that any employee could
receive restricted shares of Company Class A common stock or Substitute
Options with respect to less than all of his or her outstanding restricted
stock or options under the Inland Incentive Plans. The Compensation Committee
determined that Mr. Gratz and two other executive officers of the Company who
also are Inland officers would receive substitute restricted Company Class A
common stock for 50% of their outstanding 1996 Inland restricted stock awards
and would receive no Substitute Options, and that Mr. Darnall would receive no
substitute restricted Company Class A common stock or Substitute Options. To
the extent Substitute Options or substitute restricted stock awards were not
fully vested at the effective date of the substitution, service with Inland or
any of its subsidiaries was considered service with the Company for purposes
of the vesting requirements of the Substitute Options and substitute
restricted stock awards.
 
  Each of Messrs. Novich, LaPerre, Lusted, and Makarewicz received Substitute
Options to purchase the following numbers of shares of Company Class A common
stock: Mr. Novich-- 109,641 shares, Mr. LaPerre--48,119 shares, Mr. Lusted--
65,537 shares, and Mr. Makarewicz--48,117 shares. These options have exercise
prices ranging from $17.5456 to $32.6287 per share and expire on various dates
from July 21, 1987 to March 26, 2006. Grants of Substitute Options are not
included in the table under the caption "Individual Option Grants in 1996"
below because they were deemed to have been granted at the dates of grant of
the corresponding Inland options for which they were substituted. The
Substitute Options are included in the table below under the caption "Year-End
Option/SAR Values."
 
                                      16
<PAGE>
 
INDIVIDUAL OPTION GRANTS IN 1996
 
  The following table presents information with respect to (a) individual
grants of options that were made under the Inland 1995 Incentive Stock Plan
during the last fiscal year to the named executive officers and (b) the grant
date present value of such options. No new grants of options were made under
the Company Incentive Stock Plan during 1996. See "Substitution of Outstanding
Stock Awards and Options" above.
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                              INDIVIDUAL GRANTS
                         -----------------------------------------------------------
                          NUMBER OF    PERCENT OF
                          SECURITIES  TOTAL OPTIONS
                          UNDERLYING   GRANTED TO
                           OPTIONS    EMPLOYEES IN   EXERCISE  EXPIRATION GRANT DATE
          NAME           GRANTED(/1/)  FISCAL YEAR  PRICE(/2/) DATE(/1/)  VALUE(/3/)
- ------------------------ ------------ ------------- ---------- ---------- ----------
<S>                      <C>          <C>           <C>        <C>        <C>
Robert J. Darnall.......   100,000         7.1%      $24.6875  3/26/2006   $873,000
Neil S. Novich..........    42,000         3.0        24.6875  3/26/2006    366,660
Jay M. Gratz............    12,000         0.8        24.6875  3/26/2006    104,760
                            24,000         1.7        22.6875  5/20/2006    195,840
Timothy L. LaPerre......    12,000         0.8        24.6875  3/26/2006    104,760
Carl G. Lusted..........    21,000         1.5        24.6875  3/26/2006    183,330
Stephen E. Makarewicz...    18,000         1.3        24.6875  3/26/2006    157,140
</TABLE>
- --------
(1) All options are for Inland common stock and were granted on March 27,
    1996, except for an option for 24,000 shares granted to Mr. Gratz on May
    21, 1996. They become exercisable with respect to 33% of the shares after
    one year from the date of grant, 67% after two years from the date of
    grant, and are fully exercisable after three years from the date of grant.
    All options granted in 1996 were transferable, with the advance written
    consent of the Compensation Committee of the Board of Directors, (a) to a
    spouse or descendants, (b) to a trust for the benefit of the optionee, his
    or her spouse or descendants, or (c) as a charitable contribution. After
    the Offering, options for Company Class A common stock were substituted
    for Inland options for all named executive officers except Messrs. Darnall
    and Gratz. See "Substitution of Outstanding Stock Awards and Options"
    above. See "Change in Control of the Company" for option provisions
    regarding any change in control of the Company.
(2) The exercise price is equal to the average of the high and low price of
    Inland's common stock on the New York Stock Exchange Composite
    Transactions on the date of grant. Upon consummation of the Offering,
    options for Company Class A common stock were substituted for Inland
    options for named executive officers except Messrs. Darnall and Gratz. See
    "Substitution of Outstanding Stock Awards and Options" above. The exercise
    price may be paid by delivery of already-owned shares, and an optionee may
    elect to have the Company withhold shares of stock (or accept already-
    owned shares) to satisfy tax withholding obligations with respect to
    option exercises or payments.
(3) In accordance with Securities and Exchange Commission rules, the Black-
    Scholes option pricing model was chosen to estimate the grant date present
    value of the options granted under the Inland Incentive Plan during 1996.
    The use of this model should not be construed
 
                                      17
<PAGE>
 
   as an endorsement of the model's accuracy at valuing options. The following
   assumptions were made for purposes of calculating the value of the options
   as of the grant date: the option term is 10 years, the volatility of Inland
   common stock is 31.83% (31.75% for grants made on May 21, 1996) (calculated
   using monthly stock prices for the five-year period prior to the grant
   date), the ten-year risk-free interest rate is 6.13% (6.47% for grants made
   on May 21, 1996), the dividend yield is 1.08%, and the expected term is
   five years. The value of the options granted in 1996 depends upon the
   actual performance of the Company's Class A common stock or Inland common
   stock during the applicable period; the actual value, if any, that an
   optionee will realize upon exercise of an option will depend on the excess
   of the market value of such common stock over the exercise price on the
   date the option is exercised.
 
YEAR END OPTION/SAR VALUES
 
  The following table presents the number of securities underlying the
option/SAR holdings of the named executive officers at the end of 1996 and the
value of such holdings. No options were exercised by named executive officers
in 1996.
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                   COMPANY OPTIONS                    INLAND OPTIONS
                         ----------------------------------- ---------------------------------
                            NUMBER OF                           NUMBER OF
                           SECURITIES         VALUE OF         SECURITIES        VALUE OF
                           UNDERLYING        UNEXERCISED       UNDERLYING       UNEXERCISED
                           UNEXERCISED      IN-THE-MONEY       UNEXERCISED     IN-THE-MONEY
                         OPTIONS/SARS AT   OPTIONS/SARS AT   OPTIONS/SARS AT  OPTIONS/SARS AT
                         FISCAL YEAR-END   FISCAL YEAR-END   FISCAL YEAR-END  FISCAL YEAR-END
                          (EXERCISABLE/     (EXERCISABLE/     (EXERCISABLE/    (EXERCISABLE/
NAME                     UNEXERCISABLE)  UNEXERCISABLE)(/1/) UNEXERCISABLE)  UNEXERCISED)(/1/)
- ----                     --------------- ------------------- --------------- -----------------
<S>                      <C>             <C>                 <C>             <C>
Robert J. Darnall.......       0/0              $0/0         169,000/115,000       $0/0
Neil S. Novich..........  49,947/59,694          0/0               0/0              0/0
Jay M. Gratz............       0/0               0/0           21,800/38,000        0/0
Timothy L. LaPerre......  31,063/17,056          0/0               0/0              0/0
Carl G. Lusted..........  35,690/29,847          0/0               0/0              0/0
Stephen E. Makarewicz...  22,534/25,583          0/0               0/0              0/0
</TABLE>
- --------
(1) All such options are for Class A common stock of the Company or for Inland
    common stock, as noted. Value is based on the closing price of the
    Company's Class A common stock or Inland common stock, as applicable, on
    the New York Stock Exchange Composite Transactions on December 31, 1996.
    After the Offering, options for Company Class A common stock were
    substituted for outstanding options for Inland common stock for all named
    executive officers except Messrs. Darnall and Gratz. See "Substitution of
    Outstanding Stock Awards and Options" above.
 
                                      18
<PAGE>
 
            PENSION BENEFITS; RETIREMENT AND TERMINATION AGREEMENTS
 
PENSION BENEFITS
 
  Prior to April 30, 1996, certain employees of the Company were eligible to
participate in the Inland Pension Plan. Effective April 30, 1996, that portion
of the Inland Pension Plan covering the Company's current and former employees
was separated and became the Company's Pension Plan. Employees covered by the
Company's Pension Plan were credited with the number of years of service
credited to them under the Inland Pension Plan as of the separation date.
Messrs. Darnall and Gratz are covered by the Inland Pension Plan, which
provides the same benefits as the Company's Pension Plan. The following table
shows the maximum annual pension benefits payable on a straight life annuity
basis to employees in various earnings classifications upon retirement at age
65. All benefit amounts shown in such table are subject to offset based upon
Social Security earnings. Pension benefits are provided to eligible salaried
employees of Tull under a separate benefit schedule of the Company's Pension
Plan, as discussed below.
 
                              PENSION PLAN TABLE
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
  AVERAGE ANNUAL
   EARNINGS FOR
  THE APPLICABLE         ANNUAL PENSION BENEFITS FOR YEARS OF SERVICE SHOWN
 YEAR-OF-SERVICE   --------------------------------------------------------------
      PERIOD       5 YEARS  10 YEARS 15 YEARS 20 YEARS 25 YEARS 30 YEARS 35 YEARS
 ---------------   -------- -------- -------- -------- -------- -------- --------
 <S>               <C>      <C>      <C>      <C>      <C>      <C>      <C>
 $  200,000......  $ 17,000 $ 34,000 $ 51,000 $ 68,000 $ 85,000 $102,000 $119,000
    400,000......    34,000   68,000  102,000  136,000  170,000  204,000  238,000
    600,000......    51,000  102,000  153,000  204,000  255,000  306,000  357,000
    800,000......    68,000  136,000  204,000  272,000  340,000  408,000  476,000
  1,000,000......    85,000  170,000  255,000  340,000  425,000  510,000  595,000
  1,200,000......   102,000  204,000  306,000  408,000  510,000  612,000  714,000
  1,400,000......   119,000  238,000  357,000  476,000  595,000  714,000  833,000
  1,600,000......   136,000  272,000  408,000  544,000  680,000  816,000  952,000
</TABLE>
 
  As of April 1, 1997, the named executive officers were credited with the
following years of service under the appropriate plan: Robert J. Darnall--34
years; Neil S. Novich--2 years; Jay M. Gratz--21 years; Timothy L. LaPerre--25
years; Carl G. Lusted--29 years; and Stephen E. Makarewicz--13 years.
 
  Pensions are provided under the Pension Plan to eligible employees
(including employees who are directors or officers) who, at retirement, have
met certain service or service and age requirements. In general for salaried
employees, benefits are based on years of service and individual earnings for
the highest consecutive 36-month period of earnings during the last ten 12-
month periods of service prior to retirement. For this purpose, earnings
generally consist of salary compensation plus bonus compensation as reported
in the Summary Compensation Table.
 
 
                                      19
<PAGE>
 
  The Company has established the Ryerson Tull Supplemental Retirement Plan
for Covered Employees (the "Supplemental Plan"), which provides supplemental
pension benefits to employees of the Company and its affiliates who
participate in the Pension Plan and whose benefits under that plan are limited
by the provisions of Sections 415 and 401(a)(17) of the Internal Revenue Code
of 1986, as amended (the "Code"). Generally, the amount of the benefit
provided is equal to the difference between the benefit that would have been
payable under the Pension Plan had the applicable Code limitations not applied
and the benefit actually paid under the Pension Plan. The Supplemental Plan is
non-contributory and benefits payable under the Supplemental Plan are paid
from the general assets of the Company. Benefits under the Supplemental Plan
are generally paid at the same time in the same form as corresponding benefits
under the Pension Plan; provided however, the Supplemental Plan provides that,
for any officer or employee with at least five years of service, with annual
compensation in excess of $150,000 and who is age 55 or older, the Company may
elect to satisfy its obligations for benefits payable upon retirement at age
65 by (i) the purchase of an annuity contract either prior to or at the time
of retirement (and a tax gross-up payment to the officer or employee at the
time of purchase) or (ii) the payment of a lump sum amount at the time of
retirement. Prior to establishing the Supplemental Plan, certain employees of
the Company participated in the Inland Steel Industries Supplemental
Retirement Plan for Covered Employees and the Inland Steel Industries Special
Retirement Benefit Plan for Covered Employees (collectively, the "Inland
Supplemental Plans"). Messrs. Darnall and Gratz participate in the Inland
Supplemental Plans, which provide benefits similar to the Supplemental Plan.
The Company has assumed Inland's liabilities under the Inland Supplemental
Plans with respect to current and former employees of the Company.
 
  All accrued benefits under the Pension Plan vest, and all benefits accrued
under the Supplemental Plan will become fully and irrevocably vested and
distributable to participants as provided by the terms of such plans then in
effect, in the event of a change in control (as defined in those plans) of the
Company. Any surplus assets under the Pension Plan are to be used to provide
additional benefits in the event of a termination, merger or consolidation of
the Pension Plan, or a transfer of assets to another plan, within three years
of such a change in control, and limitations have been placed on amendments to
the Pension Plan within such three-year period.
 
  Pension benefits are provided to eligible salaried employees of Tull under a
separate benefit schedule of the Pension Plan. The maximum annual pension
benefits payable under such schedule are approximately 3% higher than those
shown in the above table for comparable earnings and service. No executive
officers are covered by the Tull benefit schedule, but Stephen E. Makarewicz
and Carl G. Lusted are credited respectively with 10 and 22 years of service
under the Tull benefit schedule under the Pension Plan. Both have lump sum
benefits accrued with respect to their Tull pension service.
 
EMPLOYMENT AND CHANGE IN CONTROL AGREEMENTS
 
  Pursuant to an agreement dated July 24, 1996, the Company has assumed
Inland's obligations under a severance agreement with Mr. Novich, dated April
8, 1994 (the "1994 Severance Agreement"), providing that, in the event of
termination of his employment for any
 
                                      20
<PAGE>
 
reason other than malfeasance or voluntary termination prior to the third
anniversary of his employment, he will receive the present value of (i) his
monthly base salary in effect at the time of such termination times the number
of months remaining in the 36-month period, plus (ii) 1/12th of the average
annual award paid to him under the Annual Incentive Plan or a successor plan
times the number of months remaining in the 36-month period. In addition, all
of his restricted stock will become fully vested, all options will become
fully exercisable and life insurance, disability insurance and dental and
health care coverage for Mr. Novich and his immediate family will continue
until the third anniversary of his date of hire upon terms consistent with
such coverages for active employees until such date. The 1994 Severance
Agreement terminates June 15, 1997. Under the Company's assumption agreement
with Inland, Inland remains obligated under the 1994 Severance Agreement only
to the extent any obligations thereunder are not fully performed by the
Company.
 
  Pursuant to an agreement dated January 22, 1997, the Company has assumed
Inland's obligation under an agreement with Mr. Lusted, dated June 27, 1990,
providing that upon Mr. Lusted reaching age 62 or at any other mutually
agreeable time, Mr. Lusted will be reimbursed for his reasonable moving
expenses from the Chicago area to the Atlanta area, or to any other mutually
agreeable location. In connection with such a relocation, Mr. Lusted will
receive the amount, if any, by which the lesser of Mr. Lusted's purchase price
or the appraised value of his home in the Chicago area exceeds the net sales
price of such home.
 
  On June 10, 1996, the Company entered into agreements (the "Company
Agreements") with each of the named executive officers except Mr. Darnall, the
present terms of which expire on December 31, 1997, but are automatically
extended for additional one-year periods thereafter unless the Company gives
prior notice that it does not wish to extend such agreements for another year
or unless a change in control (as defined below) of the Company or certain
other limited events occur. The Company has not given notice of non-renewal.
For purposes of the Company Agreements, a change in control will generally be
deemed to have occurred if: (i) with certain limited exceptions, any person
becomes the beneficial owner of 40% or more of the combined voting power of
the Company's then outstanding securities; (ii) during any two-year period,
the majority of the membership of the Company's Board of Directors changes
without the approval of two-thirds of the directors who either were directors
at the beginning of the period or whose election was previously so approved;
(iii) the Company's stockholders approve a merger or consolidation of the
Company with another company in which the Company's voting securities, in
combination with voting securities held by any trustee or fiduciary under any
Company employee benefit plan, do not continue to represent at least 60% of
the combined voting power of the voting securities of the surviving entity
(excepting certain recapitalizations of the Company); (iv) the Company's
stockholders approve a plan of complete liquidation of the Company or an
agreement for the sale or disposition by the Company of all or substantially
all of its assets; or (v) there occurs with respect to a Related Company
(defined below) a sale or disposition of securities representing 50% or more
of the combined voting power of the Related Company's securities, or a merger
or consolidation of a Related Company with another company in which a
majority-owned direct or indirect subsidiary of the Company does not own at
least
 
                                      21
<PAGE>
 
50% of the combined voting power of the voting securities of the surviving
entity or a sale or disposition of all or substantially all of the assets of a
Related Company to a person other than a majority-owned direct or indirect
subsidiary of the Company. A "Related Company" is a covered employee's
employer (or any direct or indirect parent company of such employer, or
subsidiary of such employer that is a significant subsidiary (within the
meaning of Rule 405 of the Securities Act) of the Company). A change in
control of the Company shall not be deemed to have occurred with respect to
any employee, however, if the sale or other transaction includes or involves a
sale to the public or a distribution to the stockholders of the Company of
more than 50% of the voting securities of the employee's employer or a direct
or indirect parent of his or her employer and the employee's employer (or a
direct or indirect parent of the employee's employer) agrees to become a
successor to the Company under the employee's Company Agreement.
 
  The Company Agreements provide that if a covered executive's employment is
terminated within two years after a change in control of the Company either
(i) by the Company other than for "cause" or other than as a consequence of
death, disability or retirement (all as defined in such agreements), or (ii)
by such executive for "good reason," generally relating to a diminution of
responsibilities, compensation or benefits or significant relocation of his or
her principal office, the executive will receive: (i) a lump-sum payment equal
to two times the sum of (a) the executive's current annual base salary plus
(b) the executive's average incentive bonus paid for the five years preceding
termination of employment; (ii) an amount in cash in lieu of any allocations,
unpaid awards or rights under the Company's annual or other incentive
compensation plans; (iii) an amount in cash equal to the value of outstanding
stock options granted under the Company's stock option plans at specified
prices; (iv) an amount in cash equal to the value of shares of common stock
awarded or issuable as performance and/or restricted shares under the
Company's incentive stock plans; (v) life, disability, accident and health
insurance as provided in the Company's insurance programs and financial
advisory and outplacement services for a period of 24 months after termination
of employment; (vi) an amount in cash in lieu of two years of additional
accrued benefits under the Company's pension plan and (vii) legal fees and
expenses incurred as a result of such termination. In addition to the
foregoing, Mr. Novich's Company Agreement provides that payments thereunder
will not limit or reduce any benefits that he may be entitled to receive
pursuant to his 1994 Severance Agreement but that his benefits under his 1994
Severance Agreement are reduced by benefits he receives under any other
agreement upon a change in control of the Company. Each Company Agreement
contains an excise tax "gross-up" provision pursuant to which the executive
will be paid an additional amount upon the imposition of any excise tax. While
this provision will preserve the benefits receivable under the agreement for
the executive, the Company will not be entitled to a Federal income tax
deduction for a portion of the severance payments provided thereunder.
 
  The Company Agreements provide benefits in the event the employee is
terminated by the Company for reasons other than cause within 12 months after
the occurrence of a "potential change in control" of the Company if a change
in control of the Company or certain other limited events occur within six
months after his or her termination. A "potential change in control" shall be
deemed to have occurred for purposes of the agreements if (i) the Company
enters into an
 
                                      22
<PAGE>
 
agreement, the consummation of which would result in the occurrence of a
change in control of the Company, (ii) any person (including the Company)
publicly announces an intention to take or to consider taking actions which,
if consummated, would constitute a change in control, (iii) with certain
limited exceptions, any person who is or becomes the owner of securities of
the Company representing 9.5% or more of the combined voting power of the
Company's then outstanding securities increases such person's beneficial
ownership of such securities by 5% or more over the percentage so owned on the
date of the agreement, or (iv) the Board of Directors of the Company adopts a
resolution that a potential change in control of the Company has occurred for
purposes of the Company Agreements.
 
  On March 27, 1996, Inland entered into agreements (the "Inland Agreements")
with each of the named executive officers which provide benefits substantially
similar to those provided under the Company Agreements in the event that the
executive's employment with Inland is terminated following a change in control
in Inland (defined to include events with respect to the Inland Agreement
similar to those which constitute a change in control under the Company
Agreements with respect to the Company). In addition, Mr. Novich's Inland
Agreement provides that payments under the agreement will not limit or reduce
any benefits that he may be entitled to receive pursuant to his 1994 Severance
Agreement. To the extent that an executive becomes entitled to benefits under
a Company Agreement and an Inland Agreement upon a change in control, benefits
payable under the Inland Agreement will be reduced by the amount of benefits
payable under the Company Agreement. Other than as set forth in the preceding
sentence, in no event shall an executive be entitled to benefits under both an
Inland Agreement and a Company Agreement on account of the same events
constituting a change in control.
 
             REPORT OF THE COMPENSATION COMMITTEE OF THE BOARD OF
                  DIRECTORS REGARDING EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION
 
  Certain of the 1996 compensation programs described in this Proxy Statement
were established by the Compensation Committee of the Inland Board of
Directors (the "Inland Compensation Committee") prior to the Offering. The
Inland Compensation Committee is comprised entirely of non-employee directors
of Inland who are not eligible to participate in any of the executive
compensation programs of Inland or the Company. Upon completion of the
Offering, the Compensation Committee of the Company's Board of Directors (the
"Committee") approved substitution of shares of restricted stock and of
substitute options under the Company's Incentive Stock Plan for outstanding
shares of restricted stock and outstanding option grants to Company employees
under the Inland incentive stock plans, based on the relative market values of
Inland's common stock to the Company's Class A common stock on the New York
Stock Exchange on the ten trading days commencing June 26, 1996 in order to
preserve the economic value of Inland's awards at the time of the Offering.
The Committee determined that Mr. Gratz and two other executive officers of
the Company who are also executive officers of Inland would receive substitute
Class A common stock only for 50% of such executive officers' outstanding 1996
restricted stock awards and would retain all of their Inland options under the
Inland incentive stock plans and that Mr. Darnall would receive no substitute
restricted stock awards or substitute options.
 
                                      23
<PAGE>
 
  The Company's executive compensation programs are designed to attract and
retain outstanding individuals as officers and key employees and to reward
such individuals based on their personal performance and contributions and on
the financial performance of the Company and its business units. Such programs
consist of three elements--base salary compensation, short-term incentive
compensation, and long-term incentive compensation--and are administered by
the Committee. The Committee consists of three directors, none of whom is or
has been an employee of Inland, the Company or any of the Company's
subsidiaries. The Committee currently employs and periodically meets with
outside compensation consultants for assistance regarding the Company's
executive compensation programs.
 
  Total compensation opportunities are intended to be competitive with those
offered by metal service center companies, select general distribution
companies and select industrial and service companies of comparable size. Some
(but not all) of the metal service centers used to compare executive
compensation are included in the peer group index presented in the performance
graph shown in this Proxy Statement. Comparable companies for purposes of
executive compensation include a broader range of companies, because most
metal service companies are privately (not publicly) owned, available public
information for publicly owned metal service centers shows that few have long-
term incentive programs, and none has annual revenues comparable to revenues
of the Company.
 
  Base salary compensation of executive officers is reviewed annually by the
Committee, and recommendations of the Committee in that regard are acted upon
by the Board of Directors. Base salaries are targeted at the 50th percentile
of comparable positions in the comparison group of companies described in the
immediately preceding paragraph. Such base compensation generally represents
approximately one-half of the total compensation opportunity for executive
officers of the Company. The remainder of such total compensation, consisting
of short-term and long-term incentive compensation in accordance with the
factors described below, is variable and fluctuates from year to year as a
result of the cyclical condition of the metals distribution industry.
Compensation levels for 1996 were established by the Inland Compensation
Committee in 1996 and approved after the Offering by the Committee. Mr.
Novich's base salary was increased to $405,000 in February 1996 in recognition
of his leading the Company to significantly improved financial performance.
 
  Short-term incentive compensation for 1996 was payable to officers and other
key employees under the Inland Annual Incentive Plan. This Plan, which is
administered by the Inland Compensation Committee, provides for cash awards
based on a specified percentage of a participant's salary earnings and the
extent to which corporate and (or) business unit performance standards are
achieved for the year. In 1996, all but one of the corporate and business
units of the Company achieved the target levels of return on operating assets
established for such units. As the President and Chief Executive Officer of
the Company, the award payment to Mr. Novich was computed based upon the 1996
return on operating assets achieved by the Company. The award payment to
Messrs. Darnall and Gratz were computed based on the 1996 return on operating
assets of Inland achieved by corporate units of Inland, weighted with respect
to the relative asset value of each such unit. The award payments to Messrs.
Lusted, Makarewicz and LaPerre were computed based upon the 1996 return on
 
                                      24
<PAGE>
 
operating assets achieved by each of their respective business units. The
Committee and the Board of Directors have approved and submitted a similar
short-term incentive compensation plan to stockholders for approval, as
described in "Proposal to Approve the Ryerson Tull, Inc. Annual Performance
Improvement Incentive Plan" below, in order to satisfy the requirements of
Internal Revenue Code Section 162(m) for maximum deductibility by the Company
for Federal income tax purposes of awards that may be made under such plan to
the named executive officers.
 
  Long-term incentive compensation grants and awards may be made by the
Committee (or, in certain circumstances, by the Chairman or the President of
the Company) under the Company's 1996 Incentive Stock Plan. These grants and
awards consist of stock options, stock appreciation rights, restricted stock
awards, and performance awards, or combinations thereof. Stock options and
stock appreciation rights may be granted at not less than 100% of the fair
market value of the Company's Class A common stock on the date of grant and
are generally exercisable for a period not exceeding ten years. Restricted
stock awards, consisting of shares of Class A common stock, are contingent on
continuing employment with the Company for specified periods, and performance
awards, payable in shares of Class A common stock or cash, are contingent on
the achievement over specified periods of such performance objectives as shall
be established by the Committee. Restricted stock awards may also be
contingent upon the achievement of performance measures. Grants and awards
made by the Committee under the Incentive Stock Plan are intended to provide
executive officers not only with additional incentives for outstanding
individual performance but also with an opportunity to acquire an ownership
stake in the Company and thereby more closely align their interests with those
of the stockholders. The Incentive Stock Plan is being submitted to
stockholders for approval, as described in "Proposal to Approve the Ryerson
Tull 1996 Incentive Stock Plan" below, in order to satisfy the requirements of
Internal Revenue Code Section 162(m) for maximum deductibility by the Company
for Federal income tax purposes of awards made under the Incentive Stock Plan
to named executive officers. Until the Offering, all such long-term incentive
stock awards were issued under the Inland Incentive Stock Plans, administered
by the Inland Compensation Committee.
 
  With the approval of the Committee, all Inland stock options, stock
appreciation rights and restricted stock awards of the named executive
officers (except those of Messrs. Darnall and Gratz, who also are executive
officers of Inland) that were outstanding at the consummation of the Offering
were replaced by Company stock options, stock appreciation rights and
restricted stock awards. This substitution resulted in Company substitute
options to purchase a total of 271,414 shares of Class A common stock and
Company substitute restricted stock awards totaling 23,142 shares of Class A
common stock being issued to named executive officers by the Committee in
1996, including substitute options to purchase 109,641 shares to Mr. Novich.
The Committee determined that Mr. Gratz and two other executive officers of
the Company who also are Inland officers would receive substitute Class A
common stock only for 50% of their outstanding 1996 Inland restricted stock
award and would retain all of their Inland options, and that Mr. Darnall would
receive no substitute restricted stock awards or options for his outstanding
Inland restricted stock awards and stock options.
 
  The Committee considered the amount and terms of these substitute awards of
options when deciding on additional awards for 1996. New grants of options and
restricted stock, including
 
                                      25
<PAGE>
 
those made to Messrs. Darnall and Novich, were established after review of a
compensation analysis for officer positions of the Company, based on a
comparative company survey of compensation practices at select industrial
companies with $1 billion to $2.5 billion in sales and select service
companies (including general distributors) with $500,000,000 to $3.6 billion
in annual sales and a summary of executive compensation issues prepared by the
Company's outside executive compensation consultants. Because named executive
officers had received 1996 option grants under the Inland incentive stock
plans, the Committee did not grant additional new options in 1996 after
approving the substitute options. The Committee granted new restricted stock
awards totalling 13,154 shares to named executive officers in 1996, including
a restricted stock award of 3,654 shares to Mr. Darnall (which took into
consideration a 1996 award of Inland restricted shares that had been made to
him) and an award of 5,000 shares to Mr. Novich. These grants were intended to
provide incentives to improve stockholder value, to encourage executive
retention and to remain competitive in executive recruitment. The restrictions
on the restricted stock awards will lapse, and the shares vest, at the end of
the three-year period beginning the date of grant. Vesting may be accelerated
at the discretion of the Committee in the event of exceptional individual
performance and (or) significant progress by the Company or the respective
business unit in meeting its operating and financial objectives. No
performance awards were granted or paid to named executive officers in 1996.
 
  In 1993, the Internal Revenue Code Section 162(m) was added to the Code,
which limits deductibility of certain compensation for named executive
officers. The Committee intends that Company compensation plans satisfy the
requirements of Section 162(m) for maximum deductibility by the Company for
Federal income tax purposes of payments made under such plans to named
executive officers. In the event the Committee determines that it is advisable
to grant awards to named executive officers that may not so qualify for
deductibility, the Committee reserves the right to make such awards, taking
into consideration the financial effects of such awards on the Company.
 
  Mr. Novich meets frequently with the Committee and with the non-management
directors. These meetings will include an annual review, by all of the outside
directors, of his financial, operating, and organizational goals for the
Company and an evaluation of his performance as it relates to the Company's
achievement of the previous year's goals. The results of that evaluation are
an important element in compensation decisions made by the Committee and the
Board of Directors, both with respect to Mr. Novich and with respect to the
other executive officers of the Company.
 
  The compensation philosophy expressed above was developed primarily by the
Inland Committee prior to the Offering. The Company's Compensation Committee
is in the process of developing principles and formulating a revised
compensation program, using the Ryerson Tull, Inc. Annual Performance
Improvement Incentive Plan and the Ryerson Tull 1996 Incentive Stock Plan
submitted to stockholders for approval at this Annual Meeting, that supports
the Company's business and strategies.
 
                               Jerry K. Pearlman, Chairman
                               Donald S. Perkins
                               Jean-Pierre Rosso
 
                                      26
<PAGE>
 
                COMPARISON OF SIX-MONTH CUMULATIVE TOTAL RETURN
 
  The following performance graph compares the performance of the Company's
common stock for the period commencing July 1, 1996 and ended December 31,
1996, to the cumulative total return of the Standard & Poor's 500 Composite
Stock Price Index (the "S&P 500 Index") and to a peer group. Since there is no
nationally recognized industry index consisting of metals distributors to be
used as a peer group index, the Company constructed its own peer group
consisting of seven other public companies in the metals distribution industry.
In addition to the Company, the peer group includes A.M. Castle & Co., Friedman
Industries, Incorporated, Huntco Inc., Olympic Steel, Inc., Reliance Steel &
Aluminum Co. and Steel Technologies Inc. This comparison assumes the investment
of $100 on June 30, 1996 and the reinvestment of dividends.
 

                       [PERFORMANCE GRAPH APPEARS HERE]

                               Ryerson Tull   Peer Group   S&P 500

              June    96         100.00        100.00       100.00
              -----------------------------------------------------
              July    96          87.60         85.13        95.58
              ----------------------------------------------------- 
              August  96          86.82         89.56        95.58
              -----------------------------------------------------
              Sept.   96          86.05         88.33       103.09
              -----------------------------------------------------
              Oct.    96          79.07         85.24       105.93
              -----------------------------------------------------
              Nov.    96          89.15         87.88       113.93
              -----------------------------------------------------
              Dec.    96          83.72         85.89       111.67
              -----------------------------------------------------

                                       27
<PAGE>
 
                            PROPOSAL TO APPROVE THE
                    RYERSON TULL 1996 INCENTIVE STOCK PLAN
 
  The Company has adopted the Incentive Stock Plan, which was approved by
Inland as sole stockholder of the Company prior to the consummation of the
Offering. The Board of Directors is now submitting the Incentive Stock Plan to
stockholders for approval in order to enable the Company to qualify future
awards under the Incentive Stock Plan as deductible for Federal income tax
purposes for tax years commencing January 1, 1997. The summary of the
Incentive Stock Plan that follows is qualified in its entirety by reference to
the complete text of the Incentive Stock Plan as set forth in Exhibit A.
 
GENERAL DESCRIPTION
 
  Participants in the Incentive Stock Plan shall consist of such officers and
other key employees of the Company and its subsidiaries as the Compensation
Committee of the Board of Directors (the "Committee") may select from time to
time. The Committee has identified approximately 100 participants to
participate in the Incentive Stock Plan. In the discretion of the Committee,
participants in the Plan may receive stock options, stock appreciation rights,
restricted stock awards or performance awards, either singly or in
combination. The maximum number of shares that may be issued under the Plan is
2,300,000 shares of Class A common stock. The form and amount of any grant or
award, whether measured by shares of Class A common stock or otherwise, as
well as the time and conditions of exercise or vesting and any acceleration of
the time of exercise or vesting, are subject to the discretion of the
Committee, provided that no more than 800,000 shares may be issued pursuant to
restricted stock awards and performance awards under the Incentive Stock Plan.
Except to the extent otherwise determined by the Committee, any shares subject
to a grant or award which terminates by expiration, cancellation or otherwise
without the issuance of such shares (including shares underlying a stock
appreciation right exercised for stock, to the extent that such underlying
shares are not issued) or which are settled in cash (to the extent so
settled), or, in the case of a restricted stock award, which are forfeited
prior to vesting, shall again be available for future grants under the
Incentive Stock Plan.
 
  The Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended (the "Code"), places
limitations on the deductibility, for Federal income tax purposes, of annual
compensation paid to certain executive officers, generally the five most
highly compensated officers of the Company on the last day of the year (the
"named executive officers"). In order to permit certain grants and awards
under the Incentive Stock Plan to be deductible for Federal income tax
purposes, the Incentive Stock Plan limits, except in the case of grants and
awards which by their terms are not intended to comply with such Code
limitations, the maximum number of shares that may be granted or awarded under
the Incentive Stock Plan in any three-year period of the Company to any
participant under the Incentive Stock Plan to 1,500,000 and the maximum
aggregate cash payout that may be made under the Incentive Stock Plan in any
fiscal year of the Company to a named executive officer to $1,000,000.
 
                                      28
<PAGE>
 
  The Committee has general authority to administer the Incentive Stock Plan,
including the authority to select participants, determine the form and amount
of awards and amend such awards or accelerate the time of exercise or vesting
thereof. The Committee also may authorize the Company's Chairman or President,
if then serving as a director, to act as a subcommittee of the Committee for
the purpose of making grants of restricted stock, stock options, stock
appreciation awards and performance awards, not to exceed such number of
shares as the Committee designates annually, to employees of the Company and
its subsidiaries who are not subject to Section 16(a) of the Securities
Exchange Act of 1934, as the Chairman or President shall determine in his or
her sole discretion after consultation with the Vice President of Human
Resources of the Company. To the extent any such authorization is made, the
Chairman or President, as applicable, will have the authority of the Committee
with respect to any grants made by him or her. The Board of Directors may
amend the Incentive Stock Plan in any respect, or terminate the Incentive
Stock Plan at any time, provided that no amendment may be made without
stockholder approval that would increase the maximum number of shares
available for issuance pursuant to grants under the Incentive Stock Plan if
such action would result in awards under the Incentive Stock Plan no longer
being exempt under Rule 16b-3 of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 as then
in effect. At present, such actions would not result in such loss of exemption
and therefore may be taken without stockholder approval. No amendment or
termination may impair the rights of a participant under any grant previously
made under the Incentive Stock Plan without the consent of such participant,
unless required by law.
 
  The maximum number of shares issuable under the Incentive Stock Plan and the
number, class and/or price of shares or other consideration subject to any
outstanding stock option, stock appreciation right, restricted stock award or
performance award may be appropriately adjusted by the Committee in the event
of any change in corporate capitalization, such as a stock split, reverse
stock split, or stock dividend, or a corporate transaction, such as a merger,
consolidation, or separation, including a spin-off, or other distribution of
stock or property of the Company or its subsidiaries (other than normal cash
dividends), and any reorganization or partial or complete liquidation of the
Company or its subsidiaries. The Incentive Stock Plan also provides that in
the event of a Change in Control (as defined below), with certain exceptions,
(i) all outstanding stock options, stock appreciation rights, and restricted
stock awards shall automatically become fully exercisable and vested and shall
be cashed out on the basis of a Change in Control Price (as defined in the
Incentive Stock Plan) and (ii) all outstanding performance awards shall be
cashed out in such manner and in such amount or amounts as determined by the
Committee at the time such awards are made. For purposes of the Incentive
Stock Plan, a Change in Control will generally be deemed to have occurred if:
(i) with certain limited exceptions, any person becomes the beneficial owner
of 40% or more of the combined voting power of the Company's then outstanding
securities; (ii) during any two-year period, the majority of the membership of
the Company's Board of Directors changes without the approval of two-thirds of
the directors who either were directors at the beginning of the period or
whose election was previously so approved; (iii) the Company's stockholders
approve a merger or consolidation of the Company with another company in which
the Company's voting securities, in combination with voting securities held by
any trustee or fiduciary under any Company employee benefit plan, do not
 
                                      29
<PAGE>
 
continue to represent at least 60% of the combined voting power of the voting
securities of the surviving entity (excepting certain recapitalizations of the
Company); (iv) the Company's stockholders approve a plan of complete
liquidation of the Company or an agreement for the sale or disposition by the
Company of all or substantially all of its assets; or (v) there occurs with
respect to a Related Company (defined below) a sale or disposition of
securities representing 50% or more of the combined voting power of the
Related Company's securities, or a merger or consolidation of a Related
Company with another company in which a majority-owned direct or indirect
subsidiary of the Company does not own at least 50% of the combined voting
power of the voting securities of the surviving entity or a sale or
disposition of all or substantially all of the assets of a Related Company to
a person other than a majority-owned direct or indirect subsidiary of the
Company. A "Related Company" is a participant's employer (or any direct or
indirect parent company of such employer, or subsidiary of such employer that
is a significant subsidiary (within the meaning of Rule 405 of the Securities
Act) of the Company). A Change in Control of the Company shall not be deemed
to have occurred with respect to any employee, however, if the sale or other
transaction includes or involves a sale to the public or a distribution to the
stockholders of the Company of more than 50% of the voting securities of the
participant's employer or a direct or indirect parent of his or her employer
and the participant's employer (or a direct or indirect parent of the
participant's employer) agrees to become a successor to the Company under an
individual agreement or other contractual agreement providing for benefits.
 
  A participant may elect to have the Company withhold shares of common stock
(or to accept already-owned shares) to satisfy tax withholding obligations
with respect to exercises or payments under the Incentive Stock Plan. Except
as otherwise permitted by the Committee, no stock option, stock appreciation
right, restricted stock award or performance award shall be transferable
except by will or the laws of descent and distribution. Under rules adopted by
the Committee, transfers may be made, subject to certain limitations, to (a) a
participant's spouse or descendants or (b) to a trust for the benefit of an
award holder, his or her spouse or descendants.
 
  As of April 2, 1997, grants and awards of 1,488,537 shares of Class A common
stock of the Company had been made under the Incentive Stock Plan, all of
which remain outstanding, and 811,463 shares remained available for future
grants and awards under such Plan.
 
1996 INCENTIVE STOCK PLAN BENEFITS
 
  The following table shows awards made under the Incentive Stock Plan in
1997. As the Incentive Stock Plan is discretionary, and the Committee has made
no determinations with regard to the remainder of 1997, these awards may not
be indicative of awards for all of 1997 or awards in any fiscal year.
 
 
                                      30
<PAGE>
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                            OPTIONS                        PERFORMANCE AWARDS
                          -------------------------------------------- ---------------------------
                                                                       SECURITIES    PERFORMANCE
                              SECURITIES                               UNDERLYING   AWARDS DOLLAR
                              UNDERLYING     EXERCISE PRICE EXPIRATION PERFORMANCE    VALUE AT
NAME AND POSITION         STOCK OPTIONS(/1/) PER SHARE(/2/)    DATE    AWARDS(/3/) GRANT DATE(/3/)
- -----------------         ------------------ -------------- ---------- ----------- ---------------
<S>                       <C>                <C>            <C>        <C>         <C>
Robert J. Darnall.......             0               --           --          0       $       0
 Chairman
Neil S. Novich..........        60,000          $14.0625    3/25/2007         0               0
 President and Chief
 Executive Officer
Jay M. Gratz............             0               --           --          0               0
 Vice President--Finance
 and Chief Financial
 Officer
Timothy L. LaPerre......        18,000          $14.0625    3/25/2007         0               0
 President--Ryerson Coil
 Processing
Carl G. Lusted..........        36,000          $14.0625    3/25/2007         0               0
 President--Ryerson
  Central
Stephen E. Makarewicz...        27,000          $14.0625    3/25/2007         0               0
 President--Tull Metals
Current Executive
 Officers as a Group....       207,000          $14.0625    3/25/2007     2,000          28,125
All Employees, Including
 All Current Officers
 Who Are Not Executive
 Officers,
 as a Group.............       104,500          $14.0625    3/25/2007    86,300       1,213,594
</TABLE>
- --------
(1) All options are for Company Class A common stock and were granted on March
    26, 1997. They become exercisable with respect to 33% of the shares after
    one year from the date of grant, 67% after two years from the date of
    grant, and are fully exercisable after three years from the date of grant.
    All options granted in 1997 were transferable, with the advance written
    consent of the Committee, to a spouse or descendants or to a trust for the
    benefit of the optionee, his or her spouse, or descendants.
(2) The exercise price is equal to the average of the high and low price of
    the Company's Class A common stock on the New York Stock Exchange
    Composite Transactions on the date of grant. The exercise price may be
    paid by delivery of already-owned shares, and an optionee may elect to
    have the Company withhold shares of stock (or accept already-owned shares)
    to satisfy tax withholding obligations with respect to option exercises or
    payments.
 
                                      31
<PAGE>
 
(3) All performance awards are for Company Class A common stock and were
    granted on March 26, 1997, at which date the average of the high and low
    price of the Company's Class A common stock on the New York Stock Exchange
    Composite Transactions was $14.0625. The shares payable under the award
    will be determined with respect to the period commencing January 1, 1997
    and ending on December 31, 1997, subject to the satisfaction of
    performance criteria concerning the ratio of operating profit to operating
    assets and revenue growth. Such number of shares determined by the
    Committee to be payable with respect to such performance period will be
    vested and be paid out in equal installments, subject to the participant's
    continued employment with the Company or its subsidiaries, over three
    consecutive one-year periods ending December 31, 2000.
 
STOCK OPTIONS
 
  Options to purchase shares of common stock, including incentive stock
options within the meaning of Section 422 of the Code, may be granted under
the Incentive Stock Plan. The Committee will determine the number of shares
subject to each stock option and the manner and time of exercise. No option,
however, shall be exercisable less than six months or more than ten years
after the date of grant. The per share option price shall not be less than par
value or 100% of the fair market value of a share of Class A common stock at
the date of grant. Upon exercise, the option price may be paid in cash, in
shares of Class A common stock of the Company having a fair market value equal
to the option price, or in a combination thereof. The Committee may also allow
the "cashless" exercise of options, subject to applicable rules and
regulations, and the exercise of options by any other means the Committee
determines to be consistent with the Incentive Stock Plan's purpose and
applicable law, including loans, with or without interest, made by the Company
to the holder of such option. The Incentive Stock Plan sets forth conditions
for the exercise of options under certain circumstances upon termination of
employment by reason of death, incapacity, retirement or otherwise. The
agreement or instrument evidencing the grant of an option may contain such
other terms, provisions and conditions not inconsistent with the Incentive
Stock Plan as the Committee may determine.
 
STOCK APPRECIATION RIGHTS
 
  Stock appreciation rights may be granted in tandem with a related stock
option or may be granted independently of a related stock option. Rights
granted in tandem with a related stock option shall be exercisable to the
extent that the related stock option is exercisable, provided that, except in
certain limited circumstances, no such rights shall be exercisable prior to
the expiration of six months from the date of grant. The Committee will
determine the manner and time of exercise of rights granted independently of a
stock option, but no such right shall be exercisable less than six months or
more than ten years after the date of grant. In the case of rights granted in
tandem with a related stock option, the grantee may elect to exercise either
the stock option or the rights (but not both) as to any of the same shares
subject to the stock option and the rights. The Incentive Stock Plan sets
forth conditions for the exercise of stock appreciation rights under certain
conditions upon termination of employment by reason of death,
 
                                      32
<PAGE>
 
incapacity, retirement or otherwise. The agreement or instrument evidencing
the grant of stock appreciation rights may contain such other terms,
provisions and conditions not inconsistent with the Incentive Stock Plan as
the Committee may determine.
 
  Upon exercise of a stock appreciation right, the holder shall be paid the
excess of the then fair market value of the number of shares of Class A common
stock to which the right relates over the fair market value of such number of
shares at the date of grant of the right or of the related stock option, as
the case may be. Such amount shall be paid in cash or in shares of Class A
common stock having a fair market value equal to such excess, or in such
combination thereof, as may be provided in the grant of such right (which may
permit the grantee to elect between cash and Class A common stock or to elect
a combination thereof), or, if no such provision is made in the grant, as the
Committee shall determine upon exercise of the right.
 
RESTRICTED STOCK AWARDS
 
  Restricted stock awards consisting of shares of Class A common stock of the
Company may be made under the Incentive Stock Plan. Such awards shall be
contingent on the employee's continuing employment with the Company or its
subsidiaries or affiliates for a period to be specified in the award, which
shall not be less than six months or more than ten years from the date of
award, and shall be subject to such additional terms and conditions as the
Committee deems appropriate, which may include performance measures. Except as
otherwise determined by the Committee at the time of the award, the holder of
a restricted stock award shall have the right to vote the restricted shares
and to receive dividends thereon, unless and until such shares are forfeited.
If all conditions to which such award is subject have been satisfied, the
holder shall be entitled to such shares free of all restrictions.
 
PERFORMANCE AWARDS
 
  Performance awards consisting of shares of Class A common stock of the
Company, monetary units, or units which are expressed in terms of shares of
Class A common stock of the Company may also be made under the Incentive Stock
Plan. Subject to the following paragraph, such awards shall be contingent on
the achievement over a period of not less than six months or more than ten
years of such corporate, division, subsidiary, group or other measures and
goals as shall be established by the Committee. Subject to the following
paragraph, such measures and goals may be revised by the Committee from time
to time during the performance period. Except as may otherwise be determined
by the Committee, a performance award shall terminate if the holder of the
award does not remain continuously in the employ of the Company or its
subsidiaries or affiliates at all times during the applicable performance
period. If a performance award consists of shares of Class A common stock or
units which are expressed in terms of shares of such common stock, amounts
equal to dividends otherwise payable on a like number of shares may, if the
award so provides, be converted into additional such shares or credited as
additional units and paid to the participant on payment of the award.
 
                                      33
<PAGE>
 
  In order to permit performance awards to named executive officers to be
deductible by the Company for Federal income tax purposes, the Code and
related regulations require performance measures for such awards to be
specified in the Incentive Stock Plan and approved by stockholders. The
performance measures established in the Incentive Stock Plan for such purposes
are: safety (including total injury frequency, lost workday rates or cases,
medical treatment cases and fatalities), quality control (including critical
product characteristics and defects), cost control (including cost as a
percentage of sales), capital structure (including debt and equity levels,
debt-to-equity ratios, and debt-to-total-capitalization ratios), inventory
turnover, customer performance or satisfaction, revenue growth, net income,
conformity to cash flow plans, return on investment, and the ratio of
operating profit to operating assets.
 
  The Committee has discretion to establish performance goals and to adjust
the goals and methods used to measure attainment of the goals. With respect to
awards which are intended to be exempt from the deduction limitation, the
Committee has discretion to adjust awards in a manner that does not increase
such awards or make any other change that could cause such awards to become
nondeductible under the regulations discussed above. The Committee has
discretion to amend or replace performance measures applicable to the named
executive officers in the event applicable regulations change and to grant
awards to named executive officers that would not be deductible under the
regulations based upon any performance measures it deems appropriate.
 
  Payment of a performance award following the end of the performance period,
if such award consists of monetary units or units expressed in terms of shares
of common stock, may be made in cash, shares of common stock, or a combination
thereof, as determined by the Committee. Any payment made in common stock
shall be based on the fair market value of such stock on the payment date.
 
FEDERAL TAX CONSEQUENCES
 
  The Company has been advised that an employee who has been granted an
incentive stock option will not realize taxable income and the Company will
not be entitled to a deduction at the time of the grant or exercise of such
option. If the employee makes no disposition of shares acquired pursuant to an
incentive stock option within two years from the date of grant of such option,
or within one year of the transfer of the shares to such employee, any gain or
loss realized on a subsequent disposition of such shares will be treated as a
long-term capital gain or loss. Under such circumstances, the Company will not
be entitled to any deduction for Federal income tax purposes. If the foregoing
holding period requirements are not satisfied, the employee will generally
realize ordinary income at the time of disposition in an amount equal to the
lesser of (i) the excess of the fair market value of the shares on the date of
exercise over the option price or (ii) the excess of the amount realized upon
disposition of the shares, if any, over the option price, and the Company will
be entitled to a corresponding deduction.
 
  An employee will not realize taxable income at the time of the grant of an
option which does not qualify as an incentive stock option. Upon exercise,
however, of such nonqualified stock
 
                                      34
<PAGE>
 
option, the employee (even if the option has been transferred) will realize
ordinary income in an amount measured by the excess, if any, of the fair
market value of the shares on the date of exercise over the option price, and
the Company will be entitled to a corresponding deduction. Upon a subsequent
disposition of such shares, the employee (or, if applicable, the transferee)
will realize short-term or long-term capital gain or loss with the basis for
computing such gain or loss equal to the option price plus the amount of
ordinary income realized upon exercise.
 
  An employee will not realize taxable income at the time of the grant of a
stock appreciation right. Upon exercise, however, such employee will realize
ordinary income measured by the difference between the fair market value of
the Class A common stock of the Company on the applicable date of grant and
the fair market value of such stock on date of exercise. The Company will be
entitled to a corresponding deduction in the year of exercise. Although the
tax rules governing transfers of stock appreciation rights are unclear, it
appears that an employee would be required to recognize ordinary income upon
exercise of a stock appreciation right by a transferee.
 
  An employee who has been granted a restricted stock award will not realize
taxable income at the time of grant, and the Company will not be entitled to a
deduction at that time, assuming that the restrictions constitute a
substantial risk of forfeiture for Federal income tax purposes. Upon the
vesting of shares subject to an award, the employee (even if the award has
been transferred) will realize ordinary income in an amount equal to the fair
market value of the shares at such time, and the Company will be entitled to a
corresponding deduction unless the employee is one of the named executive
officers and applicable provisions of the Code regarding deductibility are not
satisfied. Dividends paid to the employee during the restriction period will
also be compensation income to the employee and deductible as such by the
Company. An employee who receives a restricted stock award may elect to be
taxed at the time of grant of the award on the then fair market value of the
shares, in which case (i) the Company will be entitled to a deduction at the
same time and in the same amount, (ii) dividends paid to such employee during
the restriction period will be taxable as dividends to such employee and not
deductible by the Company, and (iii) there will be no further tax consequences
when the restrictions lapse. If an employee who has made such an election
subsequently forfeits the shares, he will not be entitled to any deduction or
loss. The Company, however, will be required to include as ordinary income the
lesser of the fair market value of the forfeited shares or the amount of the
deduction originally claimed with respect to the shares.
 
  The Company has also been advised that an employee who has been granted a
performance award will not realize taxable income at the time of grant, and
the Company will not be entitled to a deduction at that time. The employee
(even if the award has been transferred) will have compensation income at the
time of payment (or vesting if the award is in stock), and the Company will
have a corresponding deduction unless the employee is one of the named
executive officers and applicable provisions of the Code regarding
deductibility are not satisfied.
 
  Any acceleration of the payment of grants and awards under the Incentive
Stock Plan in the event of a change in control of the Company may cause part
or all of the consideration involved to be treated as an "excess parachute
payment" under the Code, which may subject the
 
                                      35
<PAGE>
 
participant to a 20% excise tax and which may not be deductible by the
Company. A deduction otherwise available to the Company for any year with
respect to compensation payable to a named executive officer may be denied to
the extent that it exceeds $1,000,000. For these purposes, restricted stock
grants and performance awards under the Plan may under certain circumstances
qualify for, and it is anticipated that grants of options and stock
appreciation rights will generally qualify for, an exception to that
limitation for eligible performance-based compensation.
 
OTHER INFORMATION
 
  Approval of the Incentive Stock Plan will require the affirmative vote of
the holders of shares of the Company representing more than 50% of the voting
power of shares represented in person or by proxy and entitled to vote at the
Annual Meeting, with the result that shares which abstain from voting would
count as votes against the Incentive Stock Plan and broker non-votes would
have no effect on the outcome. Proxies not limited to the contrary will be
voted for approval of the Incentive Stock Plan. The closing price of the
Company's Class A common stock reported on the New York Stock Exchange
Composite Transactions for April 10, 1997 was $13.875.
 
  THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS UNANIMOUSLY RECOMMENDS A VOTE FOR APPROVAL OF THE
RYERSON TULL 1996 INCENTIVE STOCK PLAN.
 
                            PROPOSAL TO APPROVE THE
               RYERSON TULL, INC. ANNUAL PERFORMANCE IMPROVEMENT
                                INCENTIVE PLAN
 
  The Company has used cash bonus plans, most recently the Inland Steel
Industries, Inc. Annual Incentive Plan (the "Inland Annual Incentive Plan"),
as an integral part of its compensation plan for salaried employees. The Board
of Directors has determined that a new Company bonus plan is needed to
maintain a competitive executive incentive program that supports the Company's
business and business strategies. Accordingly, the Board of Directors has
adopted, and is submitting to stockholders for their approval to enable the
Company to qualify certain payments made under the Plan as deductible for
Federal income tax purposes for tax years commencing January 1, 1997, the
Ryerson Tull, Inc. Annual Performance Improvement Incentive Plan (the "Plan").
The summary of the Plan which follows is qualified in its entirety by
reference to the complete text of the Plan as set forth in Exhibit B hereto.
 
GENERAL DESCRIPTION
 
  All full-time salaried employees of the Company, Joseph T. Ryerson & Son,
Inc., and J. M. Tull Metals Company, Inc., and of any affiliate, subsidiary,
division or group of the Company or any subsidiary of the Company designated
from time to time by the Committee (each, a "Corporate Unit") as of the first
and last day of a quarterly award period or, with respect to award periods
that extend for at least one year, as of August 1 of the first year of an
award period
 
                                      36
<PAGE>
 
and the last day of an award period (except as otherwise provided by the
Committee) are eligible to be designated as participants in the Plan for the
applicable award period. As of December 31, 1996, approximately 700 employees
were eligible to participate in the Plan. Except in the case of death,
disability, retirement or change of control, a participant must be an employee
as of the last day of an award period to be eligible for an award. The
Committee determines and designates from time to time those eligible employees
who will be participants in any award period and may adopt criteria
restricting the number of full-time salaried employees eligible to be
designated as Plan participants for any applicable award period. The Committee
may determine and establish from time to time an award period applicable to
any specified Corporate Unit or salary classification or grade, or combination
thereof, which award period may be a calendar quarter, a calendar year or a
longer period. Notwithstanding any other provision of the Plan to the
contrary, the Committee may impose such conditions on participation in and
awards under the Plan as it deems appropriate, including conditions applicable
to one or more participants that are intended to cause awards payable under
the Plan to be deductible for purposes of Section 162(m) of the Internal
Revenue Code. Such conditions include (but are not limited to) conditions that
may subject payment of awards to further stockholder approval of the Plan. The
Committee shall have sole discretion, however, to make such changes without
stockholder approval and, in the event that the Committee determines that it
is advisable to grant awards under the Plan to named executive officers that
do not qualify as deductible under Section 162(m), the Committee may make such
grants upon performance measures it deems appropriate.
 
  For each award period, the Committee must establish (i) the minimum
performance required by a Corporate Unit before an award may be paid to a
participant employed in such Corporate Unit, (ii) for each participant, a
Target Award expressed as a percentage of base salary earnings or base annual
salary for each such participant for such award period, on the basis of the
individual's salary grade classification, and (iii) an award schedule for each
Corporate Unit. The Plan permits minimum performance to be based upon return
on operating assets, operating profit, return on equity, net income, stock
price, revenue growth, expense management, inventory management, quality
management, customer service/performance, shareholder return, gross margin
management, and market share improvement. The Committee has established the
minimum performance for 1997 of each Corporate Unit based on return on
operating assets and revenue growth faster than specified markets.
 
  No award will be paid to any participant in a Corporate Unit which in any
award period did not achieve the minimum performance established for such
Corporate Unit. The award for each participant in a Corporate Unit is the
percentage of such individual's Target Award determined in accordance with the
applicable award schedule; provided, however, that subject to Plan provisions
limiting discretion of the Committee, the Committee may adjust awards on the
basis of quantitative and qualitative performance measures and evaluations as
it deems appropriate and may make adjustments as it deems appropriate in the
case of participants whose salary grade classifications have changed during
the relevant award period or who have been employed in more than one Corporate
Unit during the relevant award period. The maximum award payable to a
participant in any calendar year is $2,000,000. To the extent provided by the
Committee, any
 
                                      37
<PAGE>
 
payment under the Plan may be deferred, and to the extent deferred, may be
credited with an interest or earnings factor as determined by the Committee.
 
  Awards are paid in cash as soon as practicable after the end of the
applicable award period for which the award is made. If the participant to
whom an award has been made dies prior to the payment of the award, the award
is paid to the legal representative or to such other person as determined by
the chief executive officer of the Company. The Company or applicable
Corporate Unit has the right to deduct any taxes required by law to be
withheld from any award.
 
ANNUAL PERFORMANCE IMPROVEMENT INCENTIVE PLAN BENEFITS
 
  The following table shows awards made under the Inland Annual Incentive Plan
for 1996 (which awards may not be indicative of awards that will be paid out
under the Company's Plan):
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                 1996 AWARDS
    NAME AND POSITION                                         DOLLAR VALUE(/1/)
    -----------------                                         -----------------
   <S>                                                        <C>
   Robert J. Darnall.........................................    $  316,100
    Chairman
   Neil S. Novich............................................       386,600
    President and Chief Executive Officer
   Jay M. Gratz..............................................       104,200
    Vice President--Finance and Chief Financial Officer
   Timothy L. LaPerre........................................        95,200
    President--Ryerson Coil Processing
   Carl G. Lusted............................................       200,500
    President--Ryerson Central
   Stephen E. Makarewicz.....................................       100,000
    President--Tull Metals
   Current Executive Officers As A Group.....................     1,579,800
   All Employees, Including All Current Officers Who Are Not
    Executive Officers, As A Group...........................     5,660,916
</TABLE>
- --------
(1) Awards made under the Plan for 1996 for Mr. Darnall and Mr. Gratz
    reflected the performance of all subsidiaries of Inland, while awards for
    the other named executive officers reflected the performance of the
    Company or its Corporate Units.
 
CHANGE OF CONTROL
 
  The Plan provides that it will remain in effect for the remainder of any
calendar year in which a Change of Control of the Company occurs, and that
each participant will receive an award for all award periods occurring in such
calendar year at least equal to the Target Award whether or not awards would
otherwise have been payable under the Plan for such award periods occurring in
such calendar year and whether or not the participant was an employee at
 
                                      38
<PAGE>
 
the end of any award period occurring in such calendar year. A "Change of
Control of the Company" is deemed to have occurred if there has been a change
in the composition of the Company's Board of Directors such that a majority of
the Board of Directors shall have been members for less than 24 months, unless
the election of each new director who was not a director at the beginning of
the 24-month period was approved by a vote of at least two-thirds of the
directors then still in office who were directors at the beginning of such
period.
 
PLAN ADMINISTRATION
 
  The Plan is administered by the Committee. Under the terms of the Plan no
member of the Committee is eligible to receive an award while serving on such
Committee (and no member would receive an award in any event because awards
are limited to employees and no Committee member is or has been an employee of
the Company or any of its subsidiaries). The Committee has authority to
interpret the Plan, to establish, amend and rescind rules and regulations for
the administration of the Plan, and to delegate to one or more senior
executive officers of the Company the right to administer the Plan as it
pertains to employees who are not officers of the Company or any other
Corporate Unit. Except with respect to Plan provisions respecting a Change of
Control of the Company, the Board of Directors of the Company may amend,
suspend or terminate the Plan at any time.
 
FEDERAL TAX ISSUES AND OTHER INFORMATION
 
  An award constitutes ordinary income taxable to a participant in the year in
which the award is paid. Subject to the provisions of Section 162(m) of the
Code and regulations promulgated thereunder (collectively, the "Code"), the
Company or appropriate Corporate Unit generally will be entitled to a
corresponding deduction for the year to which awards under the Plan are paid
(or, to the extent deferred, for the year in which paid) with the possible
exception of payments made upon a change of control. In August 1993, the
Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act of 1993, among other things, amended Section
162(m) of the Code to limit the allowable deduction for compensation paid or
accrued with respect to the chief executive officer and the four most highly
compensated officers of a publicly held corporation at the end of each fiscal
year (commencing for fiscal years beginning on or after January 1, 1996).
Pursuant to Internal Revenue Service regulations, certain types of
compensation are excluded from this deduction limit, including payments
subject to the attainment of objective performance goals and satisfaction of a
disinterested director requirement and of a stockholder approval requirement.
 
  Awards under the Plan meet the performance-based compensation requirement of
the Code because the awards are paid upon meeting the minimum financial
performance standards established by the Committee for each award period. The
Plan's administration by the Committee, as limited by Plan provisions
governing the Committee's discretion in making awards to the chief executive
officer and participants for purposes of Section 162(m) of the Code, meets the
second requirement. The submission of the Plan to stockholders for approval
and the establishment of Plan provisions (i) limiting maximum awards, (ii)
authorizing the Committee to
 
                                      39
<PAGE>
 
condition awards in order to preserve the Company's tax deductions under
Section 162(m), and (iii) precluding the Committee from exercising its
discretion to increase awards to executives subject to Section 162(m) of the
Code, are intended to qualify awards made for 1997 and thereafter so as to
preserve the Company's Federal tax deduction, if and when awards are paid
under the Plan.
 
VOTE REQUIRED; EFFECT OF VOTE
 
  Approval of the Plan requires the affirmative vote of the holders of shares
of the Company representing more than 50% of the voting power of shares
represented in person or by proxy and entitled to vote at the Annual Meeting.
Abstentions count against the proposal and broker non-votes have no effect on
the outcome of the vote. Proxies not limited to the contrary will be voted for
the approval of the Plan.
 
  When stockholders approve the Plan, the Company intends to deduct, as
performance-based compensation, the amounts of any awards paid under the Plan
to the chief executive officer and the four other most highly compensated
officers of the Company in determining the Company's Federal income tax
liability. Otherwise, the Company will maintain the Plan with respect to
salaried employees but will exclude the chief executive officer and the four
other most highly compensated executive officers at year-end from
participating in the Plan.
 
  THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS UNANIMOUSLY RECOMMENDS A VOTE FOR APPROVAL OF THE
RYERSON TULL, INC. ANNUAL PERFORMANCE IMPROVEMENT INCENTIVE PLAN.
 
                             ELECTION OF AUDITORS
 
  Proxies not limited to the contrary will be voted for the election of Price
Waterhouse LLP to audit the accounts of the Company and its subsidiaries for
the year 1997.
 
  Representatives of Price Waterhouse LLP will be present at the Annual
Meeting and will be given the opportunity to make a statement if they desire
to do so. They will also be available to respond to appropriate questions.
 
  THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS UNANIMOUSLY RECOMMENDS A VOTE FOR APPROVAL OF THE
ELECTION OF PRICE WATERHOUSE LLP AS AUDITORS.
 
                           PROPOSALS OF STOCKHOLDERS
 
  Proposals of stockholders must be received in writing by the Secretary of
the Company no later than December 17, 1997 and must comply with the
requirements of the Securities and Exchange Commission in order to be
considered for inclusion in the Company's proxy statement and form of proxy
relating to the Annual Meeting of Stockholders to be held in 1998. Proposals
not included in a proxy statement for an annual meeting must comply with an
advance notice procedure set forth in the By-laws of the Company in order to
be properly brought before that annual meeting of stockholders.
 
                                      40
<PAGE>
 
                                 OTHER MATTERS
 
  The Board of Directors does not know of any matters to be presented at the
Annual Meeting other than those set forth in the Notice of the Annual Meeting.
However, if any other matters do come before the meeting, it is intended that
the holders of the proxies will vote thereon in their discretion.
 
                                          By order of the Board of Directors,
 
                                          CHARLES B. SALOWITZ Corporate
                                          Secretary
 
April 17, 1997
Chicago, Illinois
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
Each stockholder, whether or not he or she expects to be present in person at
the Annual Meeting, is requested to SIGN, DATE AND RETURN THE ENCLOSED PROXY
in the accompanying envelope as promptly as possible.
 
                                      41
<PAGE>
 
                                                                      EXHIBIT A
 
                    RYERSON TULL 1996 INCENTIVE STOCK PLAN
 
1. Purpose.
 
  The purpose of the Ryerson Tull 1996 Incentive Stock Plan (the "Plan") is to
attract and retain outstanding individuals as officers and key employees of
Ryerson Tull, Inc. (the "Company") and its subsidiaries, and to furnish
incentives to such individuals through rewards based upon the ownership and
performance of the Common Stock (as defined in Section 3). To this end, the
Committee hereinafter designated and, in certain circumstances, the Chairman
of the Board of the Company (the "Chairman") or the President of the Company,
may grant stock options, stock appreciation rights, restricted stock awards,
and performance awards, or combinations thereof, to officers and other key
employees of the Company and its subsidiaries, on the terms and subject to the
conditions set forth in this Plan.
 
2. Participants.
 
  Participants in the Plan shall consist of: (i) such officers and other key
employees of the Company and its subsidiaries as the Committee in its sole
discretion may select from time to time to receive stock options, stock
appreciation rights, restricted stock awards or performance awards, either
singly or in combination, as the Committee may determine in its sole
discretion; and (ii) if the Committee authorizes the Chairman or the President
to make grants or awards of stock options, stock appreciation rights,
restricted stock or performance awards, such employees of the Company and its
subsidiaries who are not subject to Section 16(a) of the Securities Exchange
Act of 1934, as amended (the "Exchange Act") as the Chairman or the President
shall determine in his or her sole discretion after consultation with the Vice
President-Human Resources of the Company. Individuals who receive awards of
Substitute Options and Substitute Restricted Stock pursuant to Section 14
shall also be Participants in the Plan. Any director of the Company or any of
its subsidiaries who is not also an employee of the Company or any of its
subsidiaries shall not be eligible to receive stock options, stock
appreciation rights, restricted stock awards or performance awards under the
Plan. As used in the Plan, the term "subsidiary" means (a) any corporation of
which the Company owns or controls, directly or indirectly, 50% or more of the
outstanding shares of capital stock entitled to vote for the election of
directors or (b) any partnership, joint venture, or other business entity in
respect of which the Company, directly or indirectly, has comparable ownership
or control.
 
3. Shares Reserved under the Plan.
 
  Subject to adjustment pursuant to the provisions of Section 11 of the Plan,
the maximum number of shares of Class A Common Stock, $1.00 par value per
share, of the Company ("Common Stock") which may be issued pursuant to grants
or awards made under the Plan shall not exceed 2,300,000. No more than 800,000
shares of Common Stock shall be issued pursuant to restricted stock awards and
performance awards under the Plan.
 
 
                                      A-1
<PAGE>
 
  The following restrictions shall apply to all grants and awards under the
Plan other than grants and awards which by their terms are not intended to
comply with the "Performance-Based Exception" (defined below in this Section
3):
 
    (a) the maximum aggregate number of shares of Common Stock that may be
  granted or awarded under the Plan to any participant under the Plan during
  any three year period shall be 1,500,000; and
 
    (b) the maximum aggregate cash payout with respect to grants or awards
  under the Plan in any fiscal year of the Company to any Named Executive
  Officer (defined below in this Section 3) shall be $1,000,000.
 
  For purposes of the Plan, "Named Executive Officer" shall mean a participant
who is one of the group of "covered employees" as defined in the regulations
promulgated under Section 162(m) of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as
amended (the "Code"), or any successor statute, and "Performance-Based
Exception" shall mean the performance-based exception from the deductibility
limitations as set forth in Section 162(m) of the Code.
 
  Except to the extent otherwise determined by the Committee, any shares of
Common Stock subject to grants or awards under the Plan that terminate by
expiration, cancellation or otherwise without the issuance of such shares
(including shares underlying a stock appreciation right exercised for stock,
to the extent that such underlying shares are not issued), that are settled in
cash (to the extent so settled), or, in the case of restricted stock awards,
that terminate without vesting, shall become available for future grants and
awards under the Plan. Shares of Common Stock to be issued pursuant to grants
or awards under the Plan may be authorized and unissued shares of Common
Stock, treasury Common Stock, or any combination thereof.
 
4. Administration of the Plan.
 
  The Plan shall be administered by the Compensation Committee (the
"Committee") of the Board of Directors of the Company (the "Board"). To the
extent necessary to comply with the exemption provided by Rule 16b-3 under the
Exchange Act or any successor rule ("Rule 16b-3"), each member of the
Committee shall be a non-employee director within the meaning of Rule 16b-3.
Subject to the provisions of the Plan, the Committee shall have authority: (i)
to determine which employees of the Company and its subsidiaries shall be
eligible for participation in the Plan; (ii) to select employees to receive
grants under the Plan; (iii) to determine the form of grant, whether as a
stock option, stock appreciation right, restricted stock award, performance
award or a combination thereof, the number of shares of Common Stock or units
subject to the grant, the time and conditions of exercise or vesting, the fair
market value of the Common Stock for purposes of the Plan, and all other terms
and conditions of any grant and to amend such awards or accelerate the time of
exercise or vesting thereof; and (iv) to prescribe the form of agreement,
certificate or other instrument evidencing the grant. Notwithstanding the
foregoing, the Committee, subject to the terms and conditions of the Plan, may
delegate to the Chairman or the President of the Company, if such individual
is then serving as a member of the Board, the authority to act as a
subcommittee of the Committee for purposes of making grants or awards of
 
                                      A-2
<PAGE>
 
stock options, stock appreciation rights, restricted stock or performance
awards, not to exceed such number of shares as the Committee shall designate
annually, to such employees of the Company and its subsidiaries who are not
subject to Section 16(a) of the Exchange Act as the Chairman or the President
shall determine in his or her sole discretion after consultation with the Vice
President-Human Resources of the Company, and the Chairman or the President,
as applicable, shall have the authority and duties of the Committee with
respect to such grants.
 
  The Committee shall also have authority to interpret the Plan and to
establish, amend and rescind rules and regulations for the administration of
the Plan, and all such interpretations, rules and regulations shall be
conclusive and binding on all persons.
 
5. Effective Date of Plan.
 
  The Plan shall be effective upon approval by the stockholder of the Company.
 
6. Stock Options.
 
  (a) Grants. Subject to the terms of the Plan, options to purchase shares of
Common Stock, including "incentive stock options" within the meaning of
Section 422 of the Code, may be granted from time to time to such officers and
other key employees of the Company and its subsidiaries as may be selected by
the Committee. Each grant of an option under the Plan may designate whether
the option is intended to be an incentive stock option or a "nonqualified"
stock option. Any option not so designated shall be deemed to be a
"nonqualified" stock option.
 
  (b) Terms of Options. An option shall be exercisable in whole or in such
installments and at such times as may be determined by the Committee in its
sole discretion, provided that no option shall be exercisable less than six
months or more than ten years after the date of grant (except in the case of
death or physical or mental incapacity). The per share option price shall not
be less than the greater of par value or 100% of the fair market value of a
share of Common Stock on the date the option is granted. Upon exercise, the
option price may be paid in cash, in shares of Common Stock having a fair
market value equal to the option price which have been owned by the
Participant for at least 6 months prior thereto, or in a combination thereof.
The Committee may also allow the cashless exercise of options by holders
thereof, as permitted under regulations promulgated by the Board of Governors
of the Federal Reserve System, subject to any applicable restrictions
necessary to comply with rules adopted by the Securities and Exchange
Commission, and the exercise of options by holders thereof by any other means
that the Committee determines to be consistent with the Plan's purpose and
applicable law, including loans, with or without interest, made by the Company
to the holder thereof.
 
  (c) Restrictions Relating to Incentive Stock Options. To the extent required
by the Code, the aggregate fair market value (determined as of the time the
option is granted) of the Common Stock with respect to which incentive stock
options are exercisable for the first time by an employee during any calendar
year (under the Plan or any other plan of the Company or any of its
subsidiaries) shall not exceed $100,000.
 
                                      A-3
<PAGE>
 
  (d) Termination of Employment. If an optionee ceases to be employed by the
Company or any of its subsidiaries or affiliates by reason of (i) death, (ii)
physical or mental incapacity, (iii) retirement on or after the normal
retirement date provided for in and pursuant to any pension plan of the
Company or any subsidiary or affiliate of the Company in effect at the time of
such retirement, or (iv) early retirement (with the consent of the Committee)
provided for in and pursuant to any such pension plan, any option held by such
optionee may be exercised, with respect to all or any part of the Common Stock
as to which such option was not theretofore exercised (whether or not such
option was otherwise then exercisable), for such period from and after the
date of such cessation of employment (not extending, however, beyond the date
of expiration of such option) as the Committee may determine at the time of
the grant or at any time thereafter. If an optionee ceases to be employed by
the Company and any of its subsidiaries and affiliates for any reason other
than a reason set forth in the immediately preceding sentence, any option
granted to such optionee may be exercised for a period ending on the 30th day
following the date of such cessation of employment or the date of expiration
of such option, whichever first occurs, but only with respect to that number
of shares of Common Stock for which such option was exercisable immediately
prior to the date of cessation of employment, except as otherwise determined
by the Committee at the time of grant or any time thereafter.
 
  (e) Additional Terms and Conditions. The agreement or instrument evidencing
the grant of a stock option may contain such other terms, provisions and
conditions not inconsistent with the Plan as may be determined by the
Committee in its sole discretion.
 
7. Stock Appreciation Rights.
 
  (a) Grants. Subject to the terms of the Plan, rights entitling the grantee
to receive cash or shares of Common Stock having a fair market value equal to
the appreciation in market value of a stated number of shares of such Common
Stock from the date of the grant to the date of exercise, or, in the case of
rights granted in tandem with or by reference to a stock option granted prior
to the grant of such rights, from the date of grant of such related stock
option to the date of exercise, may be granted from time to time to such
officers and other key employees of the Company and its subsidiaries as may be
selected by the Committee.
 
  (b) Terms of Grant. Such rights may be granted in tandem with or by
reference to a related stock option, in which event the grantee may elect to
exercise either the stock option or the right, but not both, as to the shares
subject to the stock option and the right, or the right may be granted
independently of a stock option. Rights granted in tandem with or by reference
to a related stock option shall be exercisable to the extent, and only to the
extent, that the related option is exercisable, provided that no such right
(except in the case of death or physical or mental incapacity) shall be
exercisable prior to the expiration of six months following the date the right
is granted. Rights granted independently of a stock option shall be
exercisable in whole or in such installments and at such times as may be
determined by the Committee, provided that no right (except in the case of
death or physical or mental incapacity) shall be exercisable less
 
                                      A-4
<PAGE>
 
than six months or more than ten years after the date of grant. Further, in
the event that any employee to whom rights are granted independently of a
stock option ceases to be an employee of the Company and its subsidiaries and
its affiliates, such rights shall be exercisable only to the extent and upon
the conditions that stock options are exercisable in accordance with the
provisions of paragraph (d) of Section 6 of the Plan. The Committee may at the
time of the grant or at any time thereafter impose such additional terms and
conditions on the exercise of stock appreciation rights as it deems necessary
or desirable for any reason, including for compliance with Section 16(a) or
Section 16(b) of the Exchange Act and the rules and regulations thereunder.
 
  (c) Payment on Exercise. Upon exercise of a stock appreciation right, the
holder shall be paid the excess of the then fair market value of the number of
shares of Common Stock to which the right relates over the fair market value
of such number of shares at the date of grant of the right or of the related
stock option, as the case may be. Such excess shall be paid in cash or in
shares of Common Stock having a fair market value equal to such excess, or in
such combination thereof, as may be provided in the grant of such right (which
may permit the holder to elect between cash and Common Stock or to elect a
combination thereof), or, if no such provision is made in the grant, as the
Committee shall determine upon exercise of the right, provided, in any event,
that the holder shall be paid cash in lieu of any fractional share of Common
Stock to which such holder would otherwise be entitled.
 
  (d) Additional Terms and Conditions. The agreement or instrument evidencing
the grant of stock appreciation rights may contain such other terms,
provisions and conditions not inconsistent with the Plan as may be determined
by the Committee in its sole discretion.
 
8. Restricted Stock Awards.
 
  Subject to the terms of the Plan, restricted stock awards consisting of
shares of Common Stock may be made from time to time to such officers and
other key employees of the Company and its subsidiaries as may be selected by
the Committee, provided that any such employee (except an employee whose terms
of employment include the granting of a restricted stock award) shall have
been employed by the Company or any of its subsidiaries or its affiliates for
at least six months. Such awards shall be contingent on the employee's
continuing employment with the Company or its subsidiaries or affiliates for a
period to be specified in the award, which (except in the case of death or
physical or mental incapacity) shall not be less than six months or more than
ten years from the date of award, and shall be subject to such additional
terms and conditions as the Committee in its sole discretion deems
appropriate, including, but not by way of limitation, restrictions on the sale
or other disposition of such shares during the restriction period. Except as
otherwise determined by the Committee at the time of the award, the holder of
a restricted stock award shall have the right to vote the restricted shares
and to receive dividends thereon, unless and until such shares are forfeited.
 
 
                                      A-5
<PAGE>
 
9. Performance Awards.
 
  (a) Awards. Performance awards consisting of (i) shares of Common Stock,
(ii) monetary units or (iii) units which are expressed in terms of shares of
Common Stock may be made from time to time to such officers and other key
employees of the Company and its subsidiaries as may be selected by the
Committee. Subject to the provisions of Section 12 below, such awards shall be
contingent on the achievement over a period of not less than six months or
more than ten years of such corporate, division, subsidiary, group or other
measures and goals as shall be established by the Committee. Subject to the
provisions of Section 12 below, such measures and goals may be revised by the
Committee at any time from time to time during the performance period. Except
as may otherwise be determined by the Committee at the time of the award or at
any time thereafter, a performance award shall terminate if the grantee of the
award does not remain continuously in the employ of the Company or its
subsidiaries or affiliates at all times during the applicable performance
period.
 
  (b) Rights with Respect to Shares and Share Units. If a performance award
consists of shares of Common Stock or units which are expressed in terms of
shares of such Common Stock, amounts equal to dividends otherwise payable on a
like number of shares may, if the award so provides, be converted into
additional such shares (to the extent that shares are then available for
issuance under the Plan) or credited as additional units and paid to the
participant if and when, and to the extent that, payment is made pursuant to
such award.
 
  (c) Payment. Payment of a performance award following the end of the
performance period, if such award consists of monetary units or units
expressed in terms of shares of Common Stock, may be made in cash, shares of
Common Stock, or a combination thereof, as determined by the Committee. Any
payment made in Common Stock shall be based on the fair market value of such
stock on the payment date.
 
10. Performance Measures Applicable to Awards to Named Executive Officers.
 
  Unless and until the Committee proposes for stockholder vote a change in the
general performance measures set forth in this Section 10, the attainment of
which may determine the degree of payout or vesting with respect to awards
under the Plan which are designed to qualify for the Performance-Based
Exception, the performance measure(s) to be used for purposes of such awards
shall be chosen from among the following alternatives: safety (including total
injury frequency, lost workday rates or cases, medical treatment cases and
fatalities); quality control (including critical product characteristics and
defects); cost control (including cost as a percentage of sales); capital
structure (including debt and equity levels, debt-to-equity ratios, and debt-
to total-capitalization ratios); inventory turnover; customer performance or
satisfaction; revenue growth; net income; conformity to cash flow plans;
return on investment; and operating profit to operating assets.
 
  The Committee shall have the discretion to establish performance goals based
upon the foregoing performance measures and to adjust such goals and the
methodology used to measure the determination of the degree of attainment of
such goals; provided, however, that awards
 
                                      A-6
<PAGE>
 
under the Plan that are intended to qualify for the Performance-Based
Exception and that are issued to or held by Named Executive Officers may not
be adjusted in a manner that increases such award. The Committee shall retain
the discretion to adjust such awards in a manner that does not increase such
awards. Furthermore, the Committee shall not make any adjustment to awards
under the Plan issued to or held by Named Executive Officers that are intended
to comply with the Performance-Based Exception if the result of such
adjustment would be the disqualification of such award under the Performance-
Based Exception.
 
  In the event that applicable laws change to permit the Committee greater
discretion to amend or replace the foregoing performance measures applicable
to awards to Named Executive Officers without obtaining stockholder approval
of such changes, the Committee shall have sole discretion to make such changes
without obtaining such approval. In addition, in the event that the Committee
determines that it is advisable to grant awards under the Plan to Named
Executive Officers that may not qualify for the Performance-Based Exception,
the Committee may make such grants upon any performance measures it deems
appropriate with the understanding that they may not satisfy the requirements
of Section 162(m) of the Code.
 
11. Adjustments for Changes in Capitalization, Etc.
 
  Subject to the provisions of Section 12 herein, in the event of any change
in corporate capitalization, such as a stock split, reverse stock split, stock
dividend, or a corporate transaction, such as a merger, consolidation, or
separation, including a spin-off, or other distribution of stock or property
of the Company or its subsidiaries (other than normal cash dividends), any
reorganization (whether or not such reorganization comes within the definition
of such term in Code Section 368) or any partial or complete liquidation of
the Company or its subsidiaries, such adjustment shall be made in the number
and class of shares which may be delivered under Section 3 (including the
number of shares referred to in the last sentence of the first paragraph of
Section 3 and in subparagraph (a) of the second paragraph of Section 3), and
in the number and class of and/or price of shares subject to outstanding
grants or awards under the Plan, as may be determined to be appropriate and
equitable by the Committee, in its sole discretion, to prevent dilution or
enlargement of rights; provided, however, that the number of shares subject to
any grants or awards under the Plan shall always be a whole number.
 
12. Effect of Change in Control.
 
  (a) Acceleration of Benefits. Subject to the following sentence, in the
event of a "Change in Control" as defined in paragraph (b) of this Section 12,
(i) the value of all outstanding stock options, stock appreciation rights and
restricted stock awards (whether or not then fully exercisable or vested)
shall be cashed out on the basis of the "Change in Control Price" (as defined
in paragraph (c) of this Section 12) as of the date the Change in Control
occurs, provided, however, that any stock options or stock appreciation rights
outstanding for less than six months shall not be cashed out until six months
after the respective date of grant, and provided, further, that the Committee
may provide for the immediate vesting instead of the cashing out of
 
                                      A-7
<PAGE>
 
restricted stock awards in such circumstances as it deems appropriate; and
(ii) all outstanding performance awards shall be cashed out in such manner and
in such amount or amounts as determined by the Committee in its sole
discretion. In the event of a transaction which is intended to be accounted
for through the pooling-of-interest accounting method, (i) in lieu of cashing
out all or any portion of the outstanding stock options, stock appreciation
rights, restricted stock awards and performance awards, the Committee, in its
discretion, may cause such grants or awards to vest, and may limit payment to
shares of Common Stock, and (ii) the Committee, in its discretion, may extend
the exercise period for stock options and stock appreciation rights, but not
beyond the earlier of (A) 30 days after the end of the pooling period or (B)
the original term of the stock option or stock appreciation right.
 
  (b) Change in Control. For purposes of this Section 12, a Change in Control
means the happening of any of the following:
 
    (i) any "person" (as such term is used in Sections 13(d) and 14(d) of the
  Exchange Act), other than (w) the Company and its affiliates (collectively
  referred to herein as "RTI"), (x) a trustee or other fiduciary holding
  securities under an employee benefit plan of RTI, (y) an underwriter
  temporarily holding securities pursuant to an offering of such securities,
  or (z) a corporation owned, directly or indirectly, by the stockholders of
  the Company in substantially the same proportions as their ownership of
  stock of the Company, is or becomes the "beneficial owner" (as defined in
  Rule 13d-3 under the Exchange Act), directly or indirectly, of securities
  of the Company (not including in the securities beneficially owned by such
  person any securities acquired directly from the Company or its affiliates)
  representing 40% or more of the combined voting power of the Company's then
  outstanding securities;
 
    (ii) during any period of two consecutive years, individuals who at the
  beginning of such period constitute the Board and any new director (other
  than a director designated by a person who has entered into an agreement
  with the Company to effect a transaction described in clauses (i), (ii) or
  (iv) of this Subsection) whose election by the Board or nomination for
  election by the Company's stockholders was approved by a vote of at least
  two-thirds ( 2/3) of the directors then still in office who either were
  directors at the beginning of the period or whose election or nomination
  for election was previously so approved cease for any reason to constitute
  a majority thereof;
 
    (iii) the stockholders of the Company approve a merger or consolidation
  of the Company with any other corporation, other than a merger or
  consolidation which would result in the voting securities of the Company
  outstanding immediately prior thereto continuing to represent (either by
  remaining outstanding or by being converted into voting securities of the
  surviving entity), in combination with the ownership of any trustee or
  other fiduciary holding securities under an employee benefit plan of RTI,
  at least 60% of the combined voting power of the voting securities of the
  Company or such surviving entity outstanding immediately after such merger
  or consolidation, or a merger or consolidation effected to implement a
  recapitalization of the Company (or similar transaction) in which no person
  acquires more than 50% of the combined voting power of the Company's then
  outstanding securities; or
 
 
                                      A-8
<PAGE>
 
    (iv) the stockholders of the Company approve a plan of complete
  liquidation of the Company or an agreement for the sale or disposition by
  the Company of all or substantially all of the Company's assets.
 
A Change in Control shall also be deemed to occur with respect to any
Participant for purposes of the Plan if there occurs:
 
    (1) a sale or disposition, directly or indirectly, other than to a person
  described in subclause (w), (x) or (z) of clause (i) next above, of
  securities of the Participant's employer, any direct or indirect parent
  company of the Participant's employer or any company that is a subsidiary
  of the Participant's employer and is also a significant subsidiary (as
  defined below) of the Company (the Participant's employer and such a parent
  or subsidiary being a "Related Company"), representing 50% or more of the
  combined voting power of the securities of such Related Company then
  outstanding;
 
    (2) a merger or consolidation of a Related Company with any other
  corporation, other than a merger or consolidation which would result in 50%
  or more of the combined voting power of the surviving company being
  beneficially owned by a majority owned direct or indirect subsidiary of the
  Company; or
 
    (3) the sale or disposition of all or substantially all the assets of a
  Related Company to a person other than a majority owned direct or indirect
  subsidiary of the Company.
 
Notwithstanding the foregoing, no Change in Control shall be deemed to have
occurred with respect to a Participant for purposes of the Plan if (I) such
transaction includes or involves a sale to the public or a distribution to the
stockholders of the Company of more than 50% of the voting securities of the
Participant's employer or a direct or indirect parent of the Participant's
employer, and (II) the Participant's employer or a direct or indirect parent
of the Participant's employer agrees to become a successor to the Company
under an individual agreement between the Company and the Participant or the
Participant is covered by an agreement providing for benefits upon a change in
control of his or her employer following an event described clauses (1), (2)
or (3) next above. For purposes of the Plan, the term "significant subsidiary"
has the meaning given to such term under Rule 405 of the Securities Act of
1933, as amended.
 
  (c) Change in Control Price. For purposes of this Section 12, Change in
Control Price means:
 
    (i) with respect to a Change in Control by reason of a merger or
  consolidation of the Company described in paragraph (b)(iii) of this
  Section 12 in which the consideration per share of Common Stock to be paid
  for the acquisition of shares of Common Stock specified in the agreement of
  merger or consolidation is all in cash, the highest such consideration per
  share;
 
    (ii) with respect to a Change in Control by reason of an acquisition of
  securities described in paragraph (b)(i) of this Section 12, the highest
  price per share for any share of the Common Stock paid by any holder of any
  of the securities representing 40% or more of the combined voting power of
  the Company giving rise to the Change in Control; and
 
                                      A-9
<PAGE>
 
    (iii) with respect to a Change in Control by reason of a merger or
  consolidation of the Company (other than a merger or consolidation
  described in paragraph (b)(iii) of this Section) or a change in the
  composition of the Board of Directors described in paragraph (b)(ii) of
  this Section 12, the highest price per share of Common Stock reported on
  the Composite Transactions (or, if such shares are not traded on the New
  York Stock Exchange, such other principal market on which such shares are
  traded) during the sixty-day period ending on the date the Change in
  Control occurs, except that, in the case of incentive stock options and
  stock appreciation rights relating to incentive stock options, the holder
  may not receive an amount in excess of the maximum amount that will enable
  such option to continue to qualify as an incentive stock option.
 
13. Amendment and Termination of Plan.
 
  The Plan may be amended by the Board in any respect, provided that, without
stockholder approval, no amendment (other than pursuant to Section 11 of the
Plan) shall increase the maximum number of shares available for issuance under
the Plan if such action would result in awards under the Plan no longer being
exempt under Rule 16b-3 as then in effect. In addition, no amendment may
impair the rights of a participant under any stock option, stock appreciation
right, restricted stock award or performance award previously granted under
the Plan without the consent of such participant, unless required by law. The
Plan may also be terminated at any time by the Board. No further grants may be
made under the Plan after termination, but termination shall not affect the
rights of any participant under, or the authority of the Committee with
respect to, any grants or awards made prior to termination.
 
14. Grant of Substitute Awards.
 
  (a) Substitute Options. In lieu of outstanding options to purchase Inland
Steel Industries, Inc. ("ISI") common stock ("ISI Options") granted pursuant
to the Inland 1995 Incentive Stock Plan, the Inland 1992 Incentive Stock Plan,
the Inland 1988 Incentive Stock Plan or the Inland 1984 Incentive Stock Plan
(collectively, the "ISI Incentive Plans") to officers and employees of ISI and
its subsidiaries who are or who become officers or employees of the Company or
any of its subsidiaries on or after the closing date of the initial public
offering of Common Stock and prior to the date on which the Company and its
subsidiaries cease to be treated as a single employer with ISI under Section
414(b) or (c) of the Code ("Transferred Employees"), such Transferred
Employees shall receive a grant of "Substitute Stock Options" under the Plan;
provided that the Committee, in its sole discretion, may award Substitute
Stock Options to any Transferred Employee with respect to less than all
(including none) of his or her outstanding options under the ISI Incentive
Plans, in which case the outstanding ISI Options for which no Substitute Stock
Options have been granted will remain outstanding. The number of shares of
Common Stock subject to any Substitute Stock Option shall bear the same ratio
to the number of shares of ISI common stock subject to the corresponding ISI
Option as the Average Value (as defined below) of a share of ISI common stock
bears to the Average Value of a share of Common Stock. The per share option
price of Common Stock subject to the Substitute Stock Option shall
 
                                     A-10
<PAGE>
 
be equal to the amount which bears the same ratio to the Average Value of a
share of Common Stock as the per share option price of ISI common stock under
the ISI Option bears to the Average Value of a share of ISI common stock.
Other than the option price and number of shares, the Substitute Stock Options
shall be subject to the same terms and conditions as the ISI Options. The term
"Average Value" means the average closing price of Common Stock or ISI common
stock, as applicable, as reported, in the case of Common Stock, on the New
York Stock Exchange Composite Transactions (the "Composite Transactions") (or,
if such shares are not traded on the New York Stock Exchange, such other
principal market on which such shares are traded) for the first ten trading
days after the date of the substitution.
 
  (b) Substitute Restricted Stock. In lieu of outstanding shares of restricted
ISI common stock ("ISI Restricted Stock") granted pursuant to the ISI
Incentive Plans to Transferred Employees, such Transferred Employees shall
receive a grant of "Substitute Restricted Stock" under the Plan; provided that
the Committee, in its sole discretion, may award Substitute Restricted Stock
to any Transferred Employee with respect to less than all (including none) of
his or her outstanding restricted stock under the ISI Incentive Plans, in
which case the outstanding ISI Restricted Stock for which no Substitute
Restricted Stock has been granted will remain outstanding. The number of
shares of Substitute Restricted Stock shall bear the same ratio to the number
of shares of ISI Restricted Stock as the Average Value of a share of ISI
common stock bears to the Average Value of a share of Common Stock. Other than
the number of shares, the Substitute Restricted Stock shall be subject to the
same terms and conditions as the ISI Restricted Stock.
 
15. Miscellaneous.
 
  (a) No Right to a Grant. Neither the adoption of the Plan nor any action of
the Board or of the Committee shall be deemed to give any employee any right
to be selected as a participant or to be granted a stock option, stock
appreciation right, restricted stock award or performance award.
 
  (b) Rights as Stockholders. No person shall have any rights as a stockholder
of the Company with respect to any shares covered by a stock option, stock
appreciation right, or performance award until the date of the issuance of a
stock certificate to such person pursuant to such stock option, right or
award.
 
  (c) Employment. Nothing contained in this Plan shall be deemed to confer
upon any employee any right of continued employment with the Company or any of
its subsidiaries or its affiliates or to limit or diminish in any way the
right of the Company or any such subsidiary or affiliate to terminate his or
her employment at any time with or without cause.
 
  (d) Taxes. The Company shall be entitled to deduct from any payment under
the Plan the amount of any tax required by law to be withheld with respect to
such payment or may require any participant to pay such amount to the Company
prior to and as a condition of making such payment. In addition, the Committee
may, in its discretion and subject to such rules as it may
 
                                     A-11
<PAGE>
 
adopt from time to time, permit a participant to elect to have the Company
withhold from any payment under the Plan (or to have the Company accept from
the participant), for tax withholding purposes, shares of Common Stock, valued
at their fair market value, but in no event shall the fair market value of the
number of shares so withheld (or accepted) exceed the amount necessary to meet
the maximum Federal, state and local marginal tax rates then in effect that
are applicable to the participant and to the particular transaction.
 
  (e) Nontransferability. Except as permitted by the Committee, no stock
option, stock appreciation right, restricted stock award or performance award
shall be transferable except by will or the laws of descent and distribution,
and, during the holder's lifetime, stock options and stock appreciation rights
shall be exercisable only by, and shares subject to restricted stock awards
and payments pursuant to performance awards shall be delivered or made only
to, such holder or such holder's duly appointed legal representative.
 
                                     A-12
<PAGE>
 
                                                                      EXHIBIT B
 
                              RYERSON TULL, INC.
                 ANNUAL PERFORMANCE IMPROVEMENT INCENTIVE PLAN
 
1. Purpose
 
  The purpose of the Ryerson Tull, Inc. Annual Performance Improvement
Incentive Plan (the "Plan") is to promote the interests of Ryerson Tull, Inc.
(the "Company") and its stockholders by (i) attracting and retaining salaried
employees of outstanding ability; (ii) strengthening the Company's capability
to develop, maintain and direct a competent employee population; (iii)
motivating salaried employees, by means of performance-related incentives, to
achieve financial rewards; (iv) providing annual incentive compensation
opportunities which are competitive with those of other major corporations;
and (v) enabling salaried employees to participate in the growth and financial
success of the Company.
 
2. Definitions
 
  "Affiliate" means any corporation or other entity which is not a Subsidiary
but as to which the Company possesses a direct or indirect ownership interest
and has power to exercise management control.
 
  "Award" means an amount for an Award Period determined to be payable to a
Participant under the Plan.
 
  "Award Period" means such calendar quarters or calendar years as the
Committee may establish from time to time with respect to any applicable
salary grade designation, to any Corporate Unit or to a combination of these
factors.
 
  "Award Schedule" means the schedule to be used for determining Awards as
established by the Committee and set forth in the Addendum to the Plan
applicable to the Corporate Unit covered thereby.
 
  "Code" means the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended.
 
  "Committee" means the Compensation Committee of the Board of Directors of
the Company.
 
  "Corporate Unit" means the Company, Joseph T. Ryerson & Son/East, Joseph T.
Ryerson & Son/Central, Joseph T. Ryerson & Son/West, Ryerson Coil Processing,
J.M. Tull Metals Company, Inc., Inland Industries de Mexico, S.A. de C.V., and
any Affiliate, other Subsidiary or any division or group of the Company or any
Subsidiary designated as a Corporate Unit from time to time by the Committee
of the Company.
 
  "Employee" means an employee eligible to be designated as a Participant in
the Plan.
 
                                      B-1
<PAGE>
 
  "Named Executive Officer" means a Participant who is one of the group of
"covered employees" as defined in the regulations promulgated under Section
162(m) of the Code.
 
  "Participant" means an Employee who is designated by the Committee to be
eligible to receive an Award under the Plan.
 
  "Performance-Based Exception" means the performance-based exception from the
deductibility limitations as set forth in Section 162(m) of the Code.
 
  "Subsidiary" means any corporation in which the Company possesses directly or
indirectly more than fifty percent (50%) of the total combined voting power of
all classes of its stock.
 
  "Target Award" means the percentage of a Participant's base salary earnings
or base annual salary for an Award Period as established by the Committee
pursuant to paragraph 6 of the Plan and set forth in the Addendum to the Plan
applicable to the Corporate Unit in which such Participant is employed.
 
  "Threshold" means the minimum financial performance (established by the
Committee and set forth in the Addendum to the Plan applicable to such
Corporate Unit) required by a Corporate Unit before an Award may be paid to a
Participant employed in such Corporate Unit.
 
3. Administration
 
  The Plan shall be administered by the Committee. No member of the Committee
shall be eligible to receive an Award while serving on the Committee. The
Committee shall have the authority to interpret the Plan and to establish,
amend and rescind rules and regulations for the administration of the Plan, and
all such interpretations, rules and regulations shall be conclusive and binding
on all persons. In addition, the Committee may delegate to one or more senior
executive officers of the Company the right to administer the Plan as it
pertains to employees who are not officers of the Company or of any other
Corporate Unit. Subject to the provisions of paragraph 7 hereof, the Committee
may impose such conditions on participation in and Awards under the Plan as it
deems appropriate.
 
4. Eligibility
 
  Except as otherwise provided by the Committee and subject to paragraph 9
hereof, all full-time salaried employees of a Corporate Unit as of the first
day and the last day of an Award Period are eligible to be designated as
Participants in the Plan for such Award Period; provided, however, that, with
respect to Award Periods that extend for at least one year, individuals who are
full-time salaried employees of a Corporate Unit on August 1 of the first year
of the Award Period and the last day of the Award Period shall also be eligible
to be designated as Participants in the Plan for such Award Period.
Notwithstanding the foregoing, the Committee may adopt criteria restricting the
number of full-time salaried employees of a Corporate Unit eligible to be
designated as Participants in the Plan for any Award Period, which criteria
shall be set forth in the Addendum to the Plan applicable to such Corporate
Unit.
 
                                      B-2
<PAGE>
 
5. Designation of Participants
 
  The Committee shall determine and designate from time to time those
Employees who shall be Participants. The designation of an Employee as a
Participant in the Plan for any Award period shall not bestow upon such
Employee any right to receive an Award for such Award Period or the right to
be designated as a Participant for any subsequent Award Period.
 
6. Individual Award Opportunity
 
  For each Award Period, the Committee shall establish for each Participant a
Target Award, expressed as a percentage of his or her base salary earnings or
base annual salary for such Award Period, on the basis of his or her salary
grade designation.
 
7. Determination of Awards
 
  Awards for each Award Period for Participants in each Corporate Unit shall
be determined in accordance with the Award Schedule established by the
Committee for such Corporate Unit. No Award shall be paid to any Participant
in a Corporate Unit for any Award Period in which the performance of such
Corporate Unit does not equal or exceed the Threshold applicable to such
Corporate Unit. The Award for each Participant in a Corporate Unit shall be
his or her Target Award multiplied by the Percent Attainment (determined in
accordance with the applicable Award Schedule), subject to the following:
 
    (a) Subject to paragraph 3 and the provisions of this paragraph 7, the
  Committee may adjust such Award for individual performance on the basis of
  such quantitative and qualitative performance measures and evaluations as
  it deems appropriate.
 
    (b) The Committee may make such adjustments as it deems appropriate in
  the case of any Participant whose salary grade designation has changed
  during the applicable Award Period or who has been employed in more than
  one Corporate Unit during an Award Period.
 
    (c) Unless and until the Committee proposes for stockholder vote a change
  in the general performance measures set forth in this paragraph 7(c), the
  attainment of which may determine the degree of payout with respect to
  Awards under the Plan which are designed to qualify for the Performance-
  Based Exception, the performance measure(s) to be used for purposes of such
  Awards shall be chosen from among the following alternatives: return on
  operating assets, operating profit, return on equity, net income, stock
  price, revenue growth, expense management, inventory management, quality
  management, customer service performance, shareholder return, gross margin
  management and market share improvement. The Committee shall have the
  discretion to establish performance goals based upon the foregoing
  performance measures and to adjust such goals and the methodology used to
  measure the determination of the degree of attainment of such goals;
  provided, however, that Awards under the Plan that are intended to qualify
  for the Performance-Based Exception and that are issued to or held by any
  Named Executive Officer may not be adjusted in a manner that increases such
  Award. The Committee shall retain the discretion to adjust such Awards in a
  manner that does not increase such Awards. Furthermore, the
 
                                      B-3
<PAGE>
 
  Committee shall not make any adjustment to Awards under the Plan issued to
  or held by any Named Executive Officer that are intended to comply with the
  Performance-Based Exception if the result of such adjustment would be the
  disqualification of such Award under the Performance-Based Exception. In
  the event that applicable laws change to permit the Committee greater
  discretion to amend or replace the foregoing performance measures
  applicable to Awards to Named Executive officers without obtaining
  stockholder approval of such changes, the Committee shall have sole
  discretion to make such changes without obtaining such approval. In
  addition, in the event that the Committee determines that it is advisable
  to grant Awards under the Plan to Named Executive Officers that may not
  qualify for the Performance-Based Exception, the Committee may make such
  grants upon any performance measures it deems appropriate with the
  understanding that they may not satisfy the requirements of Section 162(m)
  of the Code.
 
  Notwithstanding any other provision of the Plan, in no event may a
Participant be paid an Award in any calendar year in excess of $2,000,000. No
segregation of any moneys or the creation of any trust or the making of any
special deposit shall be required in connection with any awards made or to be
made under the Plan.
 
8. Payment of Awards
 
  Awards shall be paid in cash as soon as practicable after the end of the
Award Period for which the Award is made. If a Participant to whom an Award
has been made dies prior to the payment of the Award, such Award shall be
delivered to his or her legal representative or to such other person or
persons as shall be determined by the Chairman, the President, the Chief
Executive Officer or the Vice President-Human Resources of the Company. The
Company or other applicable Corporate Unit shall have the right to deduct from
all Awards payable under the Plan any taxes required by law to be withheld by
the Company or other Corporate Unit with respect thereto; provided, however,
that to the extent provided by the Committee, any payment under the Plan may
be deferred and to the extent deferred, may be credited with an interest or
earnings factor as determined by the Committee.
 
9. Termination of Employment
 
  Except in the case of death, disability, normal retirement (determined in
accordance with the qualified retirement plans of the Company), early
retirement (with the consent of the Committee) or except as provided in
paragraph 10, a Participant must be an employee of the Company or of a
Subsidiary or Affiliate as of the end of the Award Period in order to be
eligible for an Award.
 
10. Change of Control
 
  In the event of a Change of Control of the Company (as hereinafter defined),
the Plan shall remain in full force and effect for the remainder of any Award
Period (or, if longer, the remainder of the calendar year) during which such
Change of Control of the Company occurs, and each Participant shall receive an
Award for such Award Periods (or any Award Periods occurring in
 
                                      B-4
<PAGE>
 
such calendar year), at least equal to his or her Target Awards, regardless of
whether or not Awards would otherwise have been payable under the Plan for
such Award Periods and regardless of whether or not such Participant was an
Employee at the end of any such Award Period. A "Change of Control of the
Company" shall be deemed to have occurred if there shall have been a change in
the composition of the Board of Directors of the Company such that a majority
of the Board of Directors shall have been members of the Board of Directors
for less than 24 months, unless the election of each new director who was not
a director at the beginning of the 24 month period was approved by a vote of
at least two-thirds of the directors then still in office who were directors
at the beginning of such period.
 
11. Transferability
 
  Any payment to which a Participant may be entitled under the Plan shall be
free from the control or interference of any creditor of such Participant and
shall not be subject to attachment or susceptible of anticipation or
alienation. The interest of a Participant shall not be transferable except by
will or the laws of descent and distribution.
 
12. No Right to Participate; Employment
 
  Neither the adoption of the Plan nor any action of the Committee shall be
deemed to give any Employee any right to be designated as a Participant under
the Plan. Further, nothing contained in the Plan, nor any action by the
Committee or any other person hereunder, shall be deemed to confer upon any
Employee any right of continued employment with any Corporate Unit or to limit
or diminish in any way the right of any Corporate Unit to terminate his or her
employment at any time with or without cause.
 
13. Nonexclusivity of the Plan
 
  This Plan is not intended to and shall not preclude the Board of Directors
of the Company from adopting or continuing such additional compensation
arrangements as it deems desirable for Participants under this Plan, including
any thrift, savings, investment, stock purchase, stock option, profit sharing,
pension, retirement, insurance or other incentive, compensation or benefit
plan or program.
 
14. Amendment
 
  Except as provided in paragraph 10 hereof, the Board of Directors of the
Company may amend, suspend or terminate the Plan at any time.
 
                                      B-5
<PAGE>
 
      -                                                                 -

PROXY                                                                      PROXY
                               RYERSON TULL, INC.
 
              PROXY SOLICITED ON BEHALF OF THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS
 
  The undersigned hereby appoints Robert J. Darnall, Neil S. Novich, and
Charles B. Salowitz, and each of them, as attorneys and proxies (with full
power of substitution in each) to vote all common stock of the Company that the
undersigned is entitled to vote at the Annual Meeting of Stockholders of the
Company to be held May 28, 1997 and at any adjournment thereof. UNLESS
OTHERWISE SPECIFIED, THIS PROXY WILL BE VOTED FOR THE ELECTION OF DIRECTORS,
FOR THE RYERSON TULL 1996 INCENTIVE STOCK PLAN, FOR THE RYERSON TULL, INC.
ANNUAL PERFORMANCE IMPROVEMENT INCENTIVE PLAN, FOR THE ELECTION OF PRICE
WATERHOUSE LLP AS AUDITORS, AND AT THE DISCRETION OF THE PROXIES ON ANY AND ALL
OTHER MATTERS THAT MAY PROPERLY COME BEFORE SUCH ANNUAL MEETING OR ANY
ADJOURNMENT THEREOF.
 
                        (Please complete on other side)

      -                                                                 -
<PAGE>
 
      -                                                                 -

[                                                                              ]

                              RYERSON TULL, INC.

   PLEASE MARK VOTE IN OVAL IN THE FOLLOWING MANNER USING DARK INK ONLY. (0)
 
THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS RECOMMENDS A VOTE FOR ITEMS 1, 2, 3 AND 4.

1. Election of Directors.
   Jean-Pierre Rosso, Ronald L. Thompson

         --------------------------
         Nominee Exception

                  For All
   For  Withheld  Except
   ( )     ( )      ( )

2. Ryerson Tull 1996 Incentive Stock Plan.

   For  Against  Abstain
   ( )    ( )      ( )
 
3. Ryerson Tull, Inc. Annual Performance Improvement Incentive Plan.
 
   For  Against  Abstain
   ( )    ( )      ( )
 
4. The election of Price Waterhouse LLP as auditors for the year 1997.

   For  Against  Abstain
   ( )    ( )      ( )
 
5. In the discretion of the proxies to vote upon any and all other matters
   which may properly come before such annual meeting or any adjournment
   thereof.
 
 
     Dated: _____________________________________________________________ , 1997

Signature(s)____________________________________________________________________

- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
PLEASE SIGN AS NAME APPEARS HEREON. JOINT OWNERS SHOULD EACH SIGN. WHEN SIGNING
AS ATTORNEY, EXECUTOR, ADMINISTRATOR, TRUSTEE OR GUARDIAN, PLEASE GIVE FULL
TITLE AS SUCH. DATE AND RETURN PROMPTLY.

      -                                                                 -


© 2022 IncJournal is not affiliated with or endorsed by the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission