OFLX · CIK 1317945
What Omega Flex, Inc. told the SEC could break it.
Omega Flex's disclosures pull in two directions. The sharpest is customer concentration: a single national distribution chain accounted for 13% of 2025 sales and 22% of accounts receivable, so losing or shrinking that one relationship would hit both revenue and collections. The rest center on raw-material cost it may not be able to pass on — production concentrated at two Exton, Pennsylvania plants plus a UK facility, and a dependence on stainless steel (driven by nickel) and copper, where late-2025 tariffs on stainless steel and commodity volatility raised input costs.
4 self-disclosed vulnerabilities, pulled from its own filings — each in the company’s words, with the source. This is the risk register almost nobody reads.
In its own words
What could break it.
Customer concentration
- one customer 13% of sales / 22% of receivableshigh
A single customer (a national distribution chain) was 13% of Omega Flex's 2025 sales and 22% of accounts receivable; loss or reduced purchasing by this customer would materially affect results and collections.
“One customer represented 13% and 15% of sales during 2025 and 2024, respectively, and that same customer accounted for 22% and 23% of the accounts receivable balance as of December 31, 2025 and 2024, respectively.”
SEC filing →As of 2026
Geographic concentration
- manufacturing concentrated in Exton, PA and Banbury, UKmedium
The majority of Omega Flex's manufacturing capacity is at two facilities in close proximity in Exton, Pennsylvania, plus a leased plant in Banbury, UK — concentrating production at a few sites.
“The majority of our manufacturing capacity is currently located in Exton, Pennsylvania, where we own two manufacturing facilities which are in close proximity to each other, and in Banbury, England in the U.K.”
SEC filing →As of 2026
Regulatory & policy
- tariffs on stainless steel; ability to pass through cost increasesmedium
Tariffs on stainless steel increased Omega Flex's input costs late in 2025; commodity volatility, tariffs and competition could restrict its ability to pass raw-material price increases to customers.
“Volatility in the commodities marketplace, tariffs, and competitive conditions in the sale of our products could potentially restrict us from passing along raw materials or component part price increases to our customers.”
SEC filing →As of 2026
Commodity & input dependence
- stainless steel (nickel) and copperlow
Omega Flex's products depend on stainless steel (driven by nickel) for CSST and copper/brass for fittings and MediTrac CMT; copper and tariff-affected steel costs rose late in 2025.
“Nickel is a prime material in stainless steel which the Company utilizes to manufacture CSST, and copper is a key component of the Company's brass fittings and our MediTrac ® CMT.”
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