Nippon Steel's US deal approved — now comes the hard part: debt, tariffs and decarbonisation
TOKYO, June 15 — Nippon Steel yesterday touted a 'historic partnership' with US Steel after President Donald Trump approved a multi-billion-dollar merger.
But the Japanese giant faces numerous headwinds going forward.
Here are some of the challenges facing the company, from trade tariffs to lacklustre global demand:
US conditions
Nippon Steel and US Steel said they had 'entered into a National Security Agreement' with the US government, which 'provides that approximately US$11 billion (RM46.7 billion) in new investments will be made by 2028'.
Former president Joe Biden had blocked the deal on national security grounds shortly before leaving the White House.
Other conditions include a so-called 'golden share' for the US government, giving it more control over the company, as well as non-specified 'commitments' related to domestic production and trade.
'All necessary regulatory approvals for the partnership have now been received, and the partnership is expected to be finalized promptly,' the companies said in a statement.
Financial burden
Ratings agency S&P last month said that the 'huge financial burden' of the deal could cause it to downgrade Nippon Steel more severely than planned.
Bloomberg Intelligence's Michelle Leung also warned in May that the US$14.9 billion merger would 'significantly increase the Japanese firm's debt burden from the current US$16.7 billion'.
'A deal might help Nippon Steel diversify beyond its sluggish domestic market, though it would need to invest heavily to help repair the aging assets of US Steel,' she said.
Some shareholders have expressed alarm, with activist investor 3D Investment Partners calling for opposition to the reappointment of Nippon Steel executives at an upcoming annual general meeting.
'This level of capital outlay' risks an 'irreversible impairment of corporate value', it warned.
Tariff threat
'Weak domestic and overseas demand for steel products and the indirect effects of US tariffs imposed on steel' will likely hit Nippon Steel's earnings, S&P said.
The company has warned that global steel demand is 'in an unprecedented state of crisis' — a trend fuelled by sluggish economic activity, oversupply in the market and fewer public infrastructure projects.
It will also need to grapple with Trump's tariff offensive — with levies on steel and aluminium imports recently doubled to 50 per cent.
In Japan, the ageing population is weighing on demand for steel, but exporting is also becoming more challenging as other countries boost local production.
To address this, Nippon Steel has strengthened its international presence by acquiring Indian and Thai steelmakers.
The US Steel merger is part of this strategy: it will allow Nippon Steel to achieve global crude steel production capacity of 86 million tonnes a year, up from 66 million currently, it says.
Chinese overproduction
Global steel demand is growing at a pace of less than one per cent per year, which is mismatched with the anticipated 6.7 per cent jump in production capacities by 2027, according to the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD).
That will likely cause a price drop, threatening many steelmakers.
Much of this surplus is subsidised by China, the world's largest steel producer, in what the OECD characterises as a 'policy distortion'.
Steel exports from China have more than doubled since 2020, prompting regions including the European Union to launch anti-dumping investigations.
Chinese demand for steel is slowing and the country's 'exporting spree... is aimed at driving up its GDP', Ryunosuke Shibata of SBI Securities told AFP.
'A vast amount of steel is flowing into Asia at prices that are barely profitable,' sparking a 'wave of price competition', Shibata said.
Costly decarbonisation
Japan has pledged to reach carbon neutrality by 2050, as governments worldwide work to curb their emissions.
As part of its own efforts to produce less planet-warming carbon dioxide, Nippon Steel has announced a US$6 billion plan to build, modify or restart three less polluting 'electric arc' furnaces at different sites.
Around a third of the funding will come from the government.
But the investment 'could lead to mounting financial costs' as production from the facilities will not start before the 2029 financial year, Leung said. — AFP
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Borneo Post
20 minutes ago
- Borneo Post
Trump flexes military might at parade as protests sweep US
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Malay Mail
an hour ago
- Malay Mail
Sources: US-China trade truce shaky as military-use rare earth export dispute remains unresolved
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At talks in London last week, China's negotiators appeared to link progress in lifting export controls on military-use rare earth magnets with the longstanding US curbs on exports of the most advanced AI chips to China. That marked a new twist in trade talks that began with opioid trafficking, tariff rates and China's trade surplus, but have since shifted to focus on export controls. In addition, US officials also signalled they are looking to extend existing tariffs on China for a further 90 days beyond the August 10 deadline agreed in Geneva last month, both sources said, suggesting a more permanent trade deal between the world's two largest economies is unlikely before then. The two people who spoke to Reuters about the London talks requested not to be named because both sides have tightly controlled disclosure. The White House, State Department and Department of Commerce did not immediately respond to requests for comment. 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'Temporary mutual accommodation of some concerns is possible but the fundamental issue of the trade imbalance cannot be resolved within this timeframe, and possibly during Trump's remaining term,' said Liu Weidong, a US-China expert at the Institute of American Studies, Chinese Academy of Social Sciences. An extension of the August deadline could allow the Trump administration more time to establish an alternative legal claim for setting higher tariffs on China under the Section 301 authority of the USTR in case Trump loses the ongoing legal challenge to the tariffs in US court, one of the people with knowledge of the London talks said. The unresolved issues underscore the difficulty the Trump administration faces in pushing its trade agenda with China because of Beijing's control of rare earths and its willingness to use that as leverage with Washington, said Ryan Hass, director of the John L. Thornton China Center at the Brookings Institution. 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Free Malaysia Today
an hour ago
- Free Malaysia Today
Microsoft reaffirms commitment to M'sia amid global data centre pullbacks
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