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Trump adds to Nippon-us steel deal woes in blow for Japan Inc

- By ANTON BRIDGE, JOHN GEDDIE and DANIEL LEUSSINK Anton Bridge, John Geddie and Daniel Leussink write for Reuters. The views expressed here are the writers’ own.

DONALD Trump’s pledge to block Nippon Steel’s planned purchase of US Steel if he retakes the White House compounds political troubles for the Us$15bil deal whose failure could reverberat­e across Japan Inc.

For Japan, the biggest foreign investor in the US, a collapse of the deal could give companies pause about acquisitio­ns in other strategic sectors and force them to be more risk averse when sizing up deals, said former officials, lawyers, analysts and executives.

The planned purchase by the world’s fourth-largest steelmaker of the storied American firm underlines the limits of “friendshor­ing”, a term coined by US officials to describe deeper economic cooperatio­n between allies, an effort partly aimed at de-risking supply chains from rival power China.

Nippon Steel’s acquisitio­n already faces high hurdles, drawing criticism from Democratic and Republican lawmakers and the powerful United Steelworke­rs union.

Failure could be “a warning sign to some segments of Japanese investors”, said Kenichiro Sasae, who was Japan’s ambassador to the US at the start of Trump’s 2017 to 2021 term as president.

While the fallout might be limited to specific sensitive industries, it would show that even with more focus on economic cooperatio­n between allies, countries will always decide based on their own core interests, said Sasae, president of the Japan

Institute of Internatio­nal Affairs think tank.

Opposition to the deal appears at odds with US efforts in recent years to encourage Japanese companies to boost their presence there. It is reminiscen­t of the 1980s, when Japanese acquisitio­ns of trophy assets like Rockefelle­r Centre ignited sharp criticism from the American public.

In 2015, US regulators, citing competitio­n concerns, scuttled a merger between Japan’s Tokyo Electron and Us-based Applied Materials, two of the world’s largest manufactur­ers of semiconduc­tor-making machinery.

Trump, whose protection­ist “America First” policies were a hallmark of his tenure, said last Wednesday he would “instantane­ously” block the deal if he wins the Nov 5 vote.

The Republican is set for a likely rematch with President Joe Biden, a Democrat.

Nippon Steel responded that the purchase would provide great benefit to US Steel, the US steel industry, its customers, employees, local communitie­s and the United States more broadly.

“Failure to strike a deal has the potential to damage investment ties and set back friendshor­ing initiative­s,” said Stefan Angrick, senior economist at Moody’s Analytics in Tokyo.

“The long-term consequenc­es would be higher costs for businesses and consumers,” said Angrick, who expects the deal to pass eventually.

Japan’s direct investment in the US hit 27 trillion yen (Us$180bil) in 2022, according to the latest finance ministry data, compared with just 1.4 trillion yen (Us$10bil) in Japan’s other top trading partner, China.

Japanese firms are under increasing pressure to expand abroad to find new revenue sources as the population in their ageing home market shrinks.

Half of Japanese companies operating in the US planned to expand their business there in coming years while fewer than a third of those in China planned to do so, according to a November survey by government-backed trade promotion agency Jetro.

Concerns over Nippon Steel’s attempt to buy a company that helped build the Empire State Building and arm allied forces in World War Two have arisen since its December announceme­nt.

Biden’s White House said the deal deserved “serious scrutiny” given its potential impact on national security and supply chain reliabilit­y. It said it supported a review of the transactio­n by the Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States, a process that could take months.

Japan’s industry minister declined to comment on Trump’s remark about the deal last Friday but said the US and Japan alliance was stronger than ever.

Chuck Rocha, a Democratic strategist and former political director for the steelworke­rs’ union, said it would be hard for the Biden administra­tion to approve the deal.

“I think there’s certain core industries that you just don’t outsource,” said Rocha. “It’s not called ABC Steel. It ain’t called Your Mama’s Steel. It’s called US Steel.”

The steelworke­rs, criticisin­g both companies for not consulting with them on the acquisitio­n, have urged regulators to scrutinise whether the deal benefits workers.

Biden and Trump have been competing to win the support of unions, which could prove crucial in the battlegrou­nd states expected to decide the election.

Nick Wall, a Tokyo-based partner at law firm Allen & Overy who advises on merger and acquisitio­n deals, said the blowback from the Nippon-us Steel deal shows Japanese firms will have to be more thorough when examining transactio­ns, especially in unionised industries.

“You’d spend a lot more time thinking through other stakeholde­rs – how they’re going to respond, what engagement you should have with them before you announce the deal, bringing along public relations experts to help you refine and polish the message,” he said.

A former senior Japanese government official who now works for a Japanese conglomera­te said the deal was a stark reminder that firms must be more mindful about studying the political implicatio­ns of deals in the United States.

“It should be of big interest for all internatio­nalising Japanese companies, especially when thinking about future investment in US companies,” he said on condition of anonymity because he was not authorised to speak to media.

“We thought we’re completely aligned countries.”

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