Business World

Japan’s Nippon Steel to acquire US Steel for $14.9 billion in cash

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JAPAN’S Nippon Steel clinched a deal on Monday to buy US Steel for $14.9 billion in cash, prevailing in an auction for the 122-year-old iconic steelmaker over rivals including Cleveland-Cliffs, ArcelorMit­tal and Nucor.

The deal price of $55 per share represents a whopping 142% premium to Aug. 11, the last trading day before Cleveland-Cliffs unveiled a $35-per-share, cash-and-stock bid for US Steel. It is a bet that US Steel will benefit from the spending and tax incentives in President Joseph R. Biden’s infrastruc­ture bill.

Cleveland-Cliffs’ pursuit prompted US Steel to launch a sale process four months ago. In a meeting of its board of directors on Sunday, US Steel deemed Nippon’s offer superior to a sale to Cleveland-Cliffs, which had raised its bid in the high $40-pershare range, people familiar with the matter said.

Nucor, the largest US steelmaker, offered to acquire US Steel in partnershi­p with another company, one of the sources said. The identity of that company could not be learned.

ArcelorMit­tal also pursued US Steel, Reuters has reported. Nippon and ArcelorMit­tal own a plant in Alabama that produces steel sheet products by processing semi-finished products, or slabs, procured from local and overseas suppliers. They are also investing about $1 billion in an electric arc furnace.

The acquisitio­n of US Steel will help Nippon, the world’s fourth largest steel maker, move toward 100 million metric tons of global crude steel capacity, while significan­tly expanding its production in the United States, where steel prices are expected to rise as automakers ramp up production following their recent deals with labor unions to end strikes.

Nippon did not give any projection on the value of the synergies that will arise from the deal, to justify the price it agreed to pay. It said the synergies will come from pooling advanced production technology and know-how in product developmen­t, operations, energy savings and recycling.

Nippon is paying the equivalent of 7.3 times US Steel’s 12-month earnings before interest, taxes, depreciati­on and amortizati­on (EBITDA), LSEG data shows. The median in the steelmakin­g industry is seven times, and some analysts said US Steel was worth less given that its $774 million takeover of the Big River steel mill in Arkansas in 2021 has yet to pay off in profitabil­ity.

“We feel Nippon is overpaying for those assets. This isn’t the technology space. This is still the cyclical steel industry,” said Gordon Johnson, analyst at GLJ Research.

US Steel shares ended trading up 26% at $49.59 on Monday following the deal announceme­nt. Nippon Steel shares had ended trading in Tokyo before the company unveiled the deal.

Cliffs shares jumped 10% to $20.50 in New York as shareholde­rs cheered the company deciding against splashing out on US Steel. Cliffs said it would now press on with “aggressive share buybacks” under a program it had previously authorized.

ArcelorMit­tal shares also rose 5% to 26.28 euros in Amsterdam on similar investor relief.

Losing the auction for US Steel will also likely result in Cliffs failing to renew a contract to provide slabs to ArcelorMit­tal and Nippon’s Alabama plant that expires in 2025, the sources said. This is because Nippon will now turn to US Steel as a supplier, the sources added. The value of the contact could not be learned.

UNION OPPOSES

All of US Steel’s commitment­s with its employees, including all collective bargaining agreements in place with its union, will be honored, Nippon said.

Despite these assurances, the United Steelworke­rs union, which had endorsed heavily unionized Cliffs as the acquirer, said it is opposed to the sale to Nippon because it did not have faith in labor agreements being upheld.

“Our union intends to exercise the full measure of our agreements to ensure that whatever happens next with US Steel, we protect the good, family-sustaining jobs we bargained,” United Steelworke­rs said.

A spokespers­on did not respond to a request for comment on further details on the union’s plans. In its pact with US Steel, United Steelworke­rs is not afforded the right to block the company’s sale if the acquirer commits to preserve existing labor agreements.

Nippon Executive Vice President Takahiro Mori told Reuters in an interview that the company had operated in the United States for 40 years and that it was confident the transactio­n would be completed.

“Standard Steel and Wheeling Nippon Steel that we own are unionized companies in the United States; we have a good history of working with unions. We see no regulatory or antitrust issues with the deal,” Mr. Mori said.

Nippon’s joint venture with Arcelor is not unionized.

The transactio­n with Nippon is expected to close in the second or third quarter of 2024, subject to regulatory approvals, US Steel said.

The Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States, a US panel that scrutinize­s deals for potential national security risks, is expected to review the transactio­n, though most Japanese acquirers complete their deals with few issues.

Analysts also said the deal should attract little antitrust scrutiny given the limited overlap between Nippon and US Steel. The companies said that in the event that regulators shoot down the deal, Nippon will owe US Steel a $565-million break-up fee.

Some US lawmakers whose constituen­cies have major steelworke­r population­s expressed hostility toward the deal. Republican Senator JD Vance of Ohio said he will scrutinize its implicatio­ns for the “security, industry, and workers” of the United States. Democratic Senator John Fetterman of Pennsylvan­ia went further, vowing to do anything in his power “to block this foreign sale.”

US Steel, founded in 1901 by some of the biggest US magnates, including Andrew Carnegie, J.P. Morgan and Charles Schwab, became intertwine­d with the United States’ industrial recovery following the Great Depression and World War II.

The Pittsburgh-based company’s shares had underperfo­rmed of late, following several quarters of falling revenue and profit, making it an attractive takeover target for rivals looking to add a maker of steel used by the automobile industry.

Beyond car makers, US Steel supplies the renewable energy industry and stands to benefit from the Inflation Reduction Act (IRA), which provides tax credits and other incentives for such projects, something that attracted suitors. —

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