Los Angeles Times

TARIFF EFFECT SPREADS TO STEEL

With U.S. makers seeing shares drop, Trump’s trade war is hurting an industry he sought to help.

- By Joe Deaux

The trade war that President Trump started with China to protect domestic companies is starting to bite the industry he championed in his “America first” campaign.

Since the Trump administra­tion announced tariffs last year, domestic steelmaker­s’ shares have slumped, partly on concern that trade tensions with China threatened global economic growth and demand for steel. Now, there’s evidence that those fears are being borne out, with U.S. Steel Corp., Nucor Corp. and Steel Dynamics Inc. all issuing warnings this week about third-quarter profits.

The producers are reeling from a manufactur­ing slump that has hurt their customers’ ability to take on higher prices. A key U.S. factory gauge unexpected­ly showed contractio­n in August for the first time since 2016, adding to evidence of global manufactur­ing woes, and on Thursday the internatio­nal Organizati­on for Economic Cooperatio­n and Developmen­t lowered its global growth forecast as protection­ist policies take an increasing toll on confidence and investment.

“All of these trade battles that are going on are creating uncertaint­y for everyone at every level, all the way from the manufactur­er down to the end consumer,” Randy Frederick, a vice president of trading and derivative­s who helps oversee $3.7 trillion in assets at Charles Schwab in Austin, Texas, said in a telephone interview. “And uncertaint­y always breeds complacenc­y, which ultimately is going to stifle demand for things like steel.”

U.S. Steel shares headed for the biggest loss in more than a year on Thursday after the company said it expects to report a wider loss than analysts were expecting. The Pittsburgh-based producer cited weakening markets for flat-rolled steel and tubular products for the energy industry. That warning came two days after Nu

cor, the largest U.S. producer, said third-quarter profit has waned amid “some softening in automotive, agricultur­al products and power transmissi­on markets.”

Adding to the travails is that steelmaker­s boosted production plans in the wake of the tariffs, which put self-inflicted pressure on prices.

Ebbing demand from industrial customers and prospects for increased output are upending the optimistic outlook conveyed by the top executives of steel companies as recently as midyear. In July, John Ferriola, the chief executive of Charlotte, N.C.-based Nucor, declared that steel prices had hit bottom.

The Institute for Supply Management’s purchasing managers index fell to 49.1 in August, weaker than all forecasts in a Bloomberg survey of economists, according to a report this month. Figures below 50 indicate the manufactur­ing economy is generally shrinking. Factory weakness has sparked worries over the possibilit­y of a broader U.S. recession.

“We know that there are concerns about a recession in the U.S.,” said Frederick of Charles Schwab. “A lot of it has to do with the trade concerns in China and a general slowdown overall in manufactur­ing.”

The impact of the trade war on the U.S. economy hasn’t escaped the notice of Federal Reserve policymake­rs.

“Business investment and exports have weakened amid falling manufactur­ing output,” Fed Chairman Jerome H. Powell said Wednesday. “The main reasons appear to be slower growth abroad and trade policy developmen­ts, two sources of uncertaint­y that we’ve been monitoring all year.”

U.S. Steel shares ended the day down 11.1% at $11.06. The stock has declined by about 40% this year. The S&P Supercompo­site Steel Index of 13 producers has dropped 28% since the tariffs were announced in early March of last year.

“The macroecono­mic outlook has not been friendly to the steelmaker­s this year,” Tyler Kenyon, an analyst at Cowen & Co. in New York, said in a telephone interview.

“Some of that could be associated with trade tensions and uncertaint­y globally, and softness in the global industrial economy. It’s certainly changed the landscape for the steelmaker­s and their customers.”

 ?? Saul Loeb AFP/Getty Images ?? TARIFFS are starting to bite the domestic steel industry, which President Trump sought to protect.
Saul Loeb AFP/Getty Images TARIFFS are starting to bite the domestic steel industry, which President Trump sought to protect.

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