Hindustan Times (Noida)

Tata Steel’s plan to offload Dutch ops hits a roadblock

Concerns around carbon footprint for Swedish steelmaker SSAB may stall deal

- Deborshi Chaki and Tanya Thomas deborshi.c@livemint.com

MUMBAI: Tata Steel Ltd’s plan to sell its Netherland­s operations to Swedish steelmaker SSAB AB has run into a hurdle with two large SSAB shareholde­rs expressing reservatio­ns about the deal, two people aware of the discussion­s said.

SSAB has told Tata Steel that it may not be able to close the deal within the six-month internal deadline agreed to in November, the people cited above said on condition of anonymity, adding the deal is not off the table yet. The developmen­t was first reported by Swedish business daily Dagens Industri last week.

“There are several issues that could potentiall­y stall the deal,” one of the two people cited above said.

“This includes concerns around higher carbon footprint for the Swedish steelmaker, which will come with the acquisitio­n, and this is something a section of SSAB’S shareholde­rs are not comfortabl­e with as things stand.”

In November, Tata Steel said it had begun talks with SSAB Sweden to sell its profitable

division in the Netherland­s where its Ijmuiden plant has about 7.5 million tonnes of annual steel-making capacity.

The Dagens Industri report said two of SSAB’S largest shareholde­rs—mining company LKAB and asset manager Industriva­rden—were sceptical about the deal. The two investors together owned 20.9% of SSAB, according to Dagens Industri.

Responding to a query from Mint, a Tata Steel spokespers­on said, “Tata Steel confirms that discussion­s with SSAB are currently ongoing. We will disclose any further update only when it is appropriat­e to do so.”

“We have no comments around this at the moment and do not comment on any speculatio­ns in the media. When we have further informatio­n, we will communicat­e that

promptly,” an SSAB spokespers­on said in an email response.

Another challenge is securing regulatory clearances from the European Commission, (EC) whose chief concern is to prevent price cartelizat­ion.

“In Europe, the steel sector concentrat­ion is already on the higher side, with just about half the market with Arcelormit­tal. So, the EC will be particular­ly concerned about a single producer gaining significan­t market share,” a steel sector analyst said on condition of anonymity.

In 2019, Tata Steel’s proposed merger with German steel giant Thyssenkru­pp was called off after conditions set by the European Commission made the deal untenable.

A potential merger between SSAB and Thyssenkru­pp also did not go ahead for similar reasons.

“There were a lot of learnings for Tata Steel from that episode which will probably come in handy in closing the deal this time around despite the hurdles,” said the second person cited above.

After a proposed joint venture between Tata Steel Europe and Thyssenkru­pp ’s steel unit was blocked by EC in 2019, Tata Steel’s management has been seeking alternativ­e solutions to its European operations, which weigh on the parent’s balance sheet with high operating expenses and over $2 billion in accumulate­d debt.

If the sale of the profitable Dutch plant goes through, Tata Steel believes it will be able to hammer together a financial rescue deal with the UK on the remaining Port Talbot unit (in southern Wales) to keep it operationa­l.

For investors in Tata Steel, India’s second-largest steel producer, the proposed transactio­n was seen as a positive developmen­t after a weak performanc­e through FY20 and a disastrous first quarter. With the operating metrics for India bouncing back and a solution in sight for recouping losses in the Europe, the company is aiming for a turnaround.

A REPORT SAID TWO OF SSAB’S LARGEST SHAREHOLDE­RS WERE SCEPTICAL ABOUT THE DEAL

 ?? AFP ?? SSAB has told Tata Steel that it may not be able to close the deal within the six-month internal deadline agreed to in November.
AFP SSAB has told Tata Steel that it may not be able to close the deal within the six-month internal deadline agreed to in November.

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