Austria's Voestalpine sees U.S. delays over steel tariff
exclusion requests
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[June 11, 2018]
By Maytaal Angel
LONDON (Reuters) - Austrian steelmaker
Voestalpine said it expected prolonged delays from Washington in dealing
with thousands of applications for exclusions from steel tariffs it has
received from companies in the United States.
The steelmaker, which last week reported bumper annual profits, said
about a third of its U.S. sales would be impacted by Washington's steel
import tariffs, adding that it was talking to its customers about who
would bear the cost.
Voestalpine generates about 10 percent of its revenue in the United
States, while about two thirds comes from Europe and 8 percent from
Asia.
"As far as we know, none of these (tariff exclusion) applications have
been answered. We have received no reply," outgoing Voestalpine CEO
Wolfgang Eder told Reuters.
He said the application process was so cumbersome that the U.S. Commerce
Department might not get round to responding to the bulk of the 10,000
or so exclusion requests it had received.
The U.S. tariffs of 25 percent on incoming steel and 10 percent on
aluminum came into effect on March 23. They have been imposed on Europe,
Canada and Mexico since Friday, June 1, after their temporary exemptions
expired.
Companies operating in the United States can apply to the U.S. Commerce
Department for tariff exclusions for product grades they might struggle
to source locally.
U.S. authorities previously said the process for dealing with such
requests would not normally exceed 90 days.
Eder said that out of a total of 1.3 billion euros ($1.5 billion) of
U.S. sales, Voestalpine expected 400 million euros worth would be
subject to tariffs because they involved products imported into the
United States rather than produced there.
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Wolfgang Eder, CEO of Austrian specialty steelmaker Voestalpine,
talks during a Reuters interview in Linz, Austria August 24, 2017.
REUTERS/Heinz-Peter Bader/File Photo
Although there tend to be no set agreements in contracts between steelmakers and
their customers as to who pays in the event of a tariff, industry experts expect
that at present most U.S. customers will agree to pay the cost.
This is because the premium for U.S. versus global steel prices is so wide that
even after paying a 25 percent tariff, imported steel might still be cheaper
than locally sourced steel.
The European steel industry says an 8 percent surge in EU steel imports this
year is due to Washington's import tariffs, which have caused trade flows to be
deflected to Europe's shores.
The EU has said it could impose preliminary measures, in the form of tariffs or
quotas, to safeguard its steel and aluminum industries as early as July, mainly
to prevent Asian producers flooding the European market.
The U.S. tariffs have fanned trade war fears, with countries the world over
poised to retaliate in products beyond steel. Critics also says the tariffs are
inflationary for the U.S. consumer, and will result in critical product
shortages.
(This version of the story has been refiled to fix grammar error in last
paragraph)
(Reporting by Maytaal Angel; Editing by Edmund Blair)
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