Cleveland-Cliffs, the largest flat-rolled steel producer in
North America, said on Sunday it offered to buy U.S. Steel in a
cash-and-stock deal valued at $35 per share, which represented a
premium of 43% premium to U.S. Steel's last closing price.
Despite the surge, shares of U.S. Steel were trading well below
the offer price at $27.92, indicating some investors believe a
deal may not happen at that price. Cleveland-Cliffs shares were
down 6.1%.
A combination between the two firms will create the largest
steel producer in North America and the 10th largest steel
producer in the world and will be a dominant supplier to the
transportation sector, KeyBanc Capital Markets analyst Philip
Gibbs said in a note.
"We view the probability of this deal getting done without
meaningful concessions as low," Gibbs added.
After surging for last two years due to a mismatch in demand and
supply, steel prices have cooled so far in 2023, increasing
margin pressure on companies grappling with high labor costs.
NYMEX U.S. Midwest Hot-rolled steel futures have fallen about 9%
so far this year, but remain above pre-pandemic levels.
Cleveland-Cliffs has been betting on acquisitions to bolster
growth and take on competition from China - it bought AK Steel
and the U.S. business of ArcelorMittal in 2020.
The company went public with its offer after U.S. Steel rejected
the bid as being "unreasonable" and instead announced a formal
review process and said it received multiple bids for parts or
all of its business.
U.S. Steel said it has invited Cleveland-Cliffs to be a part of
the review process.
(Reporting by Priyamvada C in Bengaluru, additional reporting by
Reshma George and Arpan Daniel Varghese in Bengaluru; Editing by
Saumyadeb Chakrabarty)
[© 2023 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.]
This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content.
|
|