Japan's Nippon Steel sets sights on a growing overseas market in its bid
to acquire US Steel
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[December 06, 2024] By
YURI KAGEYAMA
KASHIMA, Japan (AP) — The signs at Nippon Steel read: “The world through
steel,” underlining why Japan’s top steelmaker is pursuing its $15
billion bid to acquire U.S. Steel.
“We can’t expect demand in Japan to grow as the population is declining.
We need to invest in production that leads to growth,” a company
official, Masato Suzuki, said Friday while giving reporters a look at a
Nippon Steel plant in Ibaraki prefecture, north of Tokyo.
Nippon Steel Corp. has its eyes on India, Southeast Asia and the U.S.,
Suzuki said. About 70% of the plant's output is exported.
The Tokyo-based company remains optimistic, although the deal is opposed
by President-elect Donald Trump, President Joe Biden and American
steelworkers.
During the tour, slabs of steel, glowing hot-orange at more than 1,000
degrees Celsius (1,800 Fahrenheit), rolled through the cavernous plant
to become giant spools of super-thin steel.
Nippon Steel officials didn’t disclose details of the fine technology
they said the planned acquisition would offer U.S. Steel.
Under the proposed deal, first announced in 2023, U.S. Steel would keep
its name and its headquarters in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, becoming a
subsidiary of Nippon Steel.
Nippon Steel already has manufacturing operations in the U.S. and
Mexico, China and Southeast Asia. It supplies the world’s top
automakers, including Toyota Motor Corp., and makes steel for railways,
pipes, appliances and skyscrapers.
The American steel industry has waned as Chinese steelmakers have grown
to dominate the market. Japan wants to leverage the decades-old
U.S.-Japan security and political alliance to seal the acquisition, but
the outlook is uncertain.
In September, an arbitration board jointly chosen by U.S. Steel and
United Steelworkers decided the proposed acquisition could proceed.
But United Steelworkers union, which has 1.2 million members, have
objected, citing worries about job losses and contract terms.
The union has questioned Nippon Steel’s plans to transfer production
locations and concerns about national security and domestic supply
chains.
When asked for comment, it referred to a recent letter to its members.
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This April 26, 2010, file photo shows the United States Steel logo
outside the headquarters building in downtown Pittsburgh.
President-elect Donald Trump is underscoring his intention to block
the purchase of U.S. Steel by Japanese steelmaker Nippon Steel
Corp., and he’s pledging to use tax incentives and tariffs to
strengthen the iconic American steelmaker. Trump said during the
campaign that he would “instantaneously” block the deal, and he
reiterated that sentiment in a Monday night statement.(AP Photo/Gene
J. Puskar, File)
“As a union, our primary concern is
the future of our jobs and the communities we live and work in — not
just this year, but also for the foreseeable future. We’ve seen job
losses in the past, and we must do everything we can to avoid it in
the future,” said the letter, co-signed by Mike Millsap, chairman of
the negotiating committee, and its international president, David
McCall.
“While Japan is a political ally, it is also an economic competitor,
one that has proven time and again that it is willing to promote its
steel industry at our expense,” the union said.
Nippon Steel is promising to “preserve the legacy” of U.S. Steel and
protect jobs, pensions and benefits, pledging that there will be no
layoffs or plant closures.
The deal is expected to produce an economic boost for the region
equivalent to nearly $1 billion in the first two years, create up to
5,000 construction jobs and generate almost $40 million in state and
local taxes, according to Nippon Steel.
William W. Grimes, professor of international relations and
political science at Boston University, said Nippon Steel's
commitment to keeping the U.S. Steel factories running would help
preserve U.S.-based production of specialty steels. Nippon Steel
also has also promised investments to make the factories more
competitive.
There is no militarily sensitive technology Nippon Steel would be
able to take from the U.S., and the U.S. relies on steel produced in
allied countries, including Japan, Grimes said.
“If Japanese companies do draw a lesson, it should be to engage
unions and local politicians early in the process,” he said.
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