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Trump approves Nippon Steel’s acquisition of USS

  • : Metals
  • 25/06/14

US president Donald Trump approved Japanese steelmaker Nippon Steel's $15bn acquisition plan of US Steel in his executive order that reversed his predecessor's decision to block the deal, the Whitehouse announced late on 13 June.

The threat to national security for the US arising as a result of the deal can be adequately mitigated by entering into a National Security Agreement (NSA) with Nippon and US Steel, Trump said in a statement. Former US president Joe Biden on 3 January rejected the proposed merger plan, citing national security concerns with a Japanese firm owning a major US steel maker.

The firms signed the NSA with the US government yesterday, following Trump's executive order, Nippon Steel told Argus, leaving no major obstacles to proceed with the transaction.

"We thank President Trump and his Administration for their bold leadership and strong support for our historic partnership. This partnership will bring a massive investment," the firms said.

The partnership means an acquisition of US Steel, the representative of Nippon Steel who spoke to Argus reiterated, rejecting speculation that the approved investment plan does not entail a merger bid.

Nippon Steel will make a $11bn investment in US Steel by 2028 as part of the requirements by the NSA, according to the Japanese firm. It will start investing in the US this year after necessary regulatory approvals were granted, the company told Argus.

The Japanese steel producer will also issue a "golden share" to the US government as required under the NSA, according to the White House. A "golden share" typically grants its holder the right to veto decisions by the firm's board members or its majority shareholders.

But Nippon Steel told Argus that the company freedomto run US Steel is guaranteed, rejecting speculation that the US government would retain full control of the business. A "golden share" can take a variety of forms, the representative told Argus, although the Japanese firm did not disclose if the White House is granted veto power.

The Trump's executive order is likely to settle the 18-month approval process that faced a number of challenges including legal action by the firms against the Biden administration and opposition to the deal by the United Steelworkers (USW) union.

Nippon Steel persists in the US market because it is the most prominent steel market among the advanced economies with robust demand for high quality steel products, said Eiji Hashimoto, chief executive of Nippon Steel in January. The acquisition of US Steel is the only promising solution to strengthen the steel industries in both countries, Hashimoto added.

The Japanese steelmaker and US Steel agreed on the acquisition in part because the collaboration would enhance US Steel's ability to serve automobile, construction and other industries including emerging energy transition sectors, according to the firms. Nippon Steel is among the top producers of electrical steel essential to electric vehicles production, according to the Japanese producer.

Nippon Steel is targeting India, the US and southeast Asia as strategic regions to achieve 100mn t/yr of crude steel production globally as part of its mid- to long-term strategy.


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25/07/11

Trump threatens 35pc tariff on Canada by 1 August

Trump threatens 35pc tariff on Canada by 1 August

Houston, 10 July (Argus) — The US will impose a 35pc tariff on all imports from Canada effective on 1 August, President Donald Trump said in a letter to Canadian prime minister Mark Carney. The 10 July letter that Trump posted on social media late Thursday noted that Canada previously planned retaliatory tariffs in response to the US' first tariff threats in the spring. He repeated his earliest justification for the tariffs - the illegal smuggling of fentanyl into the US from Canada - and said he would consider "an adjustment" to the tariffs if Canada worked with him to stop that flow. The 35pc tariff would be separate from tariffs set for specific sectors, which include a 50pc tariff on copper imports . It is not clear if any imports currently covered by the US-Mexico- Canada trade agreement (USMCA) would be affected by the new tariff threats. The Trump administration since 5 April has been charging a 10pc extra "Liberation Day" tariff on most imports — energy commodities and critical minerals are exceptions — from nearly every foreign trade partner. Trump on 9 April imposed even higher tariffs on key trading partners, only to delay them the same day until 9 July. On 7 July, Trump signed an executive order further delaying the implementation of higher rates until 12:01am ET (04:01 GMT) on 1 August. Earlier this week he threatened 50pc tariffs against Brazil for its ongoing criminal prosecution of former president Jair Bolsonaro. Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2025. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

Brazil eyes retaliatory tariffs on US


25/07/10
25/07/10

Brazil eyes retaliatory tariffs on US

Rio de Janeiro, 10 July (Argus) — Brazil will consider reciprocal tariffs if US president Donald Trump goes ahead with his threat of a 50pc charge on imports from Brazil, president Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva said. "Any unilateral tariff increases will be addressed in accordance with Brazil's economic reciprocity law," Lula posted on social media late on Wednesday. He defended Brazil's sovereignty and said the country "will not accept any form of tutelage". He rebutted Trump's claim that the US has a "very unfair trade relationship with Brazil", pointing to its long-running trade surplus. Brazil has run a trade deficit for goods and services with the US adding up to over $400bn over the last 15 years, finance minister Fernando Haddad said in a televised interview. "This is an eminently political decision, because there is no economic rationale in this measure," he said. The US is Brazil's second-largest trading partner behind China, receiving $40.3bn worth of exports in 2024, according to the Brazilian secretary of foreign trade. It is the main market for Brazilian manufactured goods. The national confederation of industries (CNI), a lobby group, called for negotiations with the Trump government "to preserve the countries' historical trade relationship". A group representing the powerful agribusiness lobby in congress, FPA, also called for diplomatic negotiations. The tariffs can "severely hamper production, investments and supply chains between the two countries," US-Brazilian chamber of commerce Amcham said. The tariffs bring uncertainty to the country's oil and gas sector, Brazil's oil chamber IBP said. Crude is Brazil's main export to the US, accounting for $5.8bn last year. "We are cautiously assessing the true impacts on investments and competitiveness on our industry," IBP said. The Brazilian real slumped against the US dollar in the wake of Trump's announcement, dropping to R5.6/$1 on Thursday morning before rallying slightly. A weaker real increases production costs for Brazilian companies who rely on imports. A letter that Trump sent on Wednesday to Lula is one of the 22 that the US leader has sent to his foreign counterparts since 7 July, announcing new tariff rates that the US will charge on imports from those countries. "I don't think that this situation will continue," Haddad said of the "unsustainable" 50pc levy, highlighting Brazil's diplomatic tradition. By Constance Malleret Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2025. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

Brazil eyes retaliatory tariffs on US


25/07/10
25/07/10

Brazil eyes retaliatory tariffs on US

Rio de Janeiro, 10 July (Argus) — Brazil will consider reciprocal tariffs if US president Donald Trump goes ahead with his threat of a 50pc charge on imports from Brazil, its president Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva said. "Any unilateral tariff increases will be addressed in accordance with Brazil's economic reciprocity law," Lula posted on social media late on Wednesday. He defended Brazil's sovereignty and said the country "will not accept any form of tutelage". He rebutted Trump's claim that the US has a "very unfair trade relationship with Brazil", pointing to its long-running trade surplus. The US is Brazil's second-largest trading partner behind China, receiving $40.3bn worth of exports in 2024, according to the Brazilian secretary of foreign trade. It is the main market for Brazilian manufactured goods. The national confederation of industries (CNI), a lobby group, called for negotiations with the Trump government "to preserve the countries' historical trade relationship". A group representing the powerful agribusiness lobby in congress, FPA, also called for diplomatic negotiations. A letter that Trump sent on Wednesday to Lula is one of the 22 that the US leader has sent to his foreign counterparts since 7 July, announcing new tariff rates that the US will charge on imports from those countries. By Constance Malleret Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2025. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

UK Steel seeks stricter post-safeguard mechanism


25/07/10
25/07/10

UK Steel seeks stricter post-safeguard mechanism

London, 10 July (Argus) — UK Steel is developing a proposal for the department of business and trade in response to European mill lobby Eurofer requesting a 50pc cut in import quotas from January 2026. Eurofer has also asked for a 50pc tariff from January, suggesting 25pc is not sufficiently high to deter some imports. Traders and buyers in the UK are starting to wake up to the threat of a new stricter mechanism as early as January 2026, despite the current mechanism not lapsing until June next year. Some sources think UK Steel will seek a cut in volumes and increase in tariffs in line with Eurofer's request to the European Commission. In recent quota reviews, UK Steel's requests have largely been in line with those made by Eurofer. Eurofer has also asked for no exceptions for developing countries in the new regime. There has been a clear uptick in offered HRC volumes into the UK from some exporters that were targeted in recent EU dumping cases. Some exporters that sell slab to Tata Steel, currently a re-roller and the largest importer in the UK, are using the larger volumes to secure cheaper freight rates into the UK for strip products. UK Steel director, trade and economics policy, Peter Brennan, told Argus the new UK mechanism "must go further than the existing quota system", suggesting imports account for 70pc of UK steel supply, way above their market share in the EU. The EU does have much more of its own steel and ironmaking capacity, and some grades and sizes are unavailable domestically in the UK. Separately, it is still not clear what safeguard duties importers of Korean and Vietnamese hot-dip galvanised will have to pay after the government imposed a 15pc cap on the other countries' quota just four business days before the quarterly quota reset. Importers expect to pay at least £90/t ($121/t) on Korean HDG, but the HM Revenue & Customs (HMRC) portal currently shows the quota as suspended until today. HMRC told Argus it was "working on some calculation issues which has prevented the quotas from processing partial claims". By Colin Richardson Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2025. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

US’ 50pc Cu levy unlikely to dent Japan’s metal output


25/07/10
25/07/10

US’ 50pc Cu levy unlikely to dent Japan’s metal output

Tokyo, 10 July (Argus) — The US' sweeping 50pc tariff on copper imports effective from 1 August is expected to have minimal impact on Japanese metal producers given limited shipments to the US market. The impact of the blanket 50pc tariff by the US government will be negligible, a domestic electric copper producer told Argus on 10 July, because the company primarily supplies copper products to Asian nations. There are virtually no shipments to the US market, it added. The company's selling prices are likely to remain stable given that most purchase agreements are locked in through term contracts, the firm said. The company has not yet received unexpected windfall orders following the White House's announcement of the tariff hikes. Another Japanese metal producer echoed this sentiment, saying that the US' tariff measure is unlikely to hit its operations given limited deliveries to the country. The firm owns stakes in a South American copper mine project but its copper offtake from the mine is not destined for the US market, reinforcing the limited direct impact from the tariffs. But the company expressed concerns over potential broader implications, citing uncertainty around Washington's definition of "copper products". The impact could be larger if the US government plans to enforce tariffs on a wider range of copper-based products. The producer's concern also lingers over potential indirect impacts from possible disruptions in the metal supply chain. The company ships processed copper products to Asian nations for further manufacturing in the region, but some of the final products are partly exported to the US market. The company could face challenges if these end-products fall under the new tariff, it added. Japan produced around 1.6mn t of copper ingot in 2024, up by 4.9pc from a year earlier, according to the industry group Japan Mining Industry Association and the Japan Mining Promotive Foundation. Around half of total domestic output is exported, with the majority going to Asian markets, according to a market participant. By Yusuke Maekawa Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2025. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

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