Nippon Steel agrees to buy US Steel for $14.9bn

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Nippon Steel has agreed to buy US Steel in a $14.9bn deal, as the Japanese group targets the American market with its largest-ever acquisition.

The Japanese company, which ranks as the world’s fourth-biggest steelmaker by production, said on Monday that it would pay $55 a share in cash for the Pittsburgh-based company. 

The price represents a 40 per cent premium to US Steel’s closing share price on Friday, but is more than 140 per cent higher than where US Steel’s stock was trading before domestic rival Cleveland-Cliffs offered $7.3bn for the company in August.

US Steel rebuffed Cleveland’s offer and said it would examine its strategic options. The offer from Nippon Steel, which values US Steel’s equity at $14.1bn, follows a tradition of Japanese companies paying handsomely for their overseas acquisitions. Including debt, the transaction values US Steel at $14.9bn.

Shares in US Steel surged 25 per cent to just under $50 in early trading.

The company, with almost 23,000 employees, has been a symbol of US manufacturing since it was formed in 1901. Financier JP Morgan bought Andrew Carnegie’s steel group and combined it with rivals to form what was then the world’s largest company.

One fund manager who holds Nippon Steel shares said the deal looked, on the face of it, “terrible” for shareholders, arguing it was another example of Japanese companies failing to act in their own investors’ interests.

Eiji Hashimoto, Nippon Steel’s president, said: “We are excited that this transaction brings together two companies with world-leading technologies and manufacturing capabilities.”

The deal drew a furious response from the United Steelworkers union, which said that neither US Steel or Nippon had consulted it.

“We remained open throughout this process to working with US Steel to keep this iconic American company domestically owned and operated, but instead it chose to push aside the concerns of its dedicated workforce and sell to a foreign-owned company,” said USW president David McCall.

According to one person familiar with the deal, Nippon Steel, which employs more than 106,000 people, was approached following the rejection of Cleveland’s offer. The decision to make such a large bid was made quickly, the person added.

“The bet had to be on the US market,” the person said, pointing to the opportunities created by President Joe Biden’s Inflation Reduction Act and the political obstacles to expanding in the likes of China or Russia.

The acquisition is the latest in what bankers say is a growing wave of Japanese companies pushing for overseas acquisitions as a response to their shrinking domestic market and the geopolitical constraints Chinese companies now face in buying US corporations.

Bankers advising on several outbound deals this year said that the weaker yen, which has fallen against the US dollar for much of 2023, had not noticeably deterred chief executives from seeking deals aimed primarily at expanding market share in the US.

The transaction will need to be approved by US competition authorities. The deal comes after much of the US steel industry has consolidated, leaving Cleveland-Cliffs, Nucor, Steel Dynamics and US Steel as the four major players.

Nippon Steel was advised by Citigroup, while US Steel was advised by Goldman Sachs and Barclays.

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