Nippon Steel makes last ditch effort to win US nod on US steel deal
There are fears the tie-up will threaten US national security by weakening the US steel supply chain
A top Nippon Steel executive plans to meet with senior US officials on Wednesday (Sep 11) to try and salvage the firm’s US$14.9 billion bid for US Steel, a person familiar with the matter said.
The meeting, which will feature Takahiro Mori, a key negotiator on the deal, is also expected to include Treasury Deputy Secretary Wally Adeyemo and Commerce Deputy Secretary Don Graves among other officials, the person said, declining to be named because he was not authorised to speak about the matter.
The Treasury Department, which leads the Committee on Foreign Investment in the US (CFIUS), and Nippon Steel declined to comment. The Commerce Department, the White House, and US Steel did not immediately respond to requests for comment.
A number of US business groups also sounded the alarm on Wednesday that the Biden administration’s national security review of Nippon Steel’s planned US$14.9 billion acquisition of US Steel is being unduly influenced by political pressure.
CFIUS is a powerful committee that reviews foreign investments for national security risks. It sent a letter in late August warning the companies their proposed tie-up would threaten US national security by weakening the US steel supply chain, as first reported by Reuters, appearing to doom the proposed deal.
The companies countered in a 100-page letter also obtained by Reuters that the deal would in fact strengthen US steel output, by allowing a much-needed cash injection from a company in an allied nation into a struggling American company in a critical industry.
The meeting also comes amid bipartisan opposition to the deal by Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump and Democratic nominee Kamala Harris. They are vying to win the critical swing state of Pennsylvania, where US Steel is headquartered. REUTERS