Biden Blocked U.S. Steel and Nippon Steel Merger

Biden Blocked U.S. Steel and Nippon Steel Merger

U.S Steel and Nippon Steel are suing to be able to follow through with their merger. This comes after President Biden blocked the merger from going through, citing national security concerns. The companies are accusing the president of violating their due process rights and interfering with a good faith regulatory review. The companies are claiming the reason for opposing the sale was to curry favor with the steelworkers’ union in a politically important swing state of Pennsylvania. A second lawsuit is targeting the international president of the steelworker’s union, David McCall, and a rival steelmaking company, Cleveland Cliffs, which made its own offer for U.S. Steel. That suit, which was filed in federal court in Pennsylvania, says the opponents tried to hamper the sale to monopolize the steel market.

Both companies claim they believe the transaction is the best path forward to secure the future of U.S. Steel, and they will defend their rights to achieve this objective. Biden claims that foreign ownership of U.S. Steel could potentially jeopardize domestic supply chains and could compromise national security. Biden claims that without domestic steel workers and steel production, the United States is less strong and less secure. A spokeswoman claims that a committee of national security and trade experts determined this acquisition would create risk for American national security.

Both Nippon Steel and U.S. Steel claim their combination would enhance steel production in the United States to better compete against China. Nippon has pledged to invest $2.7 billion to upgrade U.S. Steel facilities in Pennsylvania and Indiana. U.S. Steel has warned that without the investment, it will have to focus on newer non-union steel mills in places like Arkansas. This would, according to U.S. Steel, jeopardize thousands of union jobs.

An inter-agency committee that oversees foreign investment in the United States could not reach a consensus about whether the sale would jeopardize national security. Some of Biden’s top advisers even advised him not to block the sale. The companies claim that Biden is trying to advance his political agenda, and that the Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States failed to conduct a good faith national security focused review process. This, according to the two companies, deprived them of their rightful opportunity for fair consideration of the transaction.

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Source:
Scott Horsley, “U.S. Steel sues to salvage its sale to Japan’s Nippon Steel” npr (January 6, 2024). [Link]
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