Ilva deal gives Italian business much-needed hope 7 Sep 2018 Rome has dropped its opposition to ArcelorMittal’s 4 bln euro swoop on Europe’s biggest steelworks. Scrapping Ilva would have been a victory for ideology over business logic and common sense. It’s an encouraging sign that the radical new government’s bark is less than its bite.
It’s time to take away Trump’s tariff toys 13 Aug 2018 Using steel duties to punish Turkey over a detained U.S. pastor is an abuse of the president's powers. While national security is a legitimate reason to restrict trade, doing so on a whim hurts America. Congress can be more muscular even if it's not yet prepared to rein Trump in.
South Korea offers cautionary Trump trade tale 13 Aug 2018 Seoul dodged U.S. steel tariffs by agreeing to a quota. The limit, however, was then applied retroactively and prevented exemptions. American manufacturers are now cut off from materials. EU President Jean-Claude Juncker and others will have to keep a close eye on the fine print.
Glencore risks writ large in balance sheet caution 8 Aug 2018 The $60 bln commodities giant only narrowly missed first-half EBITDA forecasts, despite a slew of Congo and U.S. subpoena-related woes. Given its swashbuckling image, investors might have expected more of a splash. The fact they got deleveraging instead flags the group’s concern.
CEO exit is game changer for ThyssenKrupp 6 Jul 2018 Heinrich Hiesinger offered to quit the German conglomerate days after clinching an underwhelming steel JV with Tata. His long tenure and advocacy of the group’s conglomerate structure made him ill-suited to the action ThyssenKrupp needs. His replacement should be more radical.
Steel pact lets Thyssen/Tata tackle wider problems 2 Jul 2018 Tweaking the terms of their September joint venture gives the German steelmaker a bigger share of a future IPO. It could have driven a harder bargain, but Tata had limited wiggle room. Besides, ThyssenKrupp needed a deal to kickstart its own much-needed overhaul.
ThyssenKrupp can forge better steel deal with Tata 14 Jun 2018 The German group has outperformed its Indian rival since they agreed a European steel joint venture last year, and now produces more than twice as much EBITDA. Tata could pay cash or give up dividends to close the gap. Walking away from the hefty synergies would be too painful.
Italy and ArcelorMittal can unpick steel knot 13 Jun 2018 The government’s largest party has campaigned for shutting Europe’s top smelter, now being sold to the Indian steel group. At the very least, Italy will demand more environmental and labour pledges. Yet the fact Arcelor doesn’t look to be overpaying suggests room for compromise.
Election shake-ups will make NAFTA more elusive 5 Jun 2018 Doug Ford, a Canada-first candidate, has a shot at becoming the next premier of Ontario – the province that will be hardest hit by U.S. steel tariffs. Voters also go to the polls this year in Mexico and the U.S. New political faces will make sealing a trade deal even harder.
ArcelorMittal paying an odd bid “premium” in India 21 May 2018 The world's largest steelmaker is ready to cover $1 bln of debt in a tiny rival it no longer backs so it can buy bankrupt Essar. A quirky rule bans owners of defaulting companies from acquiring distressed assets. It's a sign of how India’s bankruptcy law is a work in progress.
Electrolux buffeted by perfect Trump tariff storm 27 Apr 2018 The Swedish fridge maker lost a tenth of its value after operating profit almost halved in the first quarter. A rejig of its freezer factories in the U.S. was one culprit. But investors are dubious that cost cuts will enable such a global business to offset higher steel prices.
ArcelorMittal’s India homecoming may be scrappy 14 Mar 2018 The world’s largest steelmaker is back on the acquisition trail with a $6 bln bid for bankrupt Essar. It paves the way for the family to go back to its roots. The Mittals would face an inhospitable environment, but it's probably manageable for a company spawned by a hostile deal.
M&A rebound is good sign for Indo-Japanese ties 9 Mar 2018 Nippon Steel is part of a bid for bankrupt rival Essar. That would mark a revival of Japanese deals in India after flops with Docomo and Daiichi Sankyo. Healthy financial relations are a prerequisite for creating the harmonious "Indo-Pacific” that Tokyo and Washington both want.
Revamped ENRC should set its sights low 8 Mar 2018 The colourful Kazakh miner, renamed ERG after it delisted under a cloud in 2013, is testing a recovering commodities market. A fresh IPO sounds a non-starter, but selling a stake in one of its operations could fly. If so, it would help the group trim almost $6 bln of debt.
India’s bankruptcy regime requires pragmatic touch 6 Mar 2018 Essar Steel could fetch $6 bln, with bids from groups led by ArcelorMittal and Russia's VTB. Both suitors sit awkwardly with tough rules barring defaulters from buying stressed assets. However, it is better to get good proceeds for creditors than to be purist and fail.
Trump’s incoherent strategy dooms tariff crusade 2 Mar 2018 The U.S. president defended his steel and aluminum duties, arguing trade wars are “easy to win.” But his tax cuts increase the budget deficit and the country’s reliance on foreign capital, almost guaranteeing a worsening trade balance. The conflicting tactics are self-defeating.
Trump tariff chaos shoots America in its own foot 1 Mar 2018 The president is to impose sweeping import duties on steel and aluminum, citing national-security concerns – though details are scant. It’ll help domestic steelmakers. But the move ignored some U.S. agencies and could deliver a blow to vital allies like Canada and South Korea.
ThyssenKrupp takes second step to redemption 19 Jan 2018 Having pooled its steel assets with rival Tata, the German industrial group plans a further strategy shift. Just as well: margins even in the non-steel bits lag peers. The question is how far CEO Heinrich Hiesinger can follow the vogue for dismantling big, unwieldy conglomerates.
Japan is developing a quality-control problem 10 Oct 2017 Kobe Steel admits it sold substandard metals to hundreds of clients. After Takata’s lethal airbags and testing scandals at various carmakers, this is yet another blemish on Japan’s reputation for product quality. Something is going badly wrong with corporate cultures.
Trump’s new Democrat friends put China on notice 26 Sep 2017 The U.S. president touted his common ground with congressional minority leaders Chuck Schumer and Nancy Pelosi when it comes to Beijing. They talk tougher on currency manipulation and trade than some in the White House. Their chumminess could put more economic pressure on China.