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Steel Bends Under Trump Tariffs

Steel bends: Trump’s tariffs on imported steel aim to boost demand for American steel. So far, they haven’t stopped one of the country’s biggest steelmakers, Cleveland-Cliffs, from closing plants and retreating from its strategy to dominate the industry. The top supplier of sheet steel to automakers in the U.S., has in recent months idled plants and iron-ore mines. The company plans this summer to close three specialty steel plants in Pennsylvania and Illinois.

Source: The Hill
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SunshineGirl · 36-40, F
He lifted tariffs completely from UK steel imports yesterday.
JSul3 · 70-79
@SunshineGirl
True but.....

From The Hill:
Trump announced Thursday he’s cutting tariffs on U.K. autos, steel and aluminum. The U.K. agreed to increase market access for U.S. exporters, including for domestic chemicals, machinery and other industrial products. Britain also agreed to “fast-track” American goods, Trump said. Officials said a separate deal will allow imports of 100,000 British cars at only a 10 percent tariff.

Some experts believe the impact of Thursday’s agreement with the U.K. cannot easily become a template with other nations where the U.S. has a large trade deficit.

“It’s a very small win, and it’s limited in scope,” Josh Lipsky, chair of international economics at the Atlantic Council, told CNBC.

Officials from both governments will still need to meet in the coming months to hammer out specific language. That means there’s a possibility the agreement could still fall apart. Britain occupies the No. 11 spot among the United States’s biggest trading partners — it represented 2.9 percent of total U.S. trade in the first quarter of the year — while the United States is Britain’s largest single trading partner. Even so, most of that trading relationship is in services, which aren’t affected by tariffs, according to The New York Times.

Cleveland-Cliffs will still close down facilities.
GerOttman · 61-69, M
@JSul3 The company reports reactivating other plants. It was in the same story, maybe you missed it...
JSul3 · 70-79
@GerOttman
Per Industry Week.com

Cleveland-Cliffs Inc. will lay off nearly 1,000 workers in the coming weeks as it fully idles two plants in Pennsylvania and one in Illinois as part of a plan to save $300 million annually. The moves come about six weeks after executives said they planned to similarly cut back some operations in Minnesota and Michigan, which cost about 1,200 people their jobs.

In addition to the planned closings, Chairman, President and CEO Lourenco Goncalves and his team also are stepping away from plans to build a transformer production plant in West Virginia and cutting their 2025 capital spending forecast by another $25 million. They disclosed their plans alongside Cliffs’ first-quarter report, which showed a net loss of $495 million on sales of $4.6 billion.

In line to be idled are:

Steelton, Pennsylvania: Rails and other railroad products
About 550 employees.
“Unfortunately, our rail customers prefer artificially cheap imported rail. In one case, the customer imports 50% of his needs from Nippon Steel, who is continuing to ship rail from Japan right through the Section 232 tariffs,” Goncalves said.
Conshohocken, Pennsylvania, north of Philadelphia: Plate finishing facility
Most of the work now being done at that plant will be moved to Coatesville, Pennsylvania.
Riverdale, Illinois: Compact strip mill facility
Goncalves said it has an uncompetitive cost structure and production will be moved to Cliffs’ Indiana Harbor plant about 10 miles east.

Regarding pulling back from his team’s plans to redevelop a section of Cliffs’ Weirton, West Virginia, plant with a 600-job factory to make transformers, Goncalves said the company’s (unnamed) partner is “having second thoughts” about the project’s location and size. Not moving forward means the company won’t spend $50 million both this year and next on the project, which was also in line to receive a $50 million forgivable loan from West Virginia.

Likely next for the portfolio of Cleveland-Cliffs plants around the country—which has been assembled in large part via the acquisitions since 2020 of AK Steel and ArcelorMittal USA: Some divestitures. Goncalves and CFO Celso Goncalves said they’ve received some inquiries recently and are willing to strike deals as long as they don’t compromise the company’s competitive position.

“I’m not going to go into specifics of which ones but we have received unsolicited inbounds,” Celso Goncalves said, adding that he plans to use sales proceeds to pay down debt. “We’re talking assets that could bring several billion dollars of potential value.”

Shares of Cliffs (Ticker: CLF) tumbled more than 15% to $7.15 after the report and conference call. They have now lost more than 40% of their value over the past six months, a slide that has cut the company’s market capitalization to $3.5 billion.
GerOttman · 61-69, M
@JSul3 yes, i read the article. Did you catch the part where company execs state this is not tariff related? I didn't notice that part in your post.
JSul3 · 70-79
@GerOttman Looks to me like they are getting out of the business.
GerOttman · 61-69, M
@JSul3 they're the 2nd or 3rd largest in the US, I don't think that's going to happen. They were looking to buy/merge US Steel since Biden blocked the Nippon Steel merger.
JSul3 · 70-79
@GerOttman Time will tell. I wish them the best but wonder where those folks that lost their jobs will go next.
GerOttman · 61-69, M
@JSul3 That's one of the reasons the execs at this company are supportive of the tariffs. The claim that other countries are "dumping" steel imports here is not without some merit. I agree with the premise even if the implementation is somewhat clumsy.