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‘US Steel must stay American’: Trump stance clouds Nippon’s US$15b takeover hopes
US President Donald Trump gestures as he arrives at Joint Base Andrews in Maryland, April 13, 2025. — Reuters pic

TOKYO, April 14 — US President Donald Trump on Sunday said he doesn’t think a foreign company should control US Steel, repeating comments made last week that dimmed hopes for the US$15 billion (RM66.3 billion) bid by Japan’s Nippon Steel to buy the US firm.

Trump said on Wednesday he did not want to see US Steel "go to Japan,” sending its shares down 7 per cent. The two companies later said they were working closely with the Trump administration to "secure a significant investment.”

Trump spoke with reporters aboard Air Force One as he returned to Washington from his estate in Florida.

Trump and Japanese Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba discussed the deal during their meeting in February, the latter said on Monday in a parliament session in Tokyo.

"The difference between acquisition and investment must be carefully examined in light of the US law, but there must surely be a point where it (US Steel) remains as an American company, and where Japanese interests can also be realised,” Ishiba said.

The original deal for Nippon to buy US Steel, which was announced in December 2023, has faced headwinds from the start.

Both former President Joe Biden and Trump last year asserted that US Steel should remain American-owned as they sought to win over voters in the swing state of Pennsylvania, where the company is headquartered, during a hotly contested election.

In January 2025, Biden blocked the transaction on national security grounds. But the parties quickly sued, alleging they were denied a fair national security review, because Biden had prejudiced the process with his public opposition to the deal in a bid to win reelection. — Reuters

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