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Biden to block Nippon Steel’s proposed takeover of U.S. Steel

Democratic presidential nominee Vice President Kamala Harris campaigns with President Joe Biden at the IBEW Local Union #5 union hall in Pittsburgh, on Labor Day, Monday, Sept. 2. Associated Press

U.S. President Joe Biden is preparing to block Nippon Steel Corp.’s $14.1 billion takeover of United States Steel Corp., according to people familiar with the matter.

The proposed deal has been subject to a review by the secretive Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States, and Biden plans to kill it as soon as the committee referral lands on his desk, said the people, who asked not to be identified because the move hasn’t yet been announced. A decision could be made as soon as this week, they said.

Shares of U.S. Steel plunged as much as 24% in New York after the Washington Post earlier reported Biden’s plan.

The proposed deal has sparked an election-year firestorm in the crucial swing state of Pennsylvania, where U.S. Steel and the United Steelworkers union that opposes the deal are both based. The committee hasn’t yet transmitted its recommendation to the president, a White House official said.

Any move to block the deal could potentially be subject to litigation. There’s no sign that Nippon Steel plans to walk away from the deal voluntarily, one of the people said.

The past two weeks have brought a drumbeat of developments, including a fresh $1.3 billion commitment from Nippon Steel, a commitment to use an American-majority proxy board and a warning from U.S. Steel that the deal’s death may spell the end of some of its plants.

Biden has long pledged that U.S. Steel, an iconic American company headquartered in Pittsburgh, should remain domestically owned and run, a stance with which Vice President Kamala Harris, the Democratic presidential nominee, is also aligned. Harris announced her position at a Labor Day event in Pittsburgh on Monday.

Republican Donald Trump, her opponent in November’s election, had outright vowed to block the deal if elected to the White House.

There’s little precedent for the move. Proponents of Nippon Steel’s bid say the U.S. shouldn’t reject a bid from a company based in an allied country such as Japan, particularly one that could create a joint entity with scale to compete with China.

The committee’s investigations are notoriously secretive, with little public hint of progress or timeline. The committee is a panel of government officials that reviews proposals by foreign entities to purchase companies or property in the U.S. It is chaired by the Treasury Department, but also includes members from the State, Defense, Justice, Commerce, Energy and Homeland Security departments. Because it never comments on individual reviews and often relies on classified information to decide whether to oppose or clear a deal, its investigations are effectively a black box.

It’s not clear what the panel’s decision is, or whether it’s made one.

The last time a U.S. president used the committee to block a deal was in May, when Biden ordered a Chinese crypto company to sell and vacate land near a U.S. Air Force base. Before that, only seven deals had ever been blocked.

If the Nippon Steel deal is successfully blocked, the fate of U.S. Steel remains unclear. The company warned Wednesday that failing to complete the deal would imperil thousands of jobs and force the company to pivot away from some of its legacy blast furnace facilities, including those in Pennsylvania, and potentially even relocate its headquarters from Pittsburgh.

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