U.S. Steel

U.S. Steel to be acquired in $14 billion deal

by Talk Business & Politics staff (staff2@talkbusiness.net)

U.S. Steel, which owns Big River Steel and other operations in Northeast Arkansas, is being acquired by Tokyo-based Nippon Steel Corp. in a $14.1 billion deal, the companies announced Monday (Dec. 18).

Nippon will pay $55 per share in an all-cash transaction, a 40% premium, for U.S. Steel. The companies said in a joint press release that U.S. Steel will retain its iconic name and headquarters in Pittsburgh.

Nippon Steel Corp. (NSC) is Japan’s largest steelmaker and one of the world’s leading steel manufacturers. The transaction has been unanimously approved by the board of directors of both companies and is expected to close in the third quarter of 2024.

U.S. Steel to be acquired in $14 billion deal

State of the State Mid-Year 2023: Arkansas’ steel industry to bolster overall manufacturing sector

by Michael Tilley (mtilley@talkbusiness.net)

The U.S. manufacturing sector has been soft in recent months, but Arkansas manufacturing job numbers are up more than 5% in the past two years. One sector advocate believes the job numbers would be higher if more people were in the workforce.

Manufacturing employment in Arkansas totaled 165,200 in July, up from 163,400 in July 2022 and above the 162,000 in the pre-pandemic July 2019. Manufacturing, once the state’s largest jobs sector, posted record employment of 247,600 in February 1995.

Among the three Arkansas metro areas with significant manufacturing activity, two have seen manufacturing job growth in the past five years. Manufacturing job numbers are up 6.3% in Northwest Arkansas during the past five years and up 9.3% in the Fort Smith metro. Manufacturing job numbers are down 6.5% in the Little Rock-North Little Rock metro in the past five years.

https://talkbusiness.net/2023/08/state-of-the-state-mid-year-2023-arkansas-steel-industry-to-bolster-overall-manufacturing-sector/

AUDIO: Governor Hutchinson’s Weekly Address | U.S. Steel

LITTLE ROCK – This week, we announced an economic development win for Arkansas that is the largest single project investment in state history. Today, I’d like to share some details about the new U.S. Steel plant, which eventually will create more than 900 high-paying jobs and will make Mississippi County the Number 1 steel-producing county in the nation.

The competition for the mill was intense, but we won because of our workforce, our business-friendly environment, our abundant, renewable, and clean power, superior Class 1 rail service, and easy access to Mississippi River docks and interstate trucking.

The Arkansas Economic Development Commission and Mississippi County’s economic development team, prepared a first-rate package for U.S. Steel. The 93rd General Assembly supported the effort with legislation that offers an income-tax credit to steel manufacturers that invest in equipment to reduce waste, and reuse or recycle materials. U.S. Steel plans to be carbon neutral by 2050.

The process moved quickly, and our nimble economic development team had the savvy and the resources to keep pace. U.S. Steel announced in September last year that it was looking for a place to build a state-of-the-art mini-mill. Only three months later, the company announced it would build in Arkansas. 

U.S. Steel will invest more than $3 billion to build its plant in Osceola next to the Big River Steel. The company hopes to break ground by spring and to be fully operational by 2024. That is moving very quickly for a $3 billion project.

This effort highlights the need to be able to act quickly and is built on the foundation laid by previous Arkansas governors. When Bill Clinton was governor, he helped recruit Nucor Steel to Mississippi County. And under former Governor Mike Beebe, voters approved Amendment 82, which allowed the state to offer incentives to attract industry. U.S. Steel now owns Big River Steel. And now, I was able to make the case for Arkansas in my meetings with the CEO of U.S. Steel, Dave Burritt.

I can’t overstate the importance of this plant to Mississippi County’s economy and its residents. In the ’90s, Mississippi County lost more than 9,000 jobs in a short period of time. This mill will add back more than 900 to the nearly 5,000 jobs that have returned. The average salary will be more than $100,000. 

The plant will produce the high-end steel used to build cars and appliances, and the economic development commission can build on this success by recruiting even more industry, such as automakers.

The benefits of this steel mill extend beyond the economy and will improve the quality of life in Northeast Arkansas in intangible ways we haven’t imagined. As Secretary of Commerce Mike Preston said, with the expansion of our steel industry, the sky’s the limit.

U.S. Steel To Acquire Remaining Stake In Big River Steel

United States Steel Corp. is on the verge of becoming the sole owner of Big River Steel, the first “superproject” in the history of the Natural State.

U.S. Steel has exercised its call option to acquire the remaining equity of BRS for approximately $774 million from cash on hand. The company ended November with approximately $2.9 billion of liquidity, including about $1.7 billion in cash. The deal is expected to be completed in the first quarter of 2021, subject to satisfaction of customary closing conditions, including antitrust approval.

https://www.ualrpublicradio.org/post/us-steel-acquire-remaining-stake-big-river-steel

An aerial photo of the Big River Steel facility in November 2016. U.S. Steel Corporation is taking steps to acquire complete ownership of the plant.CREDIT BIG RIVER STEEL

An aerial photo of the Big River Steel facility in November 2016. U.S. Steel Corporation is taking steps to acquire complete ownership of the plant.

CREDIT BIG RIVER STEEL