US Steel Deal Seen Closing by Merger Deadline on Trump Pivot

A Treasury Department spokesperson declined to comment. The companies, their investors and advisers to the deal are still awaiting final terms marking the end of Nippon Steel’s takeover of the US steelmaker, but talks with the Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States are progressing and poised to be finalized before the deal deadline, said the people. However, final details have not been fully ironed out and talks are ongoing, the people said. Failure to reach a deal could mean reopening the merger agreement at least partially and potentially spur new fronts of negotiation. US Steel shares jumped as high as $54.24 after the Bloomberg report — the highest since Nippon Steel’s $55-a-share offer was announced in mid-December 2023 — before paring gains.
A final deal would clear the way for the Japan-based steelmaker to finally own the once-iconic American producer — albeit with some measures of American control, such as over board seats. Trump’s self-proclaimed “big deal” that extracted further concessions from Nippon Steel would also add decades of life to existing US Steel mills that have long beleaguered the company’s bottom line due to their urgent need for significant, and unavailable, capital investments. The agreement includes a requirement that US Steel, as a subsidiary, will retain its headquarters in Pittsburgh. The deal also includes provisions for a US management team, a majority of US nationals on the board and US government approval of “key” board positions, Senator David McCormick, a Pennsylvania Republican, told “FOX News Sunday” earlier this week. It’s also poised to require an American chief executive officer, some of the people said.
Story Continues Trump said Friday that US Steel workers would receive a $5,000 bonus and that $2.2 billion of a $14 billion proposed investment would be earmarked to increase steel production at the Mon Valley Works facility. Another $7 billion would be spent to modernize steel mills, expand ore mining and build facilities across Indiana, Minnesota, Alabama and Arkansas. And, he added, US Steel wouldn’t announce layoffs or outsourcing, and its blast furnaces must remain at “full capacity” for at least 10 years. While some investors have worried about Cfius finalizing terms by a certain date, people familiar with the matter said the security panel’s decision wasn’t bound to a due date given its investigation wasn’t done through a typical process. US Steel’s recent stock performance suggests investors are optimistic the deal will succeed.
Shares of the American steelmaker have been trading above $53 a share since May 27 — close to Nippon Steel’s all-cash offer. (Adds share reaction in fifth paragraph.) Most Read from Bloomberg Businessweek Cavs Owner Dan Gilbert Wants to Donate His Billions—and Walk Again YouTube Is Swallowing TV Whole, and It’s Coming for the Sitcom Millions of Americans Are Obsessed With This Japanese Barbecue Sauce Is Elon Musk’s Political Capital Spent? Trump Considers Deporting Migrants to Rwanda After the UK Decides Not To ©2025 Bloomberg L.P. View Comments