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Business

Japan’s steel giants to merge today

Published: 01 Oct 2012 - 02:10 pm | Last Updated: 07 Feb 2022 - 01:12 am

TOKYO: Two of Japan’s biggest steel makers will formally merge today, creating the world’s second largest firm in the sector as they look to outpace their Chinese and South Korean rivals.

Nippon Steel, the nation’s number one steel company and third-ranked rival Sumitomo Metal Industries will combine to form a giant second only to India’s ArcelorMittal.

Global competition in the steel industry has intensified in recent years even as demand has been spurred by emerging economies such as China, which are undertaking massive construction, infrastructure and manufacturing projects. But economic fears have weighed on steel demand and Japanese producers have struggled with an unfavourable exchange rate, which saw the yen hit record highs against the dollar late last year.

Even with their economies of scale, Nippon Steel & Sumitomo Metal Corp., will still be a distant second to behemoth ArcelorMittal, with less than half of its annual production.

In 2011, ArcelorMittal produced 97.2 million tonnes of crude steel, while Nippon Steel, ranked sixth-largest, and Sumitomo Metal, ranked 27th, produced a combined 46.1 million tonnes, according to the World Steel Association. The launch comes at a difficult time for the Japanese steel industry.

It is “not a very good environment”, Hiroshi Tomono, Sumitomo Metal president, who will become the new company’s number two, told reporters last week, the Yomiuri Shimbun daily reported. “We have an overwhelming advantage in terms of quality, but (production) costs are our problem,” Tomono said.

A senior Nippon Steel official said the Japanese firm would do well at the top end of the market, but would face difficulties competing with the lower cost bases of other Asian steelmakers.

Nippon Steel and Sumitomo Metal filed 908 international patent applications between 2006 and 2010, nearly four times that of South Korea’s Posco and nine times the number ArcelorMittal submitted, Japanese dailies said.

The merged company will aim to realign and strengthen a global network “in response to increasing worldwide demand for steel and the local procurement needs of Japanese steel consumers operating overseas”, they said. It will focus on reorganising and expanding manufacturing, processing and sales bases in emerging countries, namely China, Brazil, India and Southeast Asian countries. AFP