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Source: US panel presents views on Nippon Steel and US Steel deal to Trump

Unnamed sources familiar with the situation said that a powerful U.S. panel of national security experts made a recommendation on Wednesday to President Donald Trump regarding Nippon Steel’s tense $14.9 billion bid to acquire U.S. Steel. They declined to provide any further details.

The submission is in accordance with a Trump executive order, signed last month. It instructed the Committee on Foreign Investment in the U.S. to outline whether the measures proposed by the firms mitigate the national security threats previously identified by the Committee.

Could not understand the recommendation of the committee.

Trump has 15 days from now to decide on the fate of this transaction. However, the timeline may slip.

Requests for comments from the companies or Treasury Department (which leads CFIUS) were not immediately responded to.

In January, after a CFIUS review of the previous deal, Joe Biden, then President of the United States blocked it on grounds related to national security.

The companies filed suit, claiming they had not received a fair review. The Biden White House dismissed that view.

Reports earlier this week stated that Nippon Steel had floated plans to spend up to $14 billion on U.S. Steel operations, including $4 billion for a new mill. This was in response to government requests for more investment.

The directive of April asks that each agency member of CFIUS make a statement explaining their position and the reasons for it. (Reporting and editing by Alexandra Alper, Sonali Paul and Costas Pitas)

(source: Reuters)