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Nippon Steel excludes US Steel in its profit guidance due to'significant' market issues

Nippon Steel is Japan's largest steelmaker. It expects to report an annual profit drop of 14% before one-offs in the current fiscal year. However, it did not include its outlook for U.S. Steel due to the significant challenges on the U.S. Market.

The Japanese steelmaker is expecting a underlying business gain, or profit adjusted to remove one-offs of 680 billion dollars for the fiscal year ending March. This is down from last year's 793.7 billion dollars.

Nippon Steel acquired U.S. Steel for $15 billion in June. The company said that it had excluded the U.S. Steel business from its fiscal year forecast "due the significant decline of the U.S. Steel market, the one-time cost degradation caused by facility problems and other factors and the high level of uncertainty in the U.S. market."

The company reported a loss for the six-month period ending in September of 113.4 billion Japanese yen, compared to a profit of 243,4 billion yen during the same time last year.

It also said that it expected to report a loss for the full fiscal year of 60 billion Japanese yen (398 million dollars), which was 50% worse than the previous forecast. This is because it would have incurred a loss of 21 billion yen on the sale its stake in Usiminas Steel Manufacturing Company in Brazil.

In its results presentation, Nippon Steel announced that its minority stake in Usiminas would be transferred to Ternium. The Japanese company will instead focus on the U.S.A., India, and Thailand. ($1 = 150,7800 yen)

(source: Reuters)