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Nippon Steel CFO: No capacity cuts required for US Steel in the coming year, says Nippon Steel

Takahiko iwai, chief financial officer at Nippon Steel, said that the company does not see a need to reduce capacity at U.S. Steel. Instead, it expects this business to contribute a profit in fiscal 2026. This is up from zero last year.

Iwai said in an interview that while?urgent? steps are necessary to improve the U.S. firm's high cost structure, similar capacity reductions to those implemented by Japan in the early 2020s is not needed because U.S. demand for steel is increasing.

Iwai stated that "U.S. Steel has steadily improved through capital expenditure effects," adding that about 100 Nippon Steel employees had been sent to U.S. for sharing best practices and advanced technology.

He didn't give an estimate of U.S. Steel’s expected earnings in the next fiscal.

After protracted negotiations, Japan's largest?steelmaker acquired U.S. Steel for $15 billion in June.

It cut its forecast for 'U.S. Business to zero, from an estimated 80 billion yen (515 million dollars) for the nine months up to March 2026. Iwai attributed this to weak market conditions, buyers who held back because of U.S. Tariffs, and transport disruptions due to a cold snap.

The improvements to the facility will help improve results next year.

Iwai stated that "Big River 2 is now operating at nearly full capacity, and will have an impact on the entire fiscal year next year." The new plant began operations in late 2024.

Iwai stated that U.S. Steel faces its biggest challenge due to the high variable costs resulting from years of underinvestment. Nippon Steel is planning to create a?structure capable of securing a stable profit even during market downturns.

He said that completing planned investments over four years to increase the share of value-added high-margin products would "significantly improve cost-competitiveness and quality."

He said that the U.S. was the largest?market in terms of high-grade steel, and is less affected than other markets by Chinese competition.

Iwai said that of the 2 trillion yen secured bridge loan for the acquisition, there are refinancing deadlines on 1.3 trillion in June. This excludes 700 billion yen raised through subordinated loans or similar instruments.

He declined to make any comment about a report stating that Nippon Steel was considering the sale of up to 500 billion yen in convertible bonds. $1 = 155.2500 Japanese yen (Reporting and editing by Yuka Obayashi, Ritsuko Shiimizu)

(source: Reuters)