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BlueScope, an Australian steelmaker, sees Trump’s tariffs in a positive light

BlueScope, an Australian steelmaker, sees Trump’s tariffs in a positive light

BlueScope Steel will benefit from the protectionist tariffs of U.S. president Donald Trump, said CEO Mark Vassella on Monday. He added that he expected higher prices to boost BlueScope Steel's profits across North America.

Vassella, after BlueScope reported a first-half profit that was better than expected, said that steel prices had already begun to "move in the right directions" as a result of Trump's announcement on 25% tariffs against imports of aluminium and steel into the U.S. without exceptions made for allies like Australia.

"If prices rise, as we have seen last time, the short answer is yes, we will benefit," he said. He noted that steel prices had risen 20% since Trump announced his tariffs a week earlier.

BlueScope has five companies in North America.

BlueScope's stock rose 12% in early trading to A$25.03 (15.90 dollars), while the benchmark S&P/ASX 200 was down 0.7%.

Port Kembla Steelworks, near Sydney, is the primary steelmaking facility of Melbourne-based BlueScope in Australia. It exports approximately 300,000 tonnes of its 3 million tonnes of domestic crude steel per year.

North Star Mill in Ohio is one of the five North American businesses that produce together about 3,000,000 tonnes.

Vassella stated that the difference between a 3,000,000 tonne and a 300,000.0 tonnes is a simple one. He said that the steel demand for building and construction, automobiles, and manufacturing industries in the U.S. was "pretty strong".

Vassella stated that the Trump administration's previous tariffs on steel caused steel prices to rise from $500 per tonne to $800-900.

He said that as a domestic steel manufacturer, he would benefit from any price increase due to the tariffs.

North America was BlueScope’s largest revenue-generating geographic region in the six months leading up to December 31, 2020. It accounted for 42% or A$309 millions of all earnings underlying before interest, taxes, depreciation, and amortization. Australia accounted for 39%, or A$288 millions.

BlueScope’s first-half profit fell 59% to A$179.1million, but was still ahead of analyst consensus forecasts of A$170million.

The steelmaker increased its interim dividend from 30 Australian cents to 20 Australian cents.

(source: Reuters)