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Nippon Steel reports a 43% drop in profit and says it will cooperate with the review of US Steel's bid

Nippon Steel forecasted a 43% drop in net profit in the current fiscal year due to a worsening business climate and increased tariffs. It also said that authorities in the U.S. are still reviewing the bid it made to purchase U.S. Steel.

The largest Japanese steelmaker, Japan's largest steelmaker, estimated its profit for the fiscal year ending March at more than 200 billion yen (about $1.4 billion).

This is a 36% decrease on the previous year's 350.2 billion yen, but still higher than the average analyst estimate of 334.3 billion yen compiled by LSEG.

In a recent earnings report, Nippon Steel said that the trend of tariffs in the United States is unpredictable and the indirect impact it may have on the company could be huge.

It said that the direct impact of this is unlikely to be significant, as small-volume exports are difficult to substitute.

The $15 billion offer by Nippon Steel for U.S. Steel that was rejected by the former U.S. president Joe Biden is being reviewed.

Nippon Steel announced on Friday that both parties are "taking all necessary steps" to close the transaction, but there is no guarantee.

Donald Trump, the U.S. president who assumed office for a second time on 20 January, began his tenure by saying that he "wouldn’t mind" Nippon Steel buying a minority stake of U.S. Steel. This scenario would require a major overhaul of the deal structures.

Trump instructed the Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States to review the foreign investment to assess the risk to national security.

Nippon Steel "fully cooperates with the review process in order to obtain approvals," said the Japanese steelmaker on Friday.

Speaking to reporters Friday, Vice Chairman Takahiro Muri said that he expected CFIUS would make a recommendation to Trump on the deal by May 21, and that the president will decide whether or not to approve the deal by June 5.

(source: Reuters)