Nippon Steel sees better year ahead for US Steel, no capacity cuts needed, CFO says
BY Reuters | CORPORATE | 02/19/26 12:00 PM ESTBy Yuka Obayashi and Ritsuko Shimizu
TOKYO, Feb 20 (Reuters) - Nippon Steel
While urgent steps are needed to improve the U.S. company's high-cost structure, capacity reductions similar to those implemented in Japan ?in the early 2020s are unnecessary because U.S. steel demand is growing, Iwai told ?Reuters in an interview this week.
"U.S. Steel's operation has been ?steadily improving through
capital expenditure ?effects," Iwai said, adding that around 100
Nippon Steel
He did not give ?an estimate for U.S. Steel's expected earnings for the next fiscal year.
Japan's biggest steelmaker completed its $15 billion acquisition of U.S. Steel in June after ?protracted negotiations.
In November it cut its ?earnings forecast ?for the U.S. business to zero from an estimate of 80 billion yen ($515 million) for the nine months to March 2026 following the acquisition, which Iwai blamed ?on weak market conditions, buyers holding back due to U.S. tariffs and transport ?disruptions caused by a cold snap.
Next year's result will be helped by facility improvements.
"Big River 2 plant is now running at near full capacity and will have a full-year impact next fiscal year," Iwai said. The new plant started operations in late 2024.
Iwai ?said U.S. ?Steel's biggest challenge is its high
variable-cost structure, stemming from years ?of underinvestment.
Nippon Steel
Completing planned investments over four years to raise the share of high-margin value-added products should "significantly improve quality and cost competitiveness," he said.
The U.S. is the world's largest market for high-grade steel and is less affected by Chinese competition than other markets, he said.
Of the 2 trillion yen bridge loan secured for the acquisition, 1.3 trillion yen faces refinancing deadlines in June, excluding 700 ?billion yen already raised through subordinated loans and similar instruments, Iwai said, adding it is considering various options.
He declined to comment on a Reuters report that Nippon Steel
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