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Nippon Steel to bolster overseas business, focus on India

Creditors of Essar Steel India approved a joint offer by ArcelorMittal and Nippon Steel for the debt-laden asset in October.

Tokyo: Japan’s Nippon Steel Corp, is set to bolster overseas operations, especially in fast-growing India, to bypass growing nationalism and capitalize on growth abroad as it faces shrinking demand at home.

“India is the fastest-growing market in the world and our investment on Essar’s operations will be our key project for this year,” said Nippon Steel’s new president, Eiji Hashimoto.

Creditors of Essar Steel India approved a joint offer by ArcelorMittal and Nippon Steel for the debt-laden asset in October, and the two have drawn up plans to double output of the unit in coming years.

“It’s a big investment, but this deal was a bargain,” Hashimoto told reporters in March. The deal also gives Nippon Steel access to a country that is difficult for foreign companies to enter amid a “Make in India” policy and that has often implemented safeguard duties on steel imports.

From April 1 this year, the 63-year-old Hashimoto - with extensive overseas experience - took the helm of the world’s third-biggest steelmaker, which changed its name from Nippon Steel & Sumitomo Metal Corp.

“The change reflects our commitment to growing globally and winning global competition as a Japan-born company,” he said, adding that it wants to regain and maintain it previous No.1 status by market capitalisation.

Nippon Steel was intermittently the world’s No1 by market cap between 2013 and 2016, but its market cap now stand at USD 16.8 billion, behind peers Baoshan Iron & Steel at USD 23.4 billion, ArcelorMittal at USD 20.3 billion, Posco at USD 19.4 billion and Nucor at USD 17.5 billion, according to data on Refinitiv Eikon.

The 69-year-old steel company is also feeling threatened by Chinese rivals as they improve and upgrade their technology.

“China, which makes half of global steel, is a big threat. We need to keep improving our products and cost competitiveness,” he said.

Nippon Steel has aggressively invested overseas in the past several years, including its 2018 acquisition of Sweden’s Ovako, which makes speciality steel used in industries.

Some analysts say, though, the more urgent challenge for Nippon Steel is to fix problems at its domestic plants.

“Production overhaul is more pressing issue,” said Yuji Matsumoto, an analyst at Nomura Securities.

In February, the steelmaker cut its annual profit forecast for the year ending on March 31 by 6 percent, as technical troubles at its mills reduced its crude steel output.

Hashimoto said ageing facilities and a lack of skilled labour were behind the problems and one of his priorities is to tackle these issues.

“We need to raise our production capability as stable output is our base for global competition and higher profits.”

Japanese steelmakers are enjoying solid domestic demand from automakers and the construction sector, which is busy with projects for the 2020 Tokyo Olympics, but natural disasters and a series of glitches have prevented them from producing as much steel as they had planned.

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