Donald Trump's pledge to block Nippon Steel's planned purchase
of U.S. Steel if he retakes the White House compounds political troubles for
the $15 billion deal, whose failure could reverberate across Japan Inc.
For Japan, the biggest foreign investor in the U.S., a collapse
of the deal could give companies pause about acquisitions in other strategic
sectors and force them to be more risk-averse when sizing up deals, say former
officials, lawyers, analysts, and executives.
Challenges and Implications of
the Planned Acquisition
According to Reuters, the planned purchase by the world's
fourth-largest steelmaker of the storied American firm underlines the limits of
"friendshoring," a term coined by U.S. officials to describe deeper
economic cooperation between allies, an effort partly aimed at de-risking
supply chains from rival power China.
Nippon Steel's acquisition already faces high hurdles, drawing
criticism from Democratic and Republican lawmakers and the powerful United
Steelworkers union.
U.S. Failure could be "a warning sign to some segments of
Japanese investors," said Kenichiro Sasae, Japan's ambassador to the U.S.
at the start of Trump's 2017-2021 presidential term.
While the fallout might be limited to specific sensitive
industries, it would show that even with more focus on economic cooperation
between allies, countries will always decide based on their core interests,
said Sasae, president of the Japan Institute of International Affairs think
tank.
Opposition and Historical Context
US News noted that opposition to the deal
appears at odds with U.S. efforts in recent years to encourage Japanese
companies to boost their presence there. It is reminiscent of the 1980s when
Japanese acquisitions of trophy assets like the Rockefeller Center ignited
sharp criticism from the American public.
In 2015, U.S. regulators, citing competition concerns, scuttled
a merger between Japan's Tokyo Electron and U.S.-based Applied Materials, two
of the world's largest manufacturers of semiconductor-making machinery.
Trump, whose protectionist "America First" policies
were a hallmark of his tenure, said on Wednesday he would
"instantaneously" block the deal if he wins the Nov. 5 vote. The
Republican is set for a likely rematch with President Joe Biden, a Democrat.
Nippon Steel responded that the purchase would greatly benefit
U.S. Steel, the U.S. steel industry, its customers, employees, local
communities, and the United States more broadly.