The potential sale to Nippon Steel has become a political football. But no one is listening to concerns about pollution and ...
TOKYO — U.S. opponents of a Japanese steelmaker’s $14.9 billion bid for U.S. Steel cite concerns about national security and a reluctance to relinquish a storied American company. In Japan ...
Readers help support Windows Report. We may get a commission if you buy through our links. The Media Creation Tool is a software app developed by Microsoft, and it works in a variety of useful ways ...
US Steel put itself up for sale in 2023 after receiving an unsolicited $7 billion takeover offer from Ohio-based Cleveland Cliffs. The $14.9 billion deal with Nippon Steel, Japan’s largest ...
The stories that matter on money and politics in the race for the White House The US government has extended its national security review of Nippon Steel’s proposed $15bn acquisition of US Steel ...
Your browser does not support the <audio> element. Each year China makes as much steel as the rest of the world combined. The vast scale of its output—around 1bn ...
As presidential politics cloud the outlook of US Steel’s merger with its Japanese rival, a national security review of the deal is now not expected to be decided until after the election ...
Donald Trump, Joe Biden, and Kamala Harris may not agree on much, but on one issue they’re in complete accord: They want to block the proposed acquisition of U.S. Steel by the Japanese firm ...
The White House has faced backlash for politicizing its review of Nippon Steel’s takeover of the company. By Alan Rappeport Andrew Duehren and Lauren Hirsch Alan Rappeport and Andrew Duehern ...
It’s hard to think of a more iconically American company than US Steel. It’s right there in the name. So in the face of increasingly tough competition both domestic and foreign, US Steel ...
TOKYO -- Nippon Steel on Wednesday released details of its negotiations with the United Steelworkers union over its proposed takeover of U.S. Steel, in a bid to dispel what it called "public ...
After spending more than a week trying to secure a meeting with the president of the United Steelworkers union, Nippon Steel’s Takahiro Mori finally got an answer. But it was not the one he wanted.