Arcelor Mittal''s Sparrows Point plant; Why it has to be sold
07 Sep 2007
Mumbai: Arcelor Mittal, the world''s largest steel maker, has received clearance from US anti-trust authorities to sell its Sparrows Point steel mill for $1.35 billion.
The transaction is expected to close in October, subject to oversight and approval by the recently appointed court trustee, the company said in a statement.
Why
Arcelor Mittal had to sell the Sparrows Point facility
Prior to Mittal''s acquisition of Arcelor (See: Mittal-Arcelor:
Saga of a bidding war) , Mittal was one of the
two large integrated steel producers who accounted for
more than 74 per cent of all tin mill product sales in
the eastern United States.
Prior to the merger, Canadian steel maker Dofasco Inc,
which Arcelor acquired in a hostile takeover (See:
ThyssenKrupp
backs out, Arcelor wins Dofasco) the same week
that Mittal announced its bid for the second largest steel
maker, operated a large integrated mill in Ontario. Between
them the two provided competition, which the US Department
of Justice felt could be threatened and lead to a rise
in prices once Mittal Steel had acquired Arcelor.
On 20 February, 2007, the department announced that it
would require Mittal Steel to divest its Sparrows Point
facility located near Baltimore, "to remedy the competitive
harm arising from Mittal''s recent $33 billion acquisition
of Arcelor S A." To pre empt such concerns in the
US, Mittal had agreed to sell to Dofasco to German steel
maker ThyssenKrupp, the company, which had proposed a
merger with Dofasco before Aercelor grabbed it.
On 1 August, 2006, the department''s antitrust division
filed a civil lawsuit in the US District Court in Washington,
DC, to block Mittal''s proposed acquisition of Arcelor.
Along with a proposed consent decree for Mittal to divest
a steel mill that supplied tin mill products to the eastern
United States anticipating that it might be unable to
sell Dofasco, which Mittal had agreed to sell to German
steel maker ThyssenKrupp (See: Mittal''s
bid revives Thyssen''s hopes for Dofasco) because
Arcelor had, in an attempt to defeat Mittal''s hostile
takeover bid, placed legal title to Dofasco into a Dutch
foundation, the Strategic Steel Stichting.
Therefore, in the event the sale of Dofasco could not
be carried out as required (See: Trust
blocking sale of Dofasco, says Arcelor Mittal),
the proposed consent decree gave the Department the right
to select for divestiture either Mittal Steel''s Sparrows
Point mill or its Weirton mill, located in Weirton, W.Va.
The
Sparrows Point is a profitable and diversified facility
that has the capacity to produce more than 500,000 tons
of tin mill products annually. Sparrows Point currently
operates as an integrated facility that produces the steel
slabs used in the manufacture of tin mill products and,
unlike the Weirton mill, would not have to develop new
sources of supply for this critical input upon its separation
from Mittal Steel.
"With the divestiture of Sparrows Point, competition
in the market for tin mill products in the eastern United
States will be preserved," said Thomas O. Barnett,
assistant attorney general in charge of the department''s
antitrust division.