labels: steel, mittal steel, m&a
Mittal eying stake in AK Steel of US, says reportnews
08 May 2007

Mumbai: Arcelor Mittal, the world''s largest steelmaker, is looking to acquire AK Steel the Financial Times reported on its web site.

align="left">AK Steel produces flat-rolled carbon, stainless and electrical steel products, as well as carbon and stainless tubular steel products, for automotive, appliance, construction and manufacturing markets.

align="left">Without citing any source or confirming through official sources, the FT Alphaville web site report said that a deal could value AK at around $40 per share, or just under $4.5 billion.

Arcelor Mittal declined to comment on the report while industry analysts raised doubts whther Arcelor Mittal would go ahead with such a deal in the light of possible anti-trust issues.

Investment banking sources in Europe also said an acquisition could raise competition concerns in the flat carbon market for the automotive industry in North America.

Arcelor Mittal had to divest its US steel plant at Sparrows Point to address US competition concerns after it decided to keep Arcelor''s Canadian unit Dofasco within the fold of the merged Arcelor Mittal group.

AK Steel reported over $6 billion in sales in 2006. In its first-quarter earnings release, AK Steel said net earnings were $62.7 million, or 56 cents per share, compared with $6.2 million, or 6 cents per share, a year earlier, the FT web site report said.

Arcelor Mittal and Nippon Steel Corp, meanwhile, have agreed to double automotive sheet capacity at their US joint venture at an estimated cost of $254 million (30 billion yen), the Nikkei business daily reported.

L.N. Mittal and Akio Mimura, the heads of the world''s No. 1 and No. 2 steelmakers, also agreed to expand their alliance in areas other than their US venture at a meeting in New Delhi, the paper said.

The two companies are seen adding a new 500,000 tonnes-a-year line to the Indiana plant, doubling its output capacity, to meet strong demand from Japanese automakers such as Toyota Motor Corp.and Honda Motor Co., it said.

Nippon Steel, the biggest beneficiary of strong worldwide sales of Japanese cars, earlier this month raised its full-year forecast for the third time in six months on booming demand from carmakers and said it would post a record profit for a third straight year.

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Mittal eying stake in AK Steel of US, says report