Unlike the steel   mergers of the mid-noughties, the mergers currently in the news are born out   of weakness, not strength, a recent Financial Times article suggests. 
  According to the piece, profitability among the continent’s steelmakers plunged from a peak in the   third quarter of 2008 — when each ton   shipped delivered on average €215 in earnings   before interest, tax, depreciation and amortization — to just €46/tonne in the   first quarter of 2016, according to calculations by UBS. 
  The figure has recovered since to about €83/tonne in the   first quarter of 2017, but at the cost of 86,000 job losses since the   financial crisis and years of losses contributing to the bankruptcy of the   continent’s largest steel production plant, Ilva,   in Italy. 
  Despite years of suboptimal capacity utilization, there has been limited   rationalization of production continentwide, with governments fiercly   opposing job losses in their backyard and steelmakers hoping the other guy   will make the cuts. Even Ilva is now being taken over by ArcelorMittal rather   than closing completely, and following a major investment will be back in   production next year. 
  Although the industry acknowledges Europe will never need as much steel as it   once did, ArcelorMittal is quoted as saying the industry is looking to   governments to do more to stem imports from Russia and China, and facilitate   the planned and phased closure of persistently loss-making plants. Less   foreign competition and more consolidation is the agenda in the hope fewer   more-consolidated steelmakers can achieve greater clout with buyers in a more   constrained market, forcing through higher prices. 
  When ArcelorMittal’s takeover of Ilva is complete, the   combined entity will control some 30% of European flat-rolled steel   production, up from 26.5% for ArcelorMittal now. While Tata Steel’s proposed and much-delayed merger with   ThyssenKrupp’s steel division — currently Europe’s second-largest steel producer — would raise their combined market share   for hot-rolled flat products to over 20%. 
  Steel prices are already up nearly 60% from the bottom in 2015 on the back of   improved recovery in steel demand and a gradual increase in anti-dumping   legislation restricting some types of steel imports into Europe. Producers   would like to see this go a lot further, of course, but consumers are   fighting to keep the import market open, fearing — with some justification — that more action will reduce competition   and result in significantly higher prices. 
  For the first time in years, steelmakers at least seem to have a plan and are   actively pursuing it. Whether that plan is to the eventual benefit or   detriment of consumers remains to be seen — but a healthier   domestic steel industry must certainly be advantageous to all.  |