US will have golden share in Nippon Steel's takeover of US Steel, US senator says


TOKYO, May 27 (Reuters) - The U.S. government will have veto power over key decisions relating to U.S. Steel as part of a deal with Nippon Steel  that would approve the Japanese firm's bid for the well-known steel company, a key U.S. lawmaker said on Tuesday.

The details are laid out in what is called a national security agreement that the companies will sign with the U.S. government, said Republican Senator David McCormick of Pennsylvania, where U.S. Steel is headquartered.

“It’ll be a U.S. CEO, a U.S. majority board and then there will be a golden share, which will essentially require U.S. government approval of a number of the board members, and that will allow the United States to ensure production levels aren’t cut and things like that,” he told CNBC in an interview.

Nippon Steel declined to comment. U.S. Steel and the White House could not be immediately reached for comment. Nikkei reported earlier in the day that a golden share was under consideration.

National security agreements get worked out in reviews led by the Committee on Foreign Investment in the U.S., which scrutinizes foreign investments for national security risks and has reviewed Nippon Steel's proposed merger twice.

Japan's top steelmaker has since December 2023 sought to seal a $14.9-billion bid to acquire U.S. Steel. But both President Donald Trump and former President Joe Biden expressed opposition to the tie-up, arguing U.S. Steel should remain American-owned as they sought to woo voters in Pennsylvania ahead of the November presidential election.

Biden formally blocked it in January on national security grounds, prompting a lawsuit by the companies that alleged the review process had been unfair. The Biden White House disputed that view.

Trump launched a fresh CFIUS review of the deal in April and on Friday appeared to finally give it his blessing in a social media post, noting that the "planned partnership" would create "at least 70,000 jobs, and add $14 Billion Dollars to the U.S. Economy."

But on Sunday, Trump cast doubt over that interpretation, noting in remarks to reporters that "It's an investment and it's a partial ownership, but it will be controlled by the USA."