National Post

U.S. firm buys Canada’s Stelco

Shareholde­rs get 87% premium in $3.85B deal

- LIEZEL HILL

U.S. firm Cleveland-cliffs Inc. is buying Canadian steelmaker Stelco Holdings Inc. for about $3.85 billion, in Cleveland-cliffs’ first major move after losing out in its bid for United States Steel Corp. last year.

Shareholde­rs in Canada’s Stelco will receive cash and shares worth about $70, Cliffs said in a statement on Monday, representi­ng a premium of 87 per cent from the closing price on Friday.

The deal is the latest in a series by Cliffs chief executive Lourenco Goncalves, who built the company from an iron ore miner just a few years ago into one of the top four U.S. steel producers and the country’s biggest automotive steel supplier. The combative executive tried unsuccessf­ully last year to acquire U.S. Steel, and has been a vocal opponent of that company’s agreement to sell itself instead to Nippon Steel Corp. of Japan.

Stelco operates two facilities in Ontario and ships approximat­ely 2.6 million net tons of flat-rolled steel annually, primarily hot-rolled steel. The acquisitio­n will expand Cliffs’ steelmakin­g footprint and doubles its exposure to the flat-rolled spot market, the company said.

Stelco, once called the Steel Company of Canada, traces its roots back more than 110 years. The company fell on hard times by the mid2000s and filed for bankruptcy protection. U.S. Steel bought the troubled producer in 2007 and changed the name to U.S. Steel Canada. Less than a decade later, U.S. Steel took some of Stelco’s best contracts and abandoned what was left of the company in 2015. Stelco chief executive Alan Kestenbaum, a noted turnaround artist with a long history in the commoditie­s industry, acquired the assets out of bankruptcy in 2017 and restored the Stelco name.

Stelco’s shareholde­rs representi­ng about 45 per cent of the ownership — including its two largest investors, Fairfax Financial Holdings and Kestenbaum — have agreed to support the deal. The deal also has the backing of United Steelworke­rs union president David Mccall, Cliffs said.

The transactio­n is expected to close in the fourth quarter of 2024, subject to approval by Stelco shareholde­rs, receipt of regulatory approvals and satisfacti­on of other customary closing conditions.

Wells Fargo, J.P. Morgan and Moelis & Company LLC are acting as financial advisers to Cliffs, while BMO Capital Markets is acting as financial adviser to Stelco, and Mccarthy Tétrault LLP and A&O Shearman LLP are serving as legal counsel to Stelco. RBC Capital Markets is acting as financial adviser and Stikeman Elliott LLP as legal counsel to the special committee of Stelco’s board of directors.

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