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The Road to Save This U.S. Steel Mill Goes Through China

The Road to Save This U.S. Steel Mill Goes Through China

(Bloomberg) --

The coronavirus has thrust new strains on global supply chains. Meanwhile, some American companies are still fighting battles from the mostly forgotten trade wars of the past two years.

One particular fight that’s playing out just northwest of Pittsburgh involves a stainless-steel company called Allegheny Technologies. U.S. tariffs on steel imports were supposed to save it. Instead, they’re threatening its survival.

Allegheny is petitioning the Trump administration for an exclusion from the 2018 tariffs so it can stay in business and keep employing some 100 workers. The company needs the clemency because it brings in raw stainless from overseas.

Steel tariffs backfiring — it’s a story told countless times. But that’s not even the most interesting part of the Allegheny saga. (Check out the just-published account by Bloomberg’s Shawn Donnan, Joe Deaux and Martin Ritchie.)

Rival steelmakers are lobbying against the company’s request for a tariff exemption in no small part because its joint-venture partner in the Midland, Pennsylvania, mill is a big Chinese company called Tsingshan. The match brings a cost advantage because Tsingshan has access to nickel, a key raw material in stainless-steel making, from a mine in Indonesia.

The Road to Save This U.S. Steel Mill Goes Through China

Tsingshan, though privately held, has pioneered a low-cost production process that some rivals say mirrors the goals of the Chinese government’s “Belt and Road” project — an effort to gain primacy over trade routes in Asia and beyond.

The big lesson from the story is that tariffs alone are insufficient to stop China from becoming an increasingly important player in the global economy. Nor is President Donald Trump’s phase one deal signed in January able to help. That agreement with Beijing delayed until an unspecified time in the future any measures to put a check on the rise of China’s global — and sometimes subsidized — industrial behemoths.

Who knows how the tale ends. But there’s likely to be yet another twist as the dispute becomes intertwined with election-year politics in the U.S.: to save or not to save factory jobs in Pennsylvania, a battleground state that Trump won in 2016 by fewer than 45,000 votes.

Charting the Trade War

The Road to Save This U.S. Steel Mill Goes Through China

The pain from weeks of stalled output in the world’s second-largest economy is starting to show up in dramatic hits to global trade data. Chinese factories are only starting to rev up production again after a coronavirus-induced lull, and China’s PMI sub-gauge of exports for February registered a shockingly low 28.7 — so far below its normal range that it’s off the Bloomberg Trade Tracker’s scale. 

Today’s Must Reads

  • Port problems | The coronavirus has cut deeply into the volume of cargo crossing the docks at U.S. seaports in a further sign of the economic turmoil caused by the outbreak.
  • Wheels of misfortune | The EU put tariffs on steel wheels from China in a dispute aimed at easing European manufacturers’ concerns about whether revamped EU trade-protection rules are strong enough.
  • Scrutinizing allies | A group of U.S. senators wants to remove a preferred investment status for countries such as the U.K. that allow for the installation of Huawei equipment in their 5G networks.
  • India’s opportunity | Steel mills in India are gearing up for an increase in demand from overseas buyers as the coronavirus outbreak chokes supplies from China.
  • Farm purchases | Vietnam, looking to allay the Trump administration’s wrath over its soaring trade surplus with the U.S., is committing to buy $3 billion in farm products from Nebraska.

Economic Analysis

  • U.S. virus fallout | Bloomberg Economics expects the U.S. economy to slow sharply, though not to the point of recession.
  • China stimulus | When it comes to supporting the economy from the coronavirus shock in China, cutting interest rates is not the only game in town, or even the main game.

Coming Up

  • March 6: U.S. trade balance, Canadian merchandise trade
  • March 7: China trade balance
  • March 9: Germany trade balance

To contact the editor responsible for this story: Zoe Schneeweiss at zschneeweiss@bloomberg.net

©2020 Bloomberg L.P.