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Steel Industry's Plight Laid Bare as Top Mill Hits 2003 Low

Steel Industry's Plight Laid Bare as Kobe Shares Take a Huge Hit

(Bloomberg) -- Kobe Steel Ltd. tumbled 15% in Tokyo to the lowest level in more than 16 years after Japan’s third-biggest steelmaker swung to a first-quarter loss and warned that full-year profit will collapse.

The shares sank the most since 2017 after the company posted a 1.2 billion yen ($11.2 million) net loss in the three months to June 30 and forecast full-year net income will drop 72%. The impact of the U.S.-China trade war “has become apparent and the outlook is growing uncertain,” Yoshihiko Katsukawa, senior managing executive officer, said at a briefing in Tokyo on Friday.

Steel Industry's Plight Laid Bare as Top Mill Hits 2003 Low

Steelmakers around the world are facing a bleaker outlook as growth slows, trade-war risks escalate and they seek to manage costs after a first-half surge in iron ore . Fellow Japanese mill Nippon Steel Corp. tumbled the most in more than eight years on Friday after forecasting full-year business profit will tank, and industry giant ArcelorMittal has cut its estimates for global demand.

Kobe’s quarterly earnings were “particularly weak at its major divisions, as the global macro slowdown weighed on the steel, aluminum and excavator businesses,” Thanh Ha Pham and Sangin Yun, analysts at Jefferies (Japan) Ltd., said in a report. “We think the new guidance is still based on overly aggressive assumptions.”

The trade war will curb earnings at the iron-and-steel unit, which accounts for about 37% of sales, due to lower sales to auto customers outside Japan, and also erode earnings at its aluminum and copper business, Kobe said. Earnings will be further crimped by lower sales of excavators in China, it said.

Kobe Steel stock retreated the daily limit of 100 yen to 559 yen at the 3 p.m. close in Tokyo, Monday’s biggest decliner in the key Nikkei 225 Stock Average. So far this year, the shares have dropped 27%. JFE Holdings Inc. also retreated, and Nippon Steel hit the lowest since 2012.

The trade war escalated last week after President Donald Trump’s moved to impose a new round of tariffs on Chinese imports, with Beijing pledging to respond with countermeasures if the U.S. goes ahead.

To contact the reporter on this story: Masumi Suga in Tokyo at msuga@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Phoebe Sedgman at psedgman2@bloomberg.net, Jake Lloyd-Smith

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