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Nippon Steel expects $1.4 billion fiscal year profit as one-off items fade

Steel News  |  2026-05-14 00:02:25

In February, the ‌company said it expected to ⁠post a loss of 70 billion yen for the year that ended in March due in part ⁠to a fire at a blast furnace and costs related to the U.S. Steel deal.

SEATTLE (Scrap Monster): Nippon Steel, Japan's biggest steelmaker, on Wednesday said it expects its net profit for the ‌year that ends in March to increase sharply to 220 ‌billion yen ($1.4 billion) as the effects of one-off losses fade from its results.

Nippon ​Steel, which bought U.S. Steel for $15 billion last year and pledged massive investments into the firm, also posted a 95% drop in profit for the previous financial year to 17.2 billion yen.

In February, the ‌company said it expected to ⁠post a loss of 70 billion yen for the year that ended in March due in part ⁠to a fire at a blast furnace and costs related to the U.S. Steel deal.

Nippon Steel managed to turn a profit thanks to ​improved profitability ​amid cost cuts, as well ​as inventory and foreign exchange ‌valuation gains, it said, as raw material prices were rising while the yen remained weak.

The company expects a negative impact from Middle East-related risks of around 50 billion yen in the first quarter, it said, adding that the impact on the full-year results was ‌not yet possible to assess.

As the U.S.-Israeli ​war on Iran triggered fuel supply ​shortages and commodity price ​increases, Japanese steelmakers JFE Holdings and Kobe Steel earlier ‌this month warned of a risk ​of cost increases ​and possibly lower sales.

"In response to rising raw material prices, including those for coking coal, we are currently working to ​increase the sales ‌price of steel products," JFE Holdings, Japan's second-biggest steelmaker, said ​on May 8.

Courtesy: www.reuters.com


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