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Thursday, September 19, 2024

Hamilton, Ont., steel maker Stelco sold for $3.4B to Cleveland-Cliffs

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Hamilton

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Hamilton-based steelmaker Stelco Holdings Inc. is set to be acquired by U.S.-based Cleveland-Cliffs Inc. for $3.4 billion Cdn. The company said its headquarters will remain in Hamilton and it will build on its existing 1,000-employee footprint in Canada.

As part of the agreement, Stelco’s headquarters will remain in Hamilton

Nathan Fung · CBC News

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The Canadian flag flies outside the Stelco Steel Mill in Hamilton, Ont.,  on Thursday, November 25, 2004.

The Canadian flag flies outside the Stelco Steel Mill in Hamilton in this file photo. Stelco is set to be acquired by a Cleveland-based steel producer for $3.4 billion Cdn. (The Canadian Press)

Hamilton-based steelmaker Stelco Holdings Inc. is set to be acquired by U.S.-based Cleveland-Cliffs Inc. for $3.4 billion Cdn.

Stelco said it has agreed to sell all issued and outstanding common shares for $70 per share to the Ohio-based steel producer.

Stelco chief executive Alan Kestenbaum said he is confident Cleveland-Cliffs will remain a reliable supplier to its customers while maintaining Stelco’s “stature and reputation in Canada and maintaining our Canadian national interests.”

Profile of a man

Alan Kestenbaum is the CEO and executive chairman of Stelco. (Bedrock Industries)

Currently, Stelco maintains two major steelmaking facilities in Ontario — one each in Hamilton and Nanticoke.

CBC Hamilton reached out to Stelco for an interview. However, the company said no one was available for comment.

Stelco said in a news release that as part of the agreement, it will keep its headquarters in Hamilton and build on its existing 1,000-employee footprint in Canada. It will also retain Canadian representation on its management team.

The news release also said Cleveland-Cliffs will continue Stelco’s current community commitments, including collaboration with McMaster University and the CanmetMATERIALS research centre, and maintain the existing research chairs with McMaster. The company will also retain its partnership with the Hamilton Tiger-Cats and Forge FC, and its 40 per cent equity interest and the master lease of Tim Hortons Field.

Getting Nanticoke ‘the real gem,’ expert says

Kestenbaum acquired Stelco in 2016 after the company went into creditor protection in 2004 and was sold as a subsidiary to U.S. Steel Co. in 2007. It then returned to creditor protection in 2014 before signing an agreement to be acquired by Kestenbaum’s Bedrock Industries in late 2016.

Cleveland-Cliffs president and CEO Lourenco Goncalves said Kestenbaum was able to turn an “underperforming asset under previous ownership into a very cost-efficient and profit-oriented company.”

He said the deal “keeps national interests at the forefront and recognizes the importance of the workforce,” noting Stelco respects the union representing its workers, “treats their employees well and leans into their cost advantages.”

Profile of a man

Marvin Ryder is a marketing and business professor at McMaster University in Hamilton. (McMaster University)

Marvin Ryder, an associate professor of marketing and entrepreneurship at the DeGroote School of Business at McMaster University, said one of the likely reasons for the purchase of the company is to acquire Stelco’s plant in Nanticoke, which he said is a modern and efficient steelmaking operation.

“If I was interested in buying the former Stelco, it wouldn’t be for what it had in Hamilton, it would be for what it had down the road in Nanticoke… In many ways I would have called it the crown jewel of the Stelco operations,” he said.

In a news release, Cleveland-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.

Ryder said Stelco’s operation will be business as usual once the sale closes later in the year. 

However, he said things could change a few years later. One possibility he sees is that instead of making steel at Nanticoke and transporting it to Hamilton for value-added finishing, the company could consolidate its operations at the Nanticoke site.

“I suspect they’ll keep [the finishing operations in Hamilton] at least for a while. But the real gem that they were acquiring wasn’t really the Hamilton operations, it was the Nanticoke operations,” he said.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Nathan Fung is a reporter with CBC Hamilton, with a strong interest in covering municipal issues. He has previously worked as a reporter in Ottawa and Edmonton. You can reach him at nathan.fung@cbc.ca

    With files from The Canadian Press

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