Global Stock Markets
U.S. President Donald Trump said on Tuesday he was considering a range
of options to address steel and aluminium imports that he said were
unfairly hurting U.S. producers, including tariffs and quotas.
Trump’s comments - his strongest signal in months that he
will take at least some action to restrict imports of the two metals -
came in a meeting with a bipartisan group of U.S. senators and
representatives at the White House. Reporters were present for part of
the meeting.
Some of the lawmakers urged him to act
decisively to save steel and aluminium plants in their states, but
others urged caution because higher prices would hurt downstream
manufacturers that consume steel and aluminium.
Trump is
weighing options presented last month by the U.S. Commerce Department
in parallel “Section 232” investigations into whether import
restrictions on steel and aluminium are needed to protect national
security. The probes were authorized under a 1962 trade law that has not
been invoked since 2001.
Trump said that the steel and aluminium industries were being “decimated by dumping” and talked about the empty steel mills he saw on the campaign trail in 2016.
U.S. steel stocks rose broadly after the comments, with the S&P 1500 steel index closing up 1.1 percent and outperforming the broader market. Alcoa Inc shares ended 1.4 percent higher, with Century Aluminum up 0.5 percent.
Trump now has until around April 11 to
decide whether to impose steel import curbs and April 20 to decide on
aluminium restrictions. The Commerce Department has not revealed its
recommendations in the probes launched last spring.
But
Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross told the lawmakers that Section 232
powers “can be applied in a much more surgical way” that could lead to
tariffs on imports from certain countries and quotas from other nations
suspected of transhipping products.
Some lawmakers came
away from the meeting with the impression that Trump would impose some
restrictions but understood the need for a balanced approach.

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