U.S. President Donald Trump speaks within the Oval Workplace on the White Home in Washington, D.C., U.S., Sept. 19, 2025.
Ken Cedeno | Reuters
The Trump administration stepped in to cease U.S. Metal from idling operations at its Granite Metropolis, In poor health., plant, exercising new powers tied to the corporate’s current takeover, the Wall Road Journal reported.
The steelmaker had knowledgeable almost 800 staff that the plant would shut in November, noting nevertheless that they’d nonetheless be paid. However after Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick warned CEO Dave Burritt the administration would not permit it, U.S. Metal reversed course on Friday, saying the ability would preserve rolling slabs into sheet metal, the Journal reported, citing an individual aware of the matter.
The intervention marked Trump’s first use of so-called “golden share” rights, a situation of the $14.1 billion takeover by Japan’s Nippon that cleared in June. The national-security settlement gave the White Home veto energy over plant closures, offshore manufacturing shifts and different strategic selections.
“U. S. Metal will proceed to produce slabs to Granite Metropolis,” a spokesperson for U.S. Metal informed CNBC. “Our purpose was to keep up flexibility, and we’re happy to have discovered an answer to proceed to slab consumption at Granite Metropolis.”
The transfer highlights Trump’s rising hand within the non-public sector. Final month, the president stated the federal government would take a ten% stake in Intel, after the chipmaker obtained billions in subsidies beneath the 2022 Chips Act.
In June, when the deal was introduced, Trump informed U.S. Metal staff that Nippon can be a “nice accomplice.” The Trump administration is presently engaged in commerce talks with Japan as traders eagerly await indicators that the U.S. will strike offers with key companions that keep away from steep tariffs.
Trump informed the steelworkers that Nippon had agreed to maintain U.S. Metal’s blast furnaces working at full capability for no less than 10 years. The president stated the deal wouldn’t lead to layoffs and promised there can be “no outsourcing in any way.” On the time, he stated staff would obtain a $5,000 bonus.