By Inti Pacheco and Bob Tita
Steel importers are winning most of their requests for tariff
exclusions for products they say they can't find in the U.S., but
the process is riddled with inconsistencies and frequent procedural
changes, according to manufacturers and importers.
The Commerce Department as of Dec. 17 granted about 75% of the
19,000 requests it processed to exclude products from tariffs on
foreign steel that took effect in March, according to a Wall Street
Journal analysis of those applications. Exclusions issued so far
cover 3.8 million tons of steel, or about 16% of the finished
foreign steel entering the U.S. through 11 months of 2018.
In cases the department rejected, a U.S. metal producer often
objected. More than 15,000 objections also have been filed on some
9,000 still-pending exclusion requests. Most of these objections
were filed by five steel companies: Nucor Corp., United States
Steel Corp., AK Steel Holding Corp., TimkenSteel Corp. and Webco
Industries Inc.
In many cases, those producers say, the Commerce Department
should reject the request because their company makes products
analogous or identical to those an importer wants to buy
abroad.
"We are willing and able to support substantial proportions of
increased domestic demand for many steel products," U.S. Steel said
in a statement. The company restarted steelmaking furnaces at an
Illinois mill earlier this year and is refurbishing equipment at
other plants as a result of rising steel demand and higher steel
prices caused by the tariff.
The Commerce Department said it is revising its
exclusion-request process to reach decisions more quickly. The
department's Bureau of Industry and Security introduced a rebuttal
period in September for companies that said some rejections seemed
arbitrary.
"The department has been treating each exclusion request and
objection in a fair and equitable way," the bureau said. The
Commerce Department didn't respond to specific comments from
companies that have filed exclusion requests or objections.
Manufacturers and other importers say some of their exclusion
requests are still being rejected for reasons that aren't fully
explained to them.
Primrose Alloys Inc., a California-based importer of
stainless-steel pipe, has had about half of its 474 exclusion
requests denied. In some of those cases, Primrose President Bob
Wren said, a competitor was granted an exclusion to import products
nearly identical to those that his company had sought to buy
tariff-free.
"None of it makes any sense," Mr. Wren said.
U.S. Metals, a pipe-and-fitting supplier, said its exclusion
requests faced resistance from the U.S. Customs and Border
Protection. The agency advised the Commerce Department to exclude
requests for products that officials said didn't match up properly
with the complex system of codes the government uses to categorize
imports.
Steve Tralie, vice president of the Houston-based company, said
competitors have been granted exclusions for similar products.
"We're just saying make it fair," Mr. Tralie said.
Amanda Pitts, who is managing the exclusion process for U.S.
Metals, has secured just seven of the 355 applications she has
filed. She said the Commerce Department hasn't explained in detail
why most of her requests were rejected.
"The whole process is a nightmare," she said.
The Commerce Department has reversed some decisions. It reversed
518 denials in December, including some of the U.S. Metals requests
that U.S. Customs and Border Protection had opposed.
Tin-coated sheet steel, used to make food cans, is one product
where some companies have won exclusions for their imports while
others have been rejected. U.S. production of tin has been falling
for years. Can makers say foreign tin is often better quality.
But domestic steel producers, led by ArcelorMittal NV and U.S.
Steel, still account for about 60% of the nation's tin market. They
accounted for nearly all the objections to the tariff exclusion
requests from U.S. can makers since the tariff took effect.
U.S. Steel wouldn't comment on its tin business. ArcelorMittal
has committed $20.2 million to improve the quality and efficiency
of its tin coating operations at its Weirton, W.V., mill, a company
spokeswoman, Mary Beth Holdford, said.
Two can makers, Independent Can Co. in Maryland and
Colorado-based Ball Corp., have received exclusions for nearly all
of their requests that have been processed so far. Meanwhile, Can
Corp. of America Inc. in Pennsylvania and Silgan Holdings Inc. in
Connecticut had almost all their tin exclusion requests denied.
Independent Can Chief Executive Richard Huether said he and his
competitors have shifted tin purchases to foreign suppliers because
of declining quality and service from domestic steel mills. He said
the unpredictable nature of the exclusion process was further
undermining his confidence in U.S. tin producers.
"The industry is being damaged by doubt and uncertainty," he
said.
Write to Inti Pacheco at inti.pacheco@wsj.com and Bob Tita at
robert.tita@wsj.com
(END) Dow Jones Newswires
January 02, 2019 07:14 ET (12:14 GMT)
Copyright (c) 2019 Dow Jones & Company, Inc.
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