- Joined
- Jan 23, 2020
- Messages
- 12,157
- Reaction score
- 3,429
- Location
- Southern California
- Gender
- Male
- Political Leaning
- Independent
Trump and U.S. Steel have described the deal as a merger in which U.S. Steel will become a wholly owned subsidiary of Nippon’s North America arm.
This is the definition of subsidiary that applies in this case. "A company controlled by a holding company."
So, Trump and U.S. Steel are in agreement.
U.S, Steel will be controlled by Nippon, a Japanese company.
Reuters reports, "U.S. President Donald Trump on Friday lauded a "partnership" between Nippon Steel and U.S. Steel at a political rally but stopped short of clarifying whether he planned to approve the companies' diplomatically sensitive merger. (Huh?)
"On a Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania-area stage decorated with signs celebrating "American steel" Trump appeared to signal he would support a long-sought tie-up between the Japanese and U.S. companies that he once opposed." (Double huh?)
"Proponents of the transaction are hoping Trump's visit would end a tumultuous 18-month effort by Nippon Steel to buy the iconic American company, beset by opposition from union leadership and two national security reviews. The White House and the companies have not responded to requests for comment on the status of deal talks.
The dimwitted President is playing games with the American economy.
This is the definition of subsidiary that applies in this case. "A company controlled by a holding company."
So, Trump and U.S. Steel are in agreement.
U.S, Steel will be controlled by Nippon, a Japanese company.
Reuters reports, "U.S. President Donald Trump on Friday lauded a "partnership" between Nippon Steel and U.S. Steel at a political rally but stopped short of clarifying whether he planned to approve the companies' diplomatically sensitive merger. (Huh?)
"On a Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania-area stage decorated with signs celebrating "American steel" Trump appeared to signal he would support a long-sought tie-up between the Japanese and U.S. companies that he once opposed." (Double huh?)
"Proponents of the transaction are hoping Trump's visit would end a tumultuous 18-month effort by Nippon Steel to buy the iconic American company, beset by opposition from union leadership and two national security reviews. The White House and the companies have not responded to requests for comment on the status of deal talks.
The dimwitted President is playing games with the American economy.