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    Home » Amsa And IDC Abandon Exclusive Buyout Talks Without Agreement
    DEALS

    Amsa And IDC Abandon Exclusive Buyout Talks Without Agreement

    November 11, 2025By Staff Writer
    Kobus Verster - ArcelorMittal South Africa CEO

    ArcelorMittal South Africa (Amsa) and the state-owned Industrial Development Corporation (IDC) have concluded their exclusive negotiations over a potential buyout without reaching an accord, freeing the steelmaker to explore alternative investors for its operations, according to Bloomberg. This development marks the end of a dedicated period of talks aimed at transferring control of the troubled firm, which has been grappling with mounting losses and threats to shutter key facilities.

    An informal offer from the IDC valued at around R8.5 billion failed to resolve lingering differences, particularly over valuation and the handling of ongoing operational challenges, leaving the door open for broader discussions on a phased acquisition or other structures. The impasse comes despite the IDC’s significant existing stake and repeated financial lifelines, including loans totalling billions of rand to postpone plant closures and sustain short-term viability.

    Amsa has long cited structural hurdles such as soaring energy costs, unreliable rail logistics from Transnet, rampant cheap imports—reaching record levels at 33.6 per cent of domestic consumption—and unfavourable policies favouring scrap-based mini-mills as reasons for its precarious position. These factors contributed to a R5.8 billion loss in the prior year and prompted the wind-down of long-steel production at Newcastle and Vereeniging works earlier in 2025, affecting thousands of jobs directly and tens of thousands downstream in automotive, mining, and construction sectors.

    The collapse of exclusive talks underscores broader tensions in South Africa’s steel industry, where the IDC has poured over R14 billion into competing mini-mills, many under business rescue, potentially influencing tariff protections and creating an uneven playing field. Efforts to salvage Amsa intensified after its November 2023 closure announcement, with interim funding like a R1.683 billion facility drawn down fully by mid-year and extensions on prior debts to avert immediate shutdowns, as reported by Moneyweb.

    While no immediate transaction materialised, conversations persist on potential gradual takeovers or partnerships, with the IDC seeking co-investors to share the burden. A  News24 notes that high-level engagements, including visits by ArcelorMittal’s mergers and acquisitions head, had accelerated in October amid due diligence, yet valuation gaps—previously reported at up to R7 billion—proved insurmountable within the exclusive framework.

    This outcome leaves Amsa vulnerable in a market flooded with imports, particularly from China, and reliant on flat-steel operations at Vanderbijlpark for survival. The firm continues to pursue asset sales of non-core land and facilities, while government task teams address policy distortions like scrap export taxes and discounts that disadvantage primary producers using iron ore.

    For South Africa, the failure to secure a state-led rescue highlights the challenges of preserving industrial capacity amid deindustrialisation pressures and global commodity shifts. With Amsa once the privatised successor to state-owned Iscor, acquired by Lakshmi Mittal’s group in 2003, the episode reflects ongoing debates over protectionism, bailouts, and the hidden costs borne by consumers through convoluted tariffs.

    As the company navigates an uncertain future, stakeholders await whether third-party bidders or revised state proposals emerge to prevent further erosion of domestic steelmaking capabilities, critical for infrastructure revival and economic sovereignty in an increasingly competitive global landscape. 

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