ArcelorMittal launched the second tranche of its 2025-2030 share repurchase program this week, immediately following completion of a $300 million first tranche that ran through early April. The Luxembourg-domiciled steel producer is executing buybacks against a sector backdrop where North American and European peers are preserving balance sheet optionality rather than returning capital.
The company purchased roughly 11.2 million shares in the opening tranche at an average price near $26.80, removing approximately 0.9% of float. The second tranche authorization mirrors the first in size and structure—open-market purchases executed by a third-party intermediary under pre-agreed parameters that insulate management from daily execution decisions. ArcelorMittal has not disclosed the exact dollar commitment for tranche two, but the 2025-2030 program carries a $2 billion ceiling with tranches releasing in six- to nine-month intervals.
The timing is noteworthy. U.S. Section 232 steel tariffs remain under judicial review, and the European Commission is preparing revised carbon border adjustment mechanisms that take effect in stages through 2027. Both create margin uncertainty. ArcelorMittal's choice to return cash now—rather than wait for regulatory clarity—suggests confidence in free cash flow durability even if tariffs tighten or CBAM compliance costs rise faster than the company can pass them through. The first tranche coincided with $1.1 billion in operating cash flow during Q1 2025, a figure that held despite flat-rolled steel prices declining 4% sequentially in Europe and 2% in NAFTA markets.
What makes this buyback unusual is its contrast with peer behavior. Nucor suspended its buyback in February and has been adding to its cash position, now $3.2 billion, ahead of potential acquisition opportunities in downstream finishing assets. Cleveland-Cliffs has not repurchased shares since Q3 2024 and is prioritizing debt reduction—net leverage currently sits at 2.1x EBITDA. ThyssenKrupp's steel unit is in active restructuring talks with IG Metall and has no capital return authorization. ArcelorMittal is the only major integrated producer executing buybacks while simultaneously investing $800 million annually in decarbonization infrastructure, primarily direct-reduced iron plants in Belgium and Canada that will run on hydrogen by 2028.
Operators should track two follow-on signals. First, the company reports Q2 earnings in late July, and management will clarify whether tranche two continues at the $300 million pace or adjusts based on interim cash generation. Second, the European steel lobby is expected to publish revised demand forecasts in June following weaker-than-expected construction activity in Germany and France during Q1. If those forecasts cut 2025 EU steel consumption below 155 million metric tons, ArcelorMittal may pause future tranches to preserve liquidity for countercyclical capacity purchases—a pattern the company has followed in prior downturns.
The buyback also creates a technical floor. With 11.2 million shares removed in tranche one and a similar amount likely in tranche two, ArcelorMittal is pulling nearly 2% of float off the market in under six months. The stock trades at 4.2x forward EBITDA, a 30% discount to the five-year average, and the buyback effectively raises earnings per share by 1.8% annually even if net income stays flat. That math works if you believe steel demand stabilizes rather than craters—a belief the company is expressing with capital, not commentary.