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+ FollowOvervalued by 89.5% based on the discounted cash flow analysis.
| Market cap | $12.42 Billion |
|---|---|
| Enterprise Value | $11.97 Billion |
| Dividend Yield | $0.20 (-) |
| Earnings per Share | $1.71 |
| Beta | 1.88 |
| Outstanding Shares | 225,645,000 |
| P/E Ratio | -60.36 |
|---|---|
| PEG | 35.97 |
| Price to Sales | 0.82 |
| Price to Book Ratio | 0.78 |
| Enterprise Value to Revenue | 0.79 |
| Enterprise Value to EBIT | 146.01 |
| Enterprise Value to Net Income | 123 |
| Total Debt to Enterprise | 0.01 |
| Debt to Equity | 0.01 |
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Founded in 1901, the United States Steel Corporation is a Fortune 250 company and leading integrated steel producer. With extensive iron ore production and an annual raw steelmaking capability of 26.2 million net tons, U. S. Steel produc...
This committee provides the official revenue estimates and technical analysis for all tax legislation. Its reports and expertise directly influence corporate tax structures, capital investment credits, and the overall tax burden on U. S. Steel.
As the most powerful economic committee, it controls taxation and trade policy. Tariffs on steel imports/exports are a critical factor for U. S. Steel, and changes to corporate tax policy directly impact profitability and corporate valuations.
This committee directly allocates discretionary federal spending. Its decisions on funding for defense programs, infrastructure projects, and other government initiatives directly translate into demand for U. S. Steel's products.
This committee drives labor laws and regulations, which directly impact a large manufacturing employer like U. S. Steel in terms of operating costs, workforce management, and industrial relations.
This committee authorizes the annual NDAA, directly determining funding for the Department of Defense. This drives demand for defense contractors, who are significant buyers of steel for military equipment and infrastructure.
This committee oversees national energy policy, which dictates energy costs crucial for steel production. It also regulates public lands, potentially impacting iron ore mining operations, and affects the energy industries which are U. S. Steel clients.
This committee directly regulates the EPA, impacting environmental compliance costs for U. S. Steel as a heavy industry. It also drives federal highway programs, creating direct demand for U. S. Steel's infrastructure products.
U. S. Steel has international operations and is highly susceptible to global market dynamics, energy prices, and trade policies influenced by this committee, such as sanctions or international trade agreements impacting raw materials and steel exports/imports.