Dividend and share capital changes approved at ArcelorMittal (NYSE: MT)
Filing Impact
Filing Sentiment
Form Type
6-K
Rhea-AI Filing Summary
ArcelorMittal reports that its Annual and Extraordinary General Meetings in Luxembourg approved all resolutions by a strong majority, with 82.28% of voting rights represented. Shareholders backed a dividend of US$0.60 per share, re-elected six directors and elected Roy Harvey for three-year terms.
They also approved cancelling shares repurchased under the company’s share buyback program, reducing issued share capital, and renewed the Board’s authorization to increase share capital and to limit or suspend existing shareholders’ preferential subscription rights.
Positive
- None.
Negative
- None.
Key Figures
Dividend per share: US$0.60 per share
Voting rights represented: 82.28% of voting rights
2025 revenue: $61.4 billion
+3 more
6 metrics
Dividend per share
US$0.60 per share
Dividend approved at 2026 General Meetings
Voting rights represented
82.28% of voting rights
Participation at 2026 General Meetings
2025 revenue
$61.4 billion
ArcelorMittal revenues in 2025
Crude steel production
55.6 million metric tonnes
Crude steel output in 2025
Iron ore production
48.8 million metric tonnes
Iron ore output in 2025
Director term length
3 years
Terms approved for elected and re-elected directors
Key Terms
Extraordinary General Meeting, preferential subscription right, share buyback program, issued share capital, +1 more
5 terms
Extraordinary General Meeting financial
"The Annual General Meeting and the Extraordinary General Meeting (‘General Meetings’)..."
preferential subscription right financial
"to limit or suspend the preferential subscription right of existing shareholders."
A preferential subscription right is the entitlement that lets existing shareholders buy newly issued shares before they are offered to the public, so they can keep the same slice of ownership. Think of it as being offered first dibs on extra pieces of a pie to avoid your share shrinking; for investors it matters because exercising the right prevents dilution of voting power and economic interest and can preserve the value of their stake.
voting rights financial
"82.28% of the voting rights were represented at the General Meetings."
Voting rights are the ability of shareholders to have a say in important company decisions, like choosing leaders or approving big changes. They matter because they give owners a voice in how the company is run, similar to how voters influence elections, ensuring the company acts in shareholders’ interests.
FAQ
Which directors were elected or re-elected to ArcelorMittal’s board in 2026?
Shareholders re-elected six directors and elected one new member. Lakshmi Niwas Mittal, Aditya Mittal, Etienne Schneider, Michel Wurth, Patricia Barbizet were re-elected, and Roy Harvey was elected, each for a three-year term on ArcelorMittal’s Board of Directors.
What were ArcelorMittal’s 2025 revenues and production levels?
In 2025, ArcelorMittal reported revenues of $61.4 billion. The company produced 55.6 million metric tonnes of crude steel and 48.8 million metric tonnes of iron ore, reflecting its large-scale steel and mining operations across multiple countries.

