By John W. Miller 

A group of steelmakers on Tuesday asked the U.S. government to impose tariffs on steel shipments from eight countries, the latest salvo in the American industry's battle to cope with record imports.

The petition claims that steelmakers in Brazil, China, India, Japan, South Korea, Netherlands, Russia and the U.K. dumped--or sold at unfair prices--cold-rolled steel, which is used in construction and to make appliances, automotive products and containers. It also claims that Brazil, China, India, South Korea, and Russia have illegally subsidized their steelmakers.

The companies that filed the request-- AK Steel Holdings Corp., the U.S. unit of ArcelorMittal; Nucor Corp.; Steel Dynamics Inc. and U.S. Steel Corp.--say their business has been hurt by the imports. News of the petition helped boost the stock market value of all five companies Tuesday.

The American steel industry needs help. The U.S. benchmark hot-rolled coil index is down 22% to $467 a ton since the start of the year. At the root of the problem are record exports from China as that economy cools. China buys roughly half the world's steel, so any hiccup matters.

Not all the imports into the U.S. come from China, but many are displaced from countries where China has grabbed market share. The environment has frustrated American steelmakers because their domestic market is relatively solid, with the exception of the oil and gas industry, which has suffered from the oil price swoon.

Imports of cold-rolled steel from the eight countries more than doubled between 2012 and 2014, from 798,000 tons to 1.75 million. In 2014, these countries exported more than $1.2 billion of cold-rolled steel to the U.S.

"AK Steel and the domestic industry have been facing a surge of what we believe are unfairly dumped and subsidized imports of cold-rolled steel coming into this country," said James L. Wainscott, the company's chairman and chief executive. AK Steel said cold-rolled steel comprised about 20% of its shipments in 2014.

On Tuesday, AK Steel reported a second-quarter loss of $64 million, or 36 cents a share. Even with Tuesday's stock-price gains, the company has lost over 65% of its market value in the past year.

Nucor reported a 15% drop in profits when it released second-quarter results last week.

The tariffs might not be a solution to the steel industry's woes. "The tariffs will help prices in the short term but eventually buyers will find other sources of supply," says Charles Bradford of Bradford Research Inc.

It is the second big trade action the steel industry has taken this year. In June, six U.S. steelmakers filed a petition against five countries, including China, seeking to protect their market for a common kind of coated steel used in the automobile and construction industries.

The U.S. Commerce Department will rule before the end of the year whether or not to impose duties. Congress recently passed legislation making it easier for industrial companies to obtain tariffs on imports.

Write to John W. Miller at john.miller@wsj.com

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