Vancouver Sun

European steel merger could see 4,000 jobs axed

ThyssenKru­pp, Tata Steel ink deal as part of bid to consolidat­e industry

- GEIR MOULSON

Germany’s ThyssenKru­pp and Tata Steel of India signed a preliminar­y deal on Wednesday to merge their European steel operations, a combinatio­n that could lead to up to 4,000 job cuts.

The move to create Europe’s second-largest steel company is an effort to consolidat­e the industry, which has long struggled with excess capacity and competitio­n, particular­ly from China.

The two firms signed a memorandum of understand­ing to form a 50-50 joint venture in a non-cash deal. Negotiatio­ns about details are to be concluded in time for a formal signing of the transactio­n at the beginning of 2018, and the merger of the second- and thirdbigge­st players in Europe will require approval from the companies’ boards and from antitrust authoritie­s.

The proposed merger, the result of talks first disclosed more than a year ago, would produce a company with revenue of about 15 billion euros (US$18 billion) per year, shipments worth 21 million tonnes a year and, at present, some 48,000 employees. The companies expect to save between 400 million euros and 600 million euros (US$479 million and US$718 million) in costs per year by integratin­g activities including research and developmen­t.

They say the deal could close in late 2018.

The new entity is to be called ThyssenKru­pp Tata Steel and be managed by what ThyssenKru­pp called a “lean holding company” based in the Netherland­s. Up to 2,000 administra­tive jobs and up to 2,000 jobs in production will likely be cut, with the impact shared between both sides, Thyssen-Krupp said.

“We will not be putting any measures into effect in the joint venture that we would not have had to adopt on our own,” Thyssen-Krupp CEO Heinrich Hiesinger said in a statement. “On the contrary: by combining our steel activities, the burdens for each partner are lower than they would have been on a stand-alone basis.”

The combined company will have major hubs in Duisburg, Germany; IJMuiden, the Netherland­s; and Port Talbot, Wales.

Shares in ThyssenKru­pp AG were up 3.9 per cent in Frankfurt while Tata Steel was 1.6 per cent higher on the Bombay Stock Exchange.

Dutch Prime Minister Mark Rutte welcomed the deal, saying on Twitter that it “will strengthen the leading role of Tata Steel IJmuiden as one of the most efficient and sustainabl­e steel mills in the world.”

Officials in Germany, which holds an election on Sunday, responded more cautiously. Labour Minister Andrea Nahles said that sites in Germany must be maintained and compulsory layoffs ruled out, and that “there must not be a merger at any price.”

“It is important that, in the case of a merger, the company headquarte­rs is in Germany” to preserve the current form of employee participat­ion in company decisions, she added.

 ?? MARTIN MEISSNER/AP ?? A worker at ThyssenKru­pp’s steel factory in Duisburg, Germany. The proposed merger between ThyssenKru­pp and India’s Tata Steel would create a company with annual revenue of about 15 billion euros and shipments worth 21 million tonnes a year.
MARTIN MEISSNER/AP A worker at ThyssenKru­pp’s steel factory in Duisburg, Germany. The proposed merger between ThyssenKru­pp and India’s Tata Steel would create a company with annual revenue of about 15 billion euros and shipments worth 21 million tonnes a year.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada