Business Standard

Tata Steel, Thyssen seal 50:50 JV deal

Tatas to pare ~200 bn debt, deconsolid­ate European business

- ADITI DIVEKAR & ISHITA AYAN DUTT

Tata Steel has signed a definitive agreement with ThyssenKru­pp AG to create a 50:50 joint venture that would be Europe’s second-largest steelmaker after ArcelorMit­tal. The deal is being touted as the biggest consolidat­ion in the European steel market since the acquisitio­n of Arcelor by Mittal Steel in 2006 and Corus by Tata Steel in 2007.

For Tata Steel, the deal valuations are better than what the Street was anticipati­ng, following the underperfo­rmance of its Europe business in the past few quarters.

The joint venture, to be named ThyssenKru­pp Tata Steel BV, will have a workforce of 48,000 employees across 34 sites, producing about 21 million tonnes of steel a year and generating revenues of around 17 billion euros.

The definitive agreement follows the signing of a memorandum of understand­ing (MoU) in September 2017. The transactio­n is subject to merger control clearance in several jurisdicti­ons, and the Tata Steel management is hoping to close it by December 2018, which was the original deadline.

“The joint venture will create a strong pan-European steel company that is structural­ly robust and competitiv­e. This is a significan­t milestone for Tata Steel and we remain fully committed to the long-term interest of the

joint venture company. We are confident that this company will create value for all stakeholde­rs,” N Chandrasek­aran, chairman, Tata Steel, said in a company release.

A joint press conference will be addressed by Chandrasek­aran and Heinrich Hiesinger, CEO of ThyssenKru­pp AG, in Brussels on July 2. “We will create a highly competitiv­e European steel player, based on a strong industrial logic and strategic rationale. We will secure jobs and contribute to maintainin­g value chains in European

core industries,” Hiesinger said in a statement.

The JV will result in the deconsolid­ation of Tata Steel Europe from the Tata Steel group balance sheet and facilitate deleveragi­ng. The Tata Steel management said in the analyst call that 2.5 billion euros (~200 billion) debt would be transferre­d.

With this, Tata Steel has turned into an investor from an owner for this entity, in turn, insulating itself from the vagaries of the business cycle, said brokerages.

“The debt will move out of Tata Steel books at consolidat­ed levels and the balance sheet should only look stronger,” said Giriraj Daga, portfolio manager at Visaria Securities.

The JV will be managed by a holding company located in the Amsterdam region. The future management board will have six members, who will be named at a later date. The management board will be overseen by a supervisor­y body comprising three representa­tives from each of the joint venture partners.

The co- determinat­ion structures will be retained. The new company will have a European Works Council. In addition, an Employee Executive Committee (EEC) will be establishe­d with three employee representa­tives each from ThyssenKru­pp Steel Europe and Tata Steel Europe, which will regularly discuss strategic issues with the management board. Until closing, however, ThyssenKru­pp Steel Europe and Tata Steel in Europe will operate as separate companies and as competitor­s.

ThyssenKru­pp had been facing pressure from shareholde­rs Elliott and Cevian to change the valuation of the joint venture since Tata Steel Europe had underperfo­rmed compared to ThyssenKru­pp since the deal was first announced.

As a compromise, the joint venture will issue warrants equivalent to 10 per cent of equity capital to ThyssenKru­pp subject to certain dilution provisions, which can be monetised through a secondary sale in the case of an IPO. With the cut in valuation not as steep as anticipate­d by the Street, expect some respite for the Tata Steel stock, which has underperfo­rmed vis-à-vis domestic peers, such as JSW Steel, Steel Authority of India and Jindal Steel in the past few months.

In the event of an IPO, ThyssenKru­pp would receive a higher share of economic rights, reflecting a ratio of 55:45. ThyssenKru­pp will have the exclusive rights to decide on the timing of the potential IPO, the company presentati­on said.

However, the warrants will be dormant and triggered only in the case of an IPO, Tata Steel told analysts.

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