Business Standard

Thyssen ends talks with Liberty on steel unit sale

- CHRISTOPH STEITZ, TOM KÄCKENHOFF & ARNO SCHUETZE REUTERS

German conglomera­te Thyssenkru­pp ended talks to sell its steel division to Britain’s Liberty Steel due to difference­s over value, the latest setback in efforts to consolidat­e the European sector. Liberty Steel, led by commoditie­s tycoon Sanjeev Gupta, last month submitted a firmed-up non-binding bid for Thyssenkru­pp’s steel unit, Europe’s second biggest in terms of sales, which sources said included commitment­s to protect jobs and sites.

German conglomera­te Thyssenkru­pp ended talks to sell its steel division to Britain’s Liberty Steel due to difference­s over value, the latest setback in efforts to consolidat­e the European sector.

Liberty Steel, led by commoditie­s tycoon Sanjeev Gupta, last month submitted a firmedup non-binding bid for Thyssenkru­pp’s steel unit, Europe’s second biggest in terms of sales, which sources said included commitment­s to protect jobs and sites.

“We regret this step because we perceived Liberty Steel as a serious partner in the process,” Thyssenkru­pp Chief Financial Officer Klaus Keysberg said in a statement.

Thyssenkru­pp’s move to terminate talks shifts the focus to the group’s two other scenarios for its steel division: keeping it or spinning it off to shareholde­rs. Both would

entail major additional cost and job cuts. Shares in the company were down 2.6 per cent at 6.58 pm IST after falling as much as 6.2 per cent. “The steel business of Thyssenkru­pp needs to be realigned and adjusted,” the Alfried Krupp von Bohlen und Halbach foundation, Thyssenkru­pp’s top shareholde­r, said. “Thyssenkru­pp has no time to spare.”

The move comes after Sweden’s SSAB last month abandoned plans to buy the Dutch operations of India’s Tata Steel, a sign of just how challengin­g consolidat­ion is in a sector plagued by overcapaci­ty.

In an internal memo to staff, Keysberg said differing views over the value of the division, financing structure and guarantees were the key reasons to end discussion­s. “Overall, ideas were so far apart that continuing discussion­s wouldn't have gotten us any further,” Keysberg said in the memo. Liberty Steel’s bid assumed a negative equity value for Thyssenkru­pp’s steel division of more than 1.5 billion euros ($1.8 billion), said sources.

Recent broker reports were more optimistic on the back of first-quarter results released last week, putting that number somewhere between 400 million euros and zero.

Liberty Steel, Europe's fourth-largest steelmaker, earlier this week made a new offer addressing some of the concerns, one of the people said.

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