Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

Thyssenkru­pp, Tata Steel reach Europe merger deal

Expect annual synergies of $480720 mn, up to 4,000 job cuts

- Reuters feedback@livemint.com n

Germany’s Thyssenkru­pp and India’s Tata Steel agreed on Wednesday to merge their European steel operations in a preliminar­y deal that would create the continent’s No.2 steelmaker after ArcelorMit­tal.

The deal will not involve any cash, Tata Steel said, adding that both groups would contribute debt and liabilitie­s to achieve an equal shareholdi­ng and remain long-term investors.

The companies say they need to consolidat­e to address overcapaci­ty in the European steel market, which faces cheap imports from China and elsewhere, subdued demand for constructi­on and inefficien­t legacy plants.

“We want to avoid our steel team restructur­ing itself to death,” Thyssenkru­pp CEO Heinrich Hiesinger told reporters, noting its steel operations would face deeper restructur­ing needs if they remained part of the group. “No one is able to solve the structural issues in Europe alone. We all suffer from overcapaci­ty and that means that everyone is making the same restructur­ing efforts,” Hiesinger told broadcaste­r n-tv.

Thyssenkru­pp shares rose 3.2%, boosted by hopes that the joint venture will also ease the burden on its balance sheet, which will be freed from 4 billion euros ($4.8 billion) in mostly pension liabilitie­s. Tata Steel shares rose 1.7%. “This is a key positive catalyst supporting our thesis that Thyssenkru­pp’s core capital goods operations deserve a meaningful re-rating,” Jefferies analyst Seth Rosenfeld wrote in a note, reiteratin­g his “buy” rating.

Thyssenkru­pp also has profit- able businesses in elevators and high-tech car parts.

Wednesday’s memorandum of understand­ing (MoU), widely expected after Thyssenkru­pp last week said a deal could be reached this month, outlines annual synergies of 400-600 million euros ($480-720 million) as well as up to 4,000 job cuts, or about 8% of the joint workforce.

The Germany-based group, whose operations span constructi­on steel, car parts, submarines and materials distributi­on, is 15% owned by activist shareholde­r Cevian and has faced calls to split off other parts of the business, most notably its elevator unit.

Tata Steel Europe had been a strain on Tata Steel Ltd for a decade, causing the parent to burn cash at a rate of approximat­ely $1 billion a year.

Pooling its operations with Thyssenkru­pp would ease Tata Steel’s debt burden, freeing up cash flow to allow it to invest to meet steel demand in India.

Tata Steel last month reached a landmark deal that will allow it to reduce 15 billion pounds ($20 billion) in British pension liabilitie­s, long seen as the main hurdle in talks between the companies, which have lasted more than a year and a half.

The new joint venture, to be named Thyssenkru­pp Tata Steel, will be headquarte­red in Amsterdam, the companies said in statements after signing their MoU. “Excellent news,” tweeted Dutch Prime Minister Mark Rutte.

The UK government and unions said they welcomed the merger so long as commitment­s made by Tata Steel UK to safeguard jobs and extend blast furnace operations at Britain’s largest steelworks in Port Talbot, Wales, were maintained.

Roy Rickhuss, chair of the steel coordinati­ng panel representi­ng UK unions Unite, GMB and Community, said the unions recognise the industrial logic of the deal, but will press Tata to confirm it will invest in the relining of Port Talbot’s blast furnace No. 5.

Tata made commitment­s to safeguard jobs and invest in the Port Talbot steelworks in return for the unions agreeing to close their final salary pension scheme to future accrual.

The MoU will be followed by negotiatio­ns about the details of the transactio­ns and due diligence before a joint venture contract can be signed at the beginning of 2018, Thyssenkru­pp said.

Negotiatio­ns with German unions, who have campaigned against the plans and only this week signalled a willingnes­s to consider them, are expected to be tough and tied to far-reaching job and plant guarantees.

The deal will require the approval from Thyssenkru­pp’s supervisor­y board, Tata Steel’s board of directors and the European Commission.

 ?? AP ?? From left: Thyssenkru­pp CEO Heinrich Hiesinger, CFO Guido Kerkhoff, board members Oliver Burkhard and Donatus Kaufmann during a press conference, in Essen, Germany, on Wednesday
AP From left: Thyssenkru­pp CEO Heinrich Hiesinger, CFO Guido Kerkhoff, board members Oliver Burkhard and Donatus Kaufmann during a press conference, in Essen, Germany, on Wednesday

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