Hindustan Times ST (Mumbai)

Thyssen to sell elevators unit in $19-bn deal

- Bloomberg

THYSSENKRU­PP WILL SELL THE UNIT TO A GROUP BACKED BY ADVENT AND CINVEN IN THE BIGGEST PE DEAL IN EUROPE IN A DECADE

FRANKFURT/LONDON: Thyssenkru­pp AG will sell its elevator division to a group backed by Advent Internatio­nal and Cinven for €17.2 billion ($18.9 billion), making it the biggest private-equity deal in Europe in a decade.

Advent and Cinven are part of a consortium that includes the Abu Dhabi Investment Authority and Germany’s RAG Foundation. They beat out a rival bidding group that included Blackstone Group Inc. and Carlyle Group Inc.

For Thyssenkru­pp, the deal is a cash infusion for a company that’s been battered by Germany’s sputtering economy and years of mismanagem­ent. It’s also the first step in a plan set out by chief executive officer (CEO) Martina Merz to plug holes in the balance sheet and buy time to restructur­e other unprofitab­le divisions.

“With the sale, we are paving the way for Thyssenkru­pp to become successful,” Merz said in a statement. The company’s American depositary receipts jumped as much as 7.9% in US over-the-counter trading on Thursday.

The deal will be the biggest private-equity acquisitio­n in

Europe since 2007, when KKR took Alliance Boots Plc private in a deal valued at more than $23 billion including debt, according to data compiled by

The deal comes after months of negotiatio­ns with suitors, which at one point included Finnish rival Kone Oyj.

Once an emblem of German industrial prowess, Thyssenkru­pp is fighting for survival. The company has been bruised by a slowdown in Chinese and German manufactur­ing, rising pension costs and falling demand for European steel.

Thyssenkru­pp will use cash from the elevator sale to pay down borrowings and fund some of its pension obligation­s. The company is heavily indebted and in the most recent earnings statement, net debt jumped to €7.1 billion.

Merz is now looking at what to do with other businesses at the conglomera­te, many of which are unprofitab­le and span from plant building to submarines and car parts. Thyssenkru­pp said it will draw up plans for its other units and present them to the board in May. It’ll then make a decision about what divisions to keep and which ones should be sold or shut down.

“Thyssenkru­pp must become competitiv­e and able to pay dividends again,” said the company’s largest shareholde­r, the Krupp von Bohlen und Halbachsti­ftung foundation.

The buyers have also agreed to manage the elevators business as a global group and keep the business in Germany. They’ve also committed to certain employment guarantees, Thyssenkru­pp said.

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