Business World

Thyssenkru­pp and Tata Steel agree on Europe steel merger

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FRANKFURT — Thyssenkru­pp and Indian peer Tata Steel on Wednesday struck a preliminar­y agreement to combine their European steel operations in a 5050 joint venture, creating the continent’s no. 2 steelmaker after ArcelorMit­tal.

The new company, to be named Thyssenkru­pp Tata Steel, would be headquarte­red in or near Amsterdam, Thyssenkru­pp said in a statement on Wednesday after the two companies signed a memorandum of understand­ing (MoU).

“Under the planned joint venture, we are giving the European steel activities of Thyssenkru­pp and Tata a lasting future,” Thyssenkru­pp CEO Heinrich Hiesinger said. “We are tackling the structural challenges of the European steel industry and creating a strong no. 2.”

The MoU, widely expected after Thyssenkru­pp last week said a deal could still be reached this month, outlines synergies of €400-€600 million ($480-$720 million) a year as well as up to 4,000 job cuts, about 8% of the joint work force.

The MoU will be followed by negotiatio­ns about the details of the transactio­ns as well as due diligence — a detailed look at each other’s accounts — before a joint-venture contract can be signed at the beginning of 2018, Thyssenkru­pp said.

The signing of the joint deal will require the approval of Thyssenkru­pp’s supervisor­y board and Tata Steel’s board of directors as well as that of the European Commission. —

 ??  ?? STEAM RISES at a coking plant at the steelworks of German steelmaker Thyssenkru­pp AG in Bruckhause­n, a suburb of the city of Duisburg, Germany, Oct. 2, 2012.
STEAM RISES at a coking plant at the steelworks of German steelmaker Thyssenkru­pp AG in Bruckhause­n, a suburb of the city of Duisburg, Germany, Oct. 2, 2012.

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