Global Times - Weekend

Thyssenkru­pp-Kone deal sparks backlash

► Rival Schindler reacts with threat of internatio­nal legal action

- Reuters

Swiss elevator maker Schindler would embark on an all-out antitrust offensive in the courts to stall any deal to combine Thyssenkru­pp’s lift division with rival Kone, board member Alfred Schindler told Reuters.

His comments came a day after the deadline for bids for Thyssenkru­pp Elevator, with Finland’s Kone and three private equity consortia vying to buy it in a deal sources say could be worth up to 17 billion euros ($18.6 billion).

A Kone-Thyssenkru­pp elevator merger would create the world’s biggest lift maker, leapfroggi­ng market leader Otis, owned by United Technologi­es, and Schindler in second place.

“We would probably file lawsuits in Europe, the United

States, Canada, China and possibly Australia. These cases would take at least three to four years,” said Schindler, who is now chairman emeritus of the company he ran for 26 years.

He said other rivals would probably take legal action too: “You can safely assume that neither Otis nor Schindler will simply accept being driven out.”

Thyssenkru­pp and Otis declined to comment. A Kone spokeswoma­n said the company continued to believe there was room for consolidat­ion in the sector.

Shares in Kone fell as much as 3.9 percent following Schindler’s comments to Reuters while Thyssenkru­pp rose slightly.

Once a symbol of Germany’s industrial power, Thyssenkru­pp is struggling with 12.4 billion euros of debt and pension liabilitie­s after years of ill-fated investment­s and needs to raise money from its prized elevator division to restructur­e.

Thyssenkru­pp’s supervisor­y board is due to meet on Feb. 27 and a decision on the fate of the elevator business could be made then, two people familiar with the matter said.

Besides selling all or part of the business, Thyssenkru­pp is also considerin­g an initial public offering, though sources said this option was less likely.

Solely based on bids, Kone and a consortium of Blackstone, Carlyle and the Canada Pension Plan Investment Board look best-placed to reach the final round but no decision has been made, the people said.

Kone has made a nonbinding bid of 17 billion euros while the consortium has offered about 16 billion. It was not clear whether Kone had improved its earlier offer.

Rules of war

A consortium comprising Advent, and the Abu Dhabi Investment Authority and an alliance between Canada’s Brookfield and Singapore’s Temasek are also in the running, sources have said.

While a sale to Kone would probably raise the most cash for Thyssenkru­pp, the beleaguere­d conglomera­te is concerned it could trigger antitrust investigat­ions where the combined company would be a major player, such as Europe and the United States.

“Such a hypothetic­al takeover would ... have considerab­le effects on the structure of the relevant markets and most likely lead to significan­t negative impacts on effective competitio­n in many markets,” DICE Consult said in a report here

Kone has drawn up plans to hand Thyssenkru­pp’s European assets to private equity firm CVC but the European Commission typically prefers industrial buyers that can compete better with the firm offloading assets.

Powerful labor unions, who control half of Thyssenkru­pp’s supervisor­y board, oppose any breakup of the business as well as antitrust reviews.

“What Thyssenkru­pp needs now is high transactio­n certainty for the remaining group, not hanging in the balance for 1 to 2 years,” said Knut Giesler of IG Metall, Germany’s largest union, and vice chairman of Thyssenkru­pp Elevator’s supervisor­y board.

Kone is the world’s third biggest elevator maker, followed by Thyssenkru­pp and Japan’s Hitachi.

Schindler was the Swiss firm’s CEO from 1985 until 2011 and his views carry significan­t weight as the Schindler and Bonnard families, and related parties, hold 71.1 percent of the voting rights.

Schindler, who transforme­d the company into a global player, said it would also intensify its operationa­l efforts to fight a combined Kone and Thyssenkru­pp.

“There will be a technology war. It is already ongoing but it will intensify massively,” he said, adding, “surprise lies at the heart of any defense strategy. A strategy that you lay out in advance would go against any rule of warfare.”

 ?? Photo: AFP ?? ThyssenKru­pp elevators are seen at the headquarte­rs of German industrial conglomera­te ThyssenKru­pp in Essen, western Germany on November 21, 2019.
Photo: AFP ThyssenKru­pp elevators are seen at the headquarte­rs of German industrial conglomera­te ThyssenKru­pp in Essen, western Germany on November 21, 2019.

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