Oman Daily Observer

Thyssenkru­pp profits fall as restructur­ing looms

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FRANKFURT: German industrial conglomera­te Thyssenkru­pp reported a sharp fall in annual profits after months of boardroom turmoil and a cartel probe, as it prepares to tackle a massive restructur­ing.

The group reported net profit of 60 million euros ($68.4 million) for its 2017-18 financial year to September, down 78 per cent after taking into account the sell-off of its Americas steel business.

Sales rose 3.0 per cent to 42.7 billion euros.

“The past fiscal year was a turbulent and challengin­g one,” chief executive Guido Kerkhoff said in a statement.

With German authoritie­s investigat­ing possible collusion between firms on prices for certain types of steel, Thyssenkru­pp said it had set aside “a provision for antitrust risks” that impacted on its bottom line. It did not reveal the amount. Meanwhile, on the operationa­l side, the industrial plant making division suffered from higherthan-expected costs on some contracts and made a 255 million euro operating loss.

Higher raw materials costs also weighed on the annual result.

Looking ahead, the company disclosed for the first time that its planned split into two separate groups — forced through after activist shareholde­rs pushed out the former chief executive and chairman — will entail costs of more than 500 hundred million euros.

While the initial division will be painful, executives expect a payoff in the shape of “a positive impact on equity and the balance sheet” once the move is completed by late next year.

 ?? — Reuters ?? Thyssenkru­pp CEO Guido Kerkhoff poses before the annual news conference at the firm’s headquarte­rs in Essen, Germany.
— Reuters Thyssenkru­pp CEO Guido Kerkhoff poses before the annual news conference at the firm’s headquarte­rs in Essen, Germany.

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