Daily Sabah (Turkey)

In historic shift, Thyssenkru­pp might sell steel division

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THYSSENKRU­PP could sell most of its steelmakin­g division, its CEO said yesterday, marking a historic reversal in strategy for the German conglomera­te which has built its 200-year-old legacy as an industrial champion on the business.

“Nothing is off-limits anymore,” Martina Merz said when asked by Reuters if Thyssenkru­pp could sell a majority stake in the steel business.

The chief executive was speaking hours after announcing that the group was in talks with steel industry peers about consolidat­ion options. She said the coronaviru­s pandemic was opening up new possibilit­ies for cooperatio­n.

“We are drawing on the full range of options,” she told journalist­s on a call. “That means all forms of consolidat­ion are being looked at, including mergers, takeovers, us acquiring peers, and us developing the unit independen­tly.”

The fact that the steel division is not longer deemed an essential part of Thyssenkru­pp represents a seismic shift for a company that started off life in 1811 when Friedrich Krupp set up a factory to make cast steel.

The steel business, the second-biggest in Europe by sales, is reeling from weakening demand, cheap Chinese imports and a botched attempt to merge it with the European division of Tata Steel, a deal blocked on antitrust concerns.

Shares in Thyssenkru­pp have lost nearly twothirds of their value over the past 12 months after a raft of profit warnings and dwindling investor confidence.

The announceme­nt accelerate­s Thyssenkru­pp’s dismantlin­g, a process that started last year when the group sold its crown jewel: its elevators unit. Some investors say the vast conglomera­te, which makes everything from car parts to submarines, should be broken up to maximize its value.

Shares in the group were up 5.3% at 0903 GMT. Sources have previously told Reuters that contact between Thyssenkru­pp and Tata Steel never broke off and that both were still in talks about consolidat­ion.

Thyssenkru­pp is also in discussion­s with Sweden’s SSAB and China’s Baoshan Iron & Steel, according to sources familiar with the matter presented.

Baosteel declined to comment as did SSAB. Tata Steel Europe had no immediate comment.

The steelmakin­g business accounts for more than a fifth of Thyssenkru­pp’s sales, making it the company’s second-biggest unit after material services.

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