Union Investment owns just a 0.2 percent stake in Thyssenkrupp,
worth about $28 million, but has been one of the most critical
shareholders of the steel-to-submarines conglomerate and
repeatedly urged management to seek a deeper restructuring.
"Thyssenkrupp needs a strategy shift. This is easier to achieve
when someone new comes in from the outside," fund manager Ingo
Speich said in the first public comments by an investor after
the group published 2020/21 targets on Wednesday.
That included margin goals for the group's four divisions, but
drew a muted market response as analysts pointed out that they
were only in line with consensus forecasts.
"They won't move the needle in capital markets. There, the main
questions are who the new CEO will be and what the strategy is
going to look like," Speich said.
Thyssenkrupp has been thrown into turmoil after both its CEO and
chairman resigned in July, under pressure from shareholders to
revive the group's share price, which has fallen a third since
2011.
A profit warning last week has deepened the crisis for interim
CEO Guido Kerkhoff, who served as finance chief but has taken
the helm until a long-term successor for Heinrich Hiesinger is
found.
Former Thyssenkrupp finance chief Stefan Kirsten, former Siemens
<SIEGn.DE> board member Siegfried Russwurm and Lanxess <LXSG.DE>
CEO Matthias Zachert have been tipped as potential candidates.
"(Kerkhoff) stands for the old strategy. It would send a
stronger signal to capital markets if the new CEO came from the
outside," Speich said. "A good combination could be a new
external CEO who will be supported by Kerkhoff."
Speich, along with larger shareholders Cevian and Elliott, is
not in favor of an outright break-up of the group but said there
should be a more active management of its portfolio.
"This includes replacing some areas or strengthening them via
acquisitions. This could also result in the addition of jobs,"
he said.
(Writing by Christoph Steitz; Editing by Mark Potter)
[© 2018 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2018 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content.
|
|