"We see no indication that the (elevators) boom is waning," unit
head Andreas Schierenbeck told Reuters.
Thyssenkrupp, which employs 20,000 staff in the Americas, is
planning to build a new site including a test tower in Atlanta
by 2022, he added.
While new installations of elevators remain a core business, a
large part of earnings from the business are generated with
maintenance services. The elevators unit is Thyssenkrupp's most
profitable, accounting for almost half of the company's 2017
core earnings of 1.9 billion euros ($2.2 billion).
Trade tensions have so far not impacted the unit's business,
Schierenbeck said. "We procure locally, produce locally, install
locally, and maintenance is done locally - it is a very stable
business. The U.S. property market is in good shape, there's
construction going on everywhere."
(Reporting by Tom Käckenhoff; Writing by Arno Schuetze; Editing
by Maria Sheahan)
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