Thyssenkrupp employees will not support Tata JV at any
price
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[February 13, 2019]
By Tom Käckenhoff
DUESSELDORF, Germany (Reuters) - Labor
leaders, who hold half the seats on Thyssenkrupp's supervisory board,
will not support a planned joint venture with Tata Steel if concessions
in ongoing antitrust proceedings go too far, a union representative
said.
Thyssenkrupp and Tata Steel are planning to combine their European steel
activities to create the continent's No. 2 steelmaker after
ArcelorMittal, raising concerns that far-reaching remedies are required
to secure antitrust approval.
The European Commission is expected to outline its competitive concerns
about the merger this week, calling on the two firms to offer
compromises to avert a potential veto.
"We won't support a merger at any price," Markus Grolms, vice chairman
of Thyssenkrupp's supervisory board and secretary at IG Metall,
Germany's biggest labor union, told Reuters on Wednesday.
"We have always defined a red line with regard to the merger control
proceedings. If this line is crossed we won't give our support," Grolms
said, without saying where the line would be drawn.
Shares in the group traded 3.2 percent lower at 1124 GMT, dropping to a
fresh three-year low.
Several brokerages cut their price targets following weak first-quarter
results on Tuesday.
Grolms said Thyssenkrupp's supervisory board, where labor
representatives hold 10 of the 20 seats, would have to vote on the
outcome of remedy negotiations between the company and the Commission.
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A steel worker of
Germany's industrial conglomerate ThyssenKrupp AG takes a sample of
raw iron from a blast furnace at Germany's largest steel factory in
Duisburg, Germany, January 28, 2019. REUTERS/Wolfgang Rattay/File
Photo
They could be outvoted by Chairwoman Martina Merz, who has a casting vote in
case of a draw, but this would be unprecedented and would go against
Thyssenkrupp's long-standing tradition of making large restructuring moves with
labor support.
Thyssenkrupp Chief Executive Guido Kerkhoff a day earlier said the Commission's
statement of objections, expected at the end of the week, was not unusual given
the transaction's size. He said it gave no reason for fresh concerns.
The steel-to-submarines group is still confident it can complete the deal in
early 2019. The European Commission will rule on the transaction by April 29.
"We've always been straight about this and have already confronted (former CEO
Heinrich) Hiesinger with our concern that the risks from merger control
proceedings are either underestimated or deliberately downplayed by management,"
Grolms said.
The steel joint venture is a key part of Thyssenkrupp's transformation plan,
which also includes a planned spin-off of its elevator, car parts and plant
engineering units to form a separately listed entity.
(Writing by Christoph Steitz; Editing by Tassilo Hummel and Edmund Blair)
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