In
his first interview, Volkmar Dinstuhl, who oversees the
divestment of non-core assets, said the company has opened the
books to buyers of its plant-building units and received
expressions of interest for its stainless steel division.
Thyssenkrupp <TKAG.DE> is also open to considering offers for
its automotive and remaining industrial assets, said Dinstuhl,
who heads up the group's Multi-Tracks division, which houses
businesses Thyssenkrupp no longer wants to own.
"Our goal is to find a solution for all our businesses within
the next two years," said Dinstuhl, the first time Thyssenkrupp
has outlined a timeline for restructuring.
The Essen, Germany-based company, which makes submarines,
warships, steel and car parts, as well as equipment for cement
factories, construction and fertiliser plants, is struggling to
define what its core business is.
Dinstuhl, an international chess master, is taking an
opportunistic approach to reshaping the company's portfolio
after selling the company's elevators unit for 17.2 billion
euros ($20.2 bln) earlier this year.
That disposal gives Thyssenkrupp the financial strength to stem
potential writedowns on other assets it has up for sale,
allowing it to pursue a deeper restructuring than has previously
been possible.
Dinstuhl said that Multi-Tracks, which accounts for about 6
billion euros in sales and was responsible for 400 million euros
of negative cash flow in the 2018/19 fiscal year, will seek to
sell, shut down or find partners for the 10 units it comprises.
"We're basically an internal private equity fund," the 48-year
old said.
Thyssenkrupp is working with Citi <C.N> to sell Plant
Technology, which comprises more than half of Multi Tracks'
20,000 employees, and which is expected to draw final bids from
a handful of suitors, sources said.
"We're keeping all options open, including a full sale or the
divestment of parts," Dinstuhl said. Plant Technology covers the
mining, cement and construction industries, and competes with
Sweden's Sandvik <SAND.ST> and Denmark's FlSmidth <FLS.CO>.
Dinstuhl said the group has also received expressions of
interest for its Italian stainless steel unit AST, a sales
process run with the help of JP Morgan <JPM.N>.
Deutsche Bank has said AST, Europe's No.4 stainless steelmaker
after Finland's Outokumpu <OUT1V.HE>, Luxembourg-based Aperam <APAM.AS>
and Spain's Acerinox <ACX.MC>, could fetch 300-600 million euros
and draw interest from Italian peers and private equity firms.
Dinstuhl said M&A activity was brisk, adding the first
transactions were possible in the current fiscal year running
until September.
Simultaneously, he is aiming for operational improvements at
Multi-Tracks: "We see a stabilisation of the businesses and are
optimistic that we've passed the trough," Dinstuhl said.
($1 = 0.8497 euros)
(Editing by Edward Taylor; Editing by Kirsten Donovan)
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