Thyssenkrupp said on Monday it has planned a major overhaul to split the vast conglomerate into several standalone businesses, fuelling fears about further job losses and a looming break-up of the historic German industrial titan.
The German firm is competing for a nearly $16B combined deal from India and Australia. While Australia is looking to acquire 11 brand-new general-purpose frigates under Project ‘Sea-3000’, India is seeking new diesel-electric submarines to bolster its naval might. You can read the ET story here.
Once a symbol of German manufacturing might, Thyssenkrupp has fallen into crisis in recent years as high costs at home, falling prices for its products, and fierce competition from Asian rivals hammered its traditional steel business in particular.
The conglomerate, which dates back to the early 19th century, had already announced massive job cuts at the steel division and was seeking to spin off some parts of the business.
The plan announced Monday goes further, however, and involves gradually turning all segments of the group, from auto parts to green technologies, into standalone businesses and opening them up to outside investment.
The current Thyssenkrupp group would be transformed into a holding company with stakes in the individual businesses.
Chief executive Miguel Lopez said the plan, to be presented to the supervisory board before the end of September, will help the group continue on its “chosen course”.
“The future independence of our current segments… will increase their entrepreneurial flexibility, strengthen their investment plans and earnings responsibility, and improve transparency for investors,” he said in a statement.
The move principally affects the group’s automotive technology and green technology units as well as one that deals with supply chain management.
The aim is for them to become independent businesses in the coming years, with Thyssenkrupp to retain a controlling stake.
Efforts were already ongoing to spin off its lucrative submarine-making unit, and Czech billionaire Daniel Kretinsky has taken a 20-percent stake in the steel business, with the goal of increasing this to 50 percent.
Dramatic Situation
Investors cheered the news, with Thyssenkrupp’s shares up more than eight percent in afternoon trading on the Frankfurt Stock Exchange.
But there was anger at what some viewed as the looming demise of a well-known German manufacturing giant, which has almost 100,000 employees worldwide, as well as fears about more job cuts.
“Germany’s industrial icon faces being dismantled, thousands of jobs are at risk,” said the tabloid newspaper Bild.
It reported that the number of staff at the group’s Essen headquarters would be slashed from 500 to 100. Thyssenkrupp declined to comment on the report.

Politicians voiced anger at the potential impact in North Rhine-Westphalia state, where Germany’s biggest steelmaker has major operations and is a big employer.
Dennis Radtke, a European Parliament lawmaker from Chancellor Friedrich Merz’s CDU party, warned of a “dramatic situation for the entire value chain in the steel industry” if the restructuring plan goes ahead.
Radtke, originally from the region, told Stern magazine that swift action was needed to “avoid carnage that would make us even more dependent on China… the chancellor must make the issue a top priority”.
China has become a major competitor to traditional European steelmakers in recent years.
A spokesman for the North Rhine-Westphalia state said it was “closely monitoring” the latest developments at Thyssenkrupp.
He told AFP that the state government’s “actions are focused on securing jobs at ThyssenKrupp… and throughout the steel industry and related value chains.”
Thyssenkrupp has reported massive annual losses for the past two years running. In November last year, it announced plans to cut about 11,000 jobs at the steel division — over a third of the workforce.
© Agence France-Presse