Latest News

Thyssenkrupp puts 20,000 jobs in danger during overhaul, union says

A senior official at Germany's IG Metall union said that a fifth or more of the jobs at Thyssenkrupp are at risk. This is in response to recent plans by the conglomerate to become a holding company.

Thyssenkrupp announced on Monday that it will pursue plans to divest minority stakes in at least three of its five business divisions. The other two, submarines and steel, are already being spun off, or partially divested.

The plans could result in the loss of more than 20,000 jobs, Juergen Kerner told Sueddeutsche Zeitung.

Thyssenkrupp announced that it would cut or outsource as many as 11,000 jobs in its steel division TKSE. It also plans to cut around 1,800 positions at its automotive unit.

Kerner stated that the supervisory board of Thyssenkrupp will meet in June and approve the spin-off plan for the group's submarine and warship division TKMS. This is expected to happen later this year.

Kerner then turned his attention to the steel industry, criticizing Czech billionaire Daniel Kretinsky who, last year, bought a stake of 20% in TKSE. He is now in negotiations to buy another 30%, contingent on a deal to reduce jobs with workers.

Kerner stated that he now considered Kretinsky to be less and less the right buyer. He added that the billionaire had refused to share his plans for more than an year. (Written by Friederike Hiene and Christoph Steitz, edited by Matthias Williams and Susan Fenton).

(source: Reuters)