Exclusive: Thyssenkrupp nears JV compromise deal with Tata Steel - sources

Reuters  |  DUESSELDORF/FRANKFURT/LONDON 

DUESSELDORF/FRANKFURT/(Reuters) - and are nearing a 15 billion euro ($17.4 billion) deal this week to combine their European assets into a global giant, sources familiar with the talks told

Talks to hammer out the final details are progressing well and a compromise has been reached on closing a valuation gap between the businesses, three of the people said.

The combination of Thyssenkrupp's and Tata Steel's European assets, first announced in September, would create the continent's second-largest steelmaker after with 15 billion euros in combined sales.

Sources told this month that the compromise options included a cash payment to Thyssenkrupp, changing the 50-50 ownership structure of the venture, lowering the debt to be transferred to it, or limiting dividend payments to for a number of years.

"Talks are very constructive, they are on the final stretches," one of the people said.

Negotiations are ongoing and could still be delayed or collapse at the last moment, the people said, adding that both companies had a great interest in getting a deal done.

and both declined to comment.

TIMETABLE SLIPPAGE

Shares in extended gains and were up 3.1 percent at 1250 GMT, topping Frankfurt's blue-chip index.

The joint venture was originally planned to be signed in early 2018 but was delayed after Thyssenkrupp's steel performed much better than Tata Steel's, requiring a reassessment of the deal.

Signing is now planned by the end of June, but due to disagreement over the size of the valuation gap -- with estimates ranging from 500 million to 3 billion euros -- that timeline, too, has been called into question.

While giving Thyssenkrupp boss more leverage in negotiations, the gap has also enabled activist fund Elliott, who disclosed a stake in the group last month, to put more pressure on the to deliver.

German labour unions, which control half of the seats on Thyssenkrupp's supervisory board, have expressed general support for the deal, saying last week they would be prepared to let talks run longer if it results in a better outcome.

Tata Steel Europe's labour representatives are also close to approving the deal, two people familiar with the matter said.

($1 = 0.8610 euros)

(Reporting by Tom Kaeckenhoff, Arno Schuetze, Christoph Steitz and Maytaal Angel; Additional reporting by Promit Mukherjee in Mumbai; Editing by and Alexander Smith)

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Wed, June 27 2018. 18:22 IST