Thyssenkrupp fills key management posts after year of turmoil

Reuters  |  FRANKFURT 

By Christoph Steitz

The German group said it would propose Johannes Dietsch, chief of group until May, as from February 2019 with a three-year contract.

Dietsch, 56, joins during one of its largest ever restructurings: a planned of its elevators, and plant engineering units into a separately listed entity to be called Industrials.

The move came in response to years of shareholder pressure to simplify the sprawling group's structure, culminating in the resignation of the group's and in July.

Dietsch was at from October 2014 to May 2018, where he arranged funding for the $63 billion all-cash takeover of U.S. Monsanto, including bond issues and a capital increase.

He also oversaw the separate listing and gradual sale of Bayer's and Covestro, now worth 8 billion euros ($9.1 billion).

"He brings exactly the skills and experience needed to manage the separation process at Thyssenkrupp together with the current members of the Board," Thyssenkrupp Supervisory Board said in a statement.

Dietsch brings the number of Thyssenkrupp's management board members back to four. Guido Kerkhoff, who was appointed Thyssenkrupp's permanent in September, previously held the position of chief.

Thyssenkrupp also named 56-year old as the new of its elevators unit, the group's most profitable division that will form the heart of the planned

Walker joined the unit's board on Feb. 1 as and succeeds as CEO, who left the group on Nov. 30 after margins fell further behind peers, most notably Finland's

"He is a longstanding expert in the elevator business, a hands-on, with the necessary operating experience to move the forward and increase its margin," Kerkhoff said in a statement.

told sources last month that Walker, a company veteran that joined the group in 1995, was likely to succeed Schierenbeck.

Thyssenkrupp is also close to unveiling the leadership of its planned European joint venture with Tata Steel, with Thyssenkrupp's current in line to lead the combined entity.

($1 = 0.8811 euros)

(Additional reporting by Ludwig Burger; Editing by Thomas Seythal/Mark Potter/Susan Fenton)

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

First Published: Fri, December 14 2018. 15:56 IST