Union Official Says Thyssenkrupp Steel Deal With Jindal Appears Elusive
Published by Global Banking & Finance Review®
Posted on March 20, 2026
2 min readLast updated: March 20, 2026
Published by Global Banking & Finance Review®
Posted on March 20, 2026
2 min readLast updated: March 20, 2026
A senior IG Metall official, Juergen Kerner, says Jindal Steel International has repeatedly delayed responding to labour representatives about its proposed acquisition of Thyssenkrupp’s steel unit, suggesting the deal remains elusive. Meanwhile, Thyssenkrupp faces mounting financial pressure amid re
FRANKFURT, March 20 (Reuters) - Talks to sell Thyssenkrupp's steel division to India's Jindal Steel International are not making progress and the long-awaited deal must not be stalled for months, the German company's deputy supervisory board chairman said on Friday.
Juergen Kerner, who is also the deputy head of Germany's IG Metall trade union, said labour representatives had presented Jindal, which has been doing due diligence on Thyssenkrupp's steel unit, also known as TKSE, since October, with a detailed questionnaire.
WORKERS LEFT IN LIMBO
"We were promised answers, but these have subsequently been postponed several times. Apparently, the discussions between Thyssenkrupp AG and Jindal are taking longer than expected," Kerner said in a statement.
"So things are not moving forward, and that is a bad thing," Kerner said because workers could not "afford to be left in limbo for months".
In September, Jindal made a non-binding bid for TKSE, Europe's No. 2 steelmaker, creating a new opportunity for parent Thyssenkrupp to part with a volatile business that it has sought to sell for years.
A Thyssenkrupp spokesperson said talks with Jindal Steel were ongoing, also referring to comments by CEO Miguel Lopez last week, who said that discussions covered valuation and future investments and that TKSE would be made fit for the future, with or without Jindal.
Jindal Steel International had no immediate comment.
Earlier this month, Flacks Group, a U.S. investor in distressed assets, signalled it could step in as potential buyer of TKSE if current talks fall through.
Lopez said in February that planned EU measures to protect the bloc's struggling steel sector have boosted investor sentiment and strengthened Thyssenkrupp's position in the talks with Jindal.
A solution for TKSE, which is closely tied to Germany's industrial history, is seen as the centrepiece of the CEO's strategy to turn the sprawling group into a holding.
(Reporting by Christoph Steitz, writing by Ludwig Burger, editing by Thomas Seythal and Tomasz Janowski)
Jindal Steel International has repeatedly delayed responding to questions from labour representatives, indicating the deal remains uncertain.
Juergen Kerner, a senior official at German trade union IG Metall, voiced the concerns.
Jindal Steel International is in talks to acquire Thyssenkrupp's steel unit but has not provided satisfactory responses to union questions.
The statement was made in Frankfurt, Germany, according to Reuters reporting.
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