ThyssenKrupp AG (/ˈtɪsən.krʊp/, German: [ˈtʏsn̩ˌkʁʊp]; stylized as thyssenkrupp) is a German industrial engineering and steel production multinational conglomerate. It resulted from the 1999 merger of Thyssen AG and Krupp and has its operational headquarters in Duisburg and Essen. The company says that it is one of the largest steel producers in the world, and it was ranked tenth-largest worldwide by revenue in 2015.[5] It is divided into 670 subsidiaries worldwide. The largest shareholders are the Alfried Krupp von Bohlen und Halbach Foundation and Cevian Capital.[6] ThyssenKrupp's products range from machines and industrial services to high-speed trains, elevators, and shipbuilding. The subsidiary ThyssenKrupp Marine Systems also manufactures frigates, corvettes, and submarines for the German and foreign navies.

ThyssenKrupp AG
Company typeAktiengesellschaft
FWBTKA
ISINDE0007500001 Edit this on Wikidata
IndustryConglomerate
Predecessors
Founded17 March 1999; 25 years ago (1999-03-17)
Headquarters,
Germany[1]
Area served
Worldwide
Key people
Executive board:
Miguel Ángel López Borrego
(CEO),
Oliver Burkhard,
Johannes Dietsch,
Jens Schulte
Supervisory board:
Siegfried Russwurm (Chairman)[2]
ProductsSteel, stainless products, automotive technologies, plant technologies, marine systems, shipbuilding, firearms
RevenueIncrease €41.140 billion (2022)
Increase €5.660 billion (2022)[3]
Increase €1.220 billion (2022)[3]
Total assetsIncrease €37.492 billion (2022)[3]
Total equityIncrease €14.742 billion (2022)[3]
Owners
Number of employees
103,598 (2020)[3]
Subsidiaries[3]
Websitethyssenkrupp.com

In 2018, ThyssenKrupp announced that the company would split into two companies, ThyssenKrupp Industrials and ThyssenKrupp Materials, but this plan was cancelled in May 2019.[7]

History

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ThyssenKrupp is the result of a merger of two German steel companies, Thyssen AG founded in 1891 under the name Gewerkschaft Deutscher Kaiser and Krupp founded in 1811. As early as the 1980s, the companies began negotiations on a merger and began closely cooperating in some business areas. In 1997, the companies combined their flat steel activities, with a full merger completed in March 1999.[8]

Beginnings (1811–1891)

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Krupp

  • 1811: Friedrich Carl Krupp established a cast steel factory in Essen, Germany.
  • 1826: After Friedrich Krupp's death in 1826, his widow Therese Krupp ran the company together with other relatives and her eldest son Alfred, who was 14 years old at the time.
  • 1833: Krupp manufactures complete rolling machines.
  • 1847: Expansion of the railroads increases the demand for durable cast steel, triggering the company's first surge of growth. Supplies include axles, springs, and seamless tires that can withstand increasing speed without cracking.
  • 1859: The Prussian military orders 300 gun barrels, marking the development of the company's second major production segment; shortly after Krupp begins producing complete artillery.
  • 1862: Construction of the first Bessemer steel plant on the continent for mass production of rails and steel sheets.
  • 1864–1872: The company purchases various iron ore mines to avoid dependency on external suppliers. In 1873, Krupp established his own shipping company in Rotterdam to transport ore from the Spanish company Orconera Iron Ore Co., in which he owned shares.
  • 1872: Alfred Krupp issues a "General Directive" establishing company hierarchy from foreman to management. Included in the directive are regulations concerning company welfare programs, including the pension fund, sickness, and death benefit insurance, company bakery and retail store, worker housing estates, and health care, all of which were slowly introduced beginning in 1836.

Thyssen

 
Bond of the Thyssen & Co. AG, issued February 1922
  • 1867: Establishment of Thyssen, Fossoul & Co., a company making hoop iron for barrels, crates, baling, etc.
  • 1871: Establishment of Thyssen & Co. in Mülheim an der Ruhr, Germany
  • 1891: August Thyssen becomes the owner of the Gewerkschaft Deutscher Kaiser coal mine in Hamborn near Duisburg. One year earlier, the Thyssen company constructed a steel mill directly adjacent to one of the pits, thus Thyssen grows into an iron and steel mill with its own coal base.

Wilhelminian period (1892–1917)

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Krupp

  • 1893: After the death of Alfred Krupp in 1887, Friedrich Alfred Krupp expands his father's enterprise with takeovers of additional steel mills and shipyards and construction of diesel engines in collaboration with Rudolf Diesel.
  • 1899: With the acquisition of and/or increased investment in various coal mines (Hannibal colliery near Bochum and the Emscher-Lippe coal mine near Datteln) business development concentrates on vertical structures with the expansion of a coal base.
  • 1903: Friedrich Alfred Krupp dies suddenly in 1902 at the age of 48 and his eldest daughter Bertha Krupp inherits the company. The company is converted into a stock corporation by the will of the late owner; Bertha retains all the stock. As she is still a minor, her mother Margarethe Krupp as guardian and proprietor takes over as the head of the company, managed by a board of directors.
  • 1906: Bertha Krupp marries Gustav von Bohlen und Halbach who adds the Krupp name as a prefix to his own family name. He is appointed vice-chairman of the board and serves as chairman through 1943.
  • 1912: Development of stainless, acid-resistant steels quickly finds application in the chemical and food processing industries, medicine, and building. The spire of New York's Chrysler Building is clad in the new stainless steel panels.
  • 1917: The "Paris Gun" is developed with a range of 130 km (80 mi).

Thyssen

  • 1895: Thyssen sets up integrated iron and steel mill with the construction of a blast furnace plant at the Gewerkschaft Deutscher Kaiser. Expansion later is focused on vertical integration of the group.
  • 1906: Intra-company trading and shipping organizations are established to facilitate the transport of iron ore to the blast furnace plants. In 1910, the N.V. Handels- en Transport Maatschappij Vulcaan ocean shipping company is established in Rotterdam to keep the Thyssen group independent of the international freight market.
  • 1910: Expansion with mills in the Lorraine and in Normandy.
  • 1912: Various branches are set up in the Mediterranean area (Algiers, Port Said, Suez, Oran, Naples, Bona, Bizerte, Tangier, and Genoa) so that freighters can store coal en route to Russian or Indian ore mines besides delivery of coal or freight for third parties.
  • 1913: Attention is paid to Latin America with the founding of the Deutsch-Überseeische Handelsgesellschaft (German Overseas Trading Company). Thyssen constructs extensive housing estates and related infrastructure to attract workers to the western Ruhr area. By the end of 1913, Thyssen owns 8,750 housing units for 15,500 employees and 850 civil servants: housing for 44,000 people.
  • 1914: Gewerkschaft Deutscher Kaiser begins producing armaments for the First World War. To compensate for labor shortages, women, civilians from Belgium, and prisoners of war work for the company.

Weimar Republic (1918–1933)

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Krupp

  • 1919: After the Treaty of Versailles, Krupp reverts to peace-time production focusing on the manufacture of locomotives, trucks, agricultural machinery, and excavators. The post-war circumstances of inflation, occupation, and dismantling of the company's industrial infrastructure led to a financial crisis in 1924/25. The company stabilizes by, among other measures, streamlining processing operations and expanding stainless steel production.
  • 1926: Sintered tungsten carbide was developed by Osram as a material for machining metal. In 1925, Krupp buys the licence and launches sintered carbide onto the market, exploiting its exceptional hardness and wear resistance, which represents a breakthrough in tool engineering.
  • 1929: A 15,000-ton forging press goes into operation in Essen-Borbeck. It is at the time the largest worldwide.

Thyssen

  • 1919: The company is renamed from Gewerkschaft Deutscher Kaiser to August Thyssen-Hütte; Gewerkschaft and mining operations are transferred to an independent company, Gewerkschaft Friedrich Thyssen. The company's foreign interests in the Allied and Soviet countries are expropriated.
  • 1926: Major parts of the Thyssen group are transferred to a newly merged group, Vereinigte Stahlwerke AG, bringing together several coal and steel companies in the Ruhr area to solve cost and production problems of excess capacities. August Thyssen dies at Schloss Landsberg near Essen. His sons Fritz Thyssen and Heinrich Thyssen-Bornemisza inherit the industrial enterprises. His other two children, Hedwig and August Jr., are compensated differently.

Nazi Germany (1933–1945)

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Krupp

  • 1937: As dictated by Hitler's Four-Year Plan, production of locomotives, trucks, and ships was expanded and armaments production resumed.
  • 1941: Krupp Germania shipyard was extended with the acquisition of Deutsche Schiff- und Maschinenbau AG "Deschimag" to include larger ships and submarines. Krupp took advantage of foreign labourers, slave labourers, prisoners of war, and Jews to compensate for labour shortages. It is estimated that a total of 100,000 people were forced to work by the company. Moreover, it had a workshop near the Auschwitz complex. Due to the company's involvement in the war, Alfried Krupp von Bohlen und Halbach was then convicted for crimes against humanity and received a sentence of 12 years imprisonment during The United States of America vs. Alfried Krupp, et al., trial of 8 December 1947 – 31 July 1948.[9]

Thyssen

  • 1934: The company August Thyssen-Hütte AG is spun off the Vereinigte Stahlwerke AG as a so-called operating company.
  • 1939: Fritz Thyssen, chairman of the Board of Vereingte Stahlwerke AG, flees to Switzerland after the invasion of Poland. Vichy France hands over Thyssen and his wife to the German Reich at the end of 1940.
  • 1940: A rearmament policy is introduced by the Nazis in the mid-1930s and with the outbreak of war, labor is conscripted and supplemented by foreign workers, slave laborers, and prisoners of war.
  • 1945: Thyssenhütte mill in Hamborn occupied by US troops.

Mergers and acquisitions

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Corporate headquarters in Essen, Germany
 
Former Thyssenkrupp building in Düsseldorf
 
ThyssenKrupp elevator test tower (246m)[10] near Rottweil, Germany (2018)

During a period of expansion in 1978, Thyssen AG entered the North American automotive industry with the acquisition of Budd's automotive operations,[11] which became the automotive division of Thyssen and operated in North America as Budd Thyssen, later ThyssenKrupp Budd Incorporated. In October 2006, ThyssenKrupp sold ThyssenKrupp Budd's North American body and chassis operations to Martinrea International Inc.[12]

In 1988, ThyssenKrupp acquired German shock absorber manufacturer Bilstein, when it became a division until 2005, when it became a wholly owned subsidiary.[13] In 1991, ThyssenKrupp acquired German company Hoesch AG. In 1999, Thyssen (one of the companies of the merger to form Thyssenkrupp Elevator) acquired the elevator division of American-based conglomerate Dover Corporation. Four years later, ThyssenKrupp acquired the Korean-based Dongyang Elevator.

In 2005, ThyssenKrupp acquired Howaldtswerke-Deutsche Werft (HDW) in Kiel from One Equity Partners. One Equity Partners holds 25% of the TKMS shares. In December 2005, ThyssenKrupp acquired 60% of Atlas Elektronik from BAE Systems, with EADS acquiring the remaining 40%.

In August 2007, ThyssenKrupp Materials North America acquired OnlineMetals.com, a small-quantity distributor of semi-finished metals and plastics based in Seattle.[14] In early 2008, ThyssenKrupp Aerospace acquired Apollo Metals and Aviation Metals, both suppliers to aerospace and defence based in Kent, Washington.

In June 2012, ThyssenKrupp sold Thyssenkrupp Waupaca to KPS Capital Partners. ThyssenKrupp Waupaca is a tier two supplier to the automotive industry, located in Waupaca, Wisconsin. In April 2014, ThyssenKrupp announced it was in talks to sell its Swedish maritime defence unit to Saab after failing to agree deals with the Swedish government for a new generation of submarines.[15]

ThyssenKrupp Access, the global manufacturer of home elevators, wheelchair lifts, and stairlifts, has linked up with Chennai-based Indian Company Elite Elevators. The company has launched luxury home elevators segments targeting HNI Clientele[16] to launch high-end elevators in India.[17] In June 2018, Thyssenkrupp signed a final agreement with India's Tata Steel to establish a long-expected steel venture. The 50-50 joint venture was called Thyssenkrupp Tata Steel and it became the second-largest steel producer in Europe, after ArcelorMittal.[18]

On 1 October 2023 the firm instituted a green energy division, Decarbon Technologies, to develop its energy solutions.[19]

Divestments and Restructures of Steel Business

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Steel Europe

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In September 2017, ThyssenKrupp and India-based Tata Steel announced plans to combine their European steel-making businesses. The final agreement was signed in June 2018. The deal would have structured the European assets as ThyssenKrupp Tata Steel, a 50–50 joint venture headquartered in Amsterdam and created the second-largest steel producer in Europe.[18][20] The merger was finally prohibited by the EU Commission in 2019 for competitive concerns.[21]

Steel Americas

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On 11 May 2007, ThyssenKrupp AG invested €3.1 billion (increased to $4.6 billion in 2010) for a project consisting of building new carbon steel and stainless steel processing facilities in Calvert, Alabama about 40 miles north of Mobile. The project, along with a multibillion-dollar greenfield steel-making facility in Brazil, was a cornerstone of ThyssenKrupp's new global expansion strategy into the North American steel markets.[22] The carbon steel and stainless steel companies were independent and operated under different management teams. Co-locating both facilities on the same site enabled the company to optimize the investment in infrastructure and in some shared processing.

Additionally, the Alabama State Port Authority invested over $100 million to build a state-of-the-art transloading slab terminal on the southern tip of Pinto Island in Mobile Bay to service the inbound raw material slabs for the upriver carbon steel facility. The terminal was necessary since the Tombigbee River depth and lack of turning basins prohibit deep draft ship navigation to the site in Calvert.[23]

The world steel industry peaked in 2007, just as the company spent $12 billion to build the two most modern mills in the world, in Alabama and Brazil. The worldwide Great Recession started in 2008. Heavy cutbacks in construction combined with sharply lowered demand, and prices fell 40%. ThyssenKrupp lost $11 billion on its two new plants, which sold steel below the cost of production. ThyssenKrupp's stainless steel division, Inoxum, including the stainless portion of the US plant, was sold to Finnish stainless steel company Outokumpu in 2012.[24] Finally in 2013, ThyssenKrupp offered the remaining portion of the plant for sale at under $4 billion.[25] They sold it to ArcelorMittal and Nippon Steel the following year for $1.55 billion.[26] In February 2017, it agreed to sell its Brazilian steel business CSA to Ternium for €1.5 billion. The two transactions meant that Thyssenkrupp fully parted from the Steel Americas business.[27]

ThyssenKrupp Tailored Blanks

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In September 2012, ThyssenKrupp agreed to sell the automotive components manufacturer Tailored Blanks to the Wuhan Iron and Steel Corporation, based in China for an undisclosed price.[28] At the time of the agreement Tailored Blanks had annual sales of around 700 million euros and a global market share of about 40 percent in automotive laser-welded blanks.[28]

ThyssenKrupp Elevator

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TK Elevator logo

In April 2015, ThyssenKrupp announced it would invest more than €800 million in the North American region by 2020 to take advantage of the economy's reindustrialization.[29] In February 2020, ThyssenKrupp AG's board announced that it would sell its elevator segment to Advent International, Cinven, and RAG foundation for $18.9 billion.[30] The transaction closed in July 2020, and the new stand-alone company was named TK Elevator [fr; de].

Financial data

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Financial data in € billions[31][32][33]
Year 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 2020 2021 2022
Revenue 38.559 41.304 42.778 39.263 41.447 42.745 41.996 28.889 34.02 41.14
Net Income −1.589 0.009 0.279 0.261 0.271 −0.060 −0.260 −5.541 1.045 0.975
Assets 35.304 36.045 35.694 35.072 35.048 34.426 36.475 36.490
Employees 156,856 160,745 154,906 156,487 158,739 161,096 162,372 103,598

Carbon footprint

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ThyssenKrupp reported Total CO2e emissions (Direct + Indirect) for the twelve months ending 30 September 2020 at 22,700 Kt (−1,400 /-5.8% y-o-y).[34]

Thyssenkrupp's annual Total CO2e emissions (Direct + Indirect) (in kilotonnes)
Sep 2018 Sep 2019 Sep 2020
24,000[35] 24,100[36] 22,700[34]

Employees

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As of 2020, the company had over 100,000 employees worldwide. After a financial struggle in 2020, and a loss of over €5.5 billion, ThyssenKrupp announced that it will be cutting over 11,000 jobs, 7,000 of which are located in Germany.[37]

Products and sales

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ThyssenKrupp generates 33% of its consolidated sales in its home market. The rest of the European Union (EU) (28%) and the NAFTA region (21%) are the key trading partners for business and exports outside Germany.

Business areas

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The operations are organized in five business areas:[38]

Construction of the corporate headquarters began in 2007. The first buildings were complete in 2010; the second phase of the building was completed in June 2015. Situated in the west of Essen, the corporate campus was designed by Chaix & Morel et associeés (Paris) and JSWD Architekten (Cologne). Their design was selected for construction in an architectural design competition[39] in 2006.

Controversies

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Price fixing

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In November 2006, five elevator manufacturers including ThyssenKrupp, were found guilty of price fixing by the EU, over nine years,[40] along with competitors Otis Elevator Co., Schindler Group, Kone, and Mitsubishi Elevator Europe. On 21 February 2007, ThyssenKrupp was fined €479 million by the EU (Otis was fined $US295 million).[40] The EU Competition Commission reported that the companies had worked to rig bids for procurement contracts, share markets, and fix prices between at least 1995 and 2004.[40] The Commission reported that the companies "did not contest the facts" found by EU regulators, noting none of the accused requested a hearing to answer the allegations. The fines totaled US$1.3 billion.[40]

In July 2012, the German Bundeskartellamt served fines totalling €124.5 million on ThyssenKrupp GfT Gleistechnik GmbH, Essen (€103m); Stahlberg Roensch GmbH, Seevetal, which since 2010 belongs to the Vossloh group (€13m); TSTG Schienen Technik GmbH & Co. KG, Duisburg, a subsidiary of the Voestalpine group (€4.5m); and Voestalpine BWG GmbH & Co. KG, Butzbach, another Voestalpine subsidiary (€4m) for price-fixing of steel railway lines and points blades supplied to Deutsche Bahn, the German state railway. According to Andreas Mundt, president of the Bundeskartellamt, "For many years the rail suppliers have guaranteed each other virtually constant shares of Deutsche Bahn's contract volume. The cartel members monitored compliance with the contract volume quotas, assigned each other projects, and set protective prices in order to steer the contract award process." The proceedings had been triggered by an application for leniency filed by the Austrian company Voestalpine AG. Investigations into further companies are ongoing.

Turin plant fire and trial

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On the early morning of 6 December 2007, an accident on the annealing and pickling line of the ThyssenKrupp plant in Turin, Italy, caused the death of seven steelworkers.[41] The accident happened between 00:45 and 00:48, when the eight workers that were then on duty attempted to extinguish a localized small pool fire with CO2 fire extinguishers and a fire hydrant, without success. About 400L of hydraulic oil escaped during the rupture of a hydraulic circuit which caused a violent jet fire engulfing the workers that were fighting the fire.[41]

CEO Espenhahn was charged by the State prosecutor of Turin with "voluntary multiple murder with possible malice" ("omicidio volontario multiplo con dolo eventuale"), while five other managers and executives have been charged with "culpable murder with conscious guilt".[42] On Friday 15 April 2011, Espenhahn and all the other indictees were pronounced guilty of all charges; he was sentenced to 16 years and 6 months in jail and barred from holding public office for life. Prior to the court case, Espenhahn was transferred from Italy and is now believed to live in Brazil. On 23 February 2013, the Appellate Court changed the sentence for him to culpable murder, not recognizing the voluntary murder, thus reducing the conviction. Convictions for the other managers were also reduced.[citation needed]

In May 2016, the appeal court reduced the sentence for Espenhahn to 9 years and 8 months, the other 5 managers (4 Italians and 1 German) between 6 and 7 years. Priegnitz the German manager, was sentenced to 6 years and 3 months.[43] According to the bilateral laws between Germany and Italy, the convicted can serve the term in his home country and with accordance to this countries' laws. Since accounts of first-degree murder have been appealed down to aggravated negligent manslaughter, the German convicts are expecting further reductions that would eventually not exceed 5 years.[43]

Bribery and conflict of interest

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ThyssenKrupp is suspected of corruption in deals made in Israel, Turkey, South Africa and also in Pakistan, where the deal did not mature. In Greece, the defense minister Akis Tsochatzopoulos was sentenced to prison for accepting a bribe from a consortium in which one of the members was ThyssenKrupp.[44][45][46]

Incidents

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ThyssenKrupp has been the target of major, organised hacking attacks on several occasions, attacking the company's trade secrets.

On 8 December 2016, it was disclosed the company was attacked in February of that year. Internally uncovered in April 2016, it took their IT team around six months to fix. The hack is thought to have originated from South-East Asia and was successful in retrieving information from various departments, including the plant engineering division.[47] In 2012, ThyssenKrupp and other European companies were attacked by Chinese hackers.[48]

On August 15, 2024, a fire broke out at the Thyssenkrupp warehouse in Völklingen. The building where plastic products and solar panels were stored caught fire. Smoke from the burning warehouse was visible from Saarbrücken, 15 kilometers away. 200 firefighters fought the fire for more than 30 hours. The roof of the building collapsed.[49]

See also

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References

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  • James, Harold. Krupp: A History of the Legendary German Firm. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 2012. ISBN 9780691153407.

Notes

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  1. ^ "Press release – Press releases – thyssenkrupp AG". Thyssenkrupp.com. 3 December 2014. Archived from the original on 3 March 2016. Retrieved 5 April 2009.
  2. ^ "Management". Thyssenkrupp.com. 6 October 2019.
  3. ^ a b c d e f "Thyssenkrupp Subsidiaries 2019" (PDF). Retrieved 7 April 2023.
  4. ^ "Shareholder structure". 4-traders.com.
  5. ^ "The world's largest steel companies in 2015, based on revenue" Statista
  6. ^ "THYSSENKRUPP (TKA)". www.4-traders.com. Retrieved 19 July 2018.
  7. ^ Bender, Ruth (10 May 2019). "Thyssenkrupp Abandons Planned Split, Pursues Elevator-Unit IPO". Wall Street Journal. ISSN 0099-9660. Retrieved 16 May 2019.
  8. ^ "Krupp – Lead up to the merger with Thyssen". Thyssenkrupp.com. 30 September 2013. Archived from the original on 28 September 2011.
  9. ^ "About this Service | Federal Research Division | Services | Library of Congress". Library of Congress, Washington, D.C. 20540 USA. Retrieved 7 April 2023.
  10. ^ See German Wikipedia: Thyssenkrupp Testturm
  11. ^ "Internationalization and further vertical diversification – Bonn Republic – Thyssenkrupp AG". Thyssenkrupp.com. 30 September 2013. Archived from the original on 26 June 2015.
  12. ^ "Thyssenkrupp Budd to sell North American automotive body operations". americanmachinist.com. Archived from the original on 1 April 2012.
  13. ^ "BILSTEIN Corporate". BILSTEIN. Retrieved 7 April 2023.
  14. ^ "ThyssenKrupp Materials NA acquires OnlineMetals.com" ThyssenKrupp 17 August 2007.
    "The Story of OnlineMetals.com". onlinemetals.com.
  15. ^ Mia Shanley & Bjorn Rundstrom (15 April 2014). "Thyssenkrupp in talks to sell Swedish naval shipyard to Saab". Reuters.
  16. ^ "Home Elevators India | Residential Lifts – Elite Elevators ®". Elite Elevators – No 1 Domestic Home Lifts & Platform Elevators India. Retrieved 7 April 2023.
  17. ^ Thyssenkrupp Access unveils high-end home elevator
  18. ^ a b "Reuters". Reuters. Retrieved 7 April 2023.
  19. ^ Christoph Steitz and Lisa Shumaker. (14 September 2023). "Thyssenkrupp creates green tech division, launches performance programme". Reuters website Retrieved 24 September 2023.
  20. ^ Turner, Zeke; Patterson, Scott (20 September 2017). "Thyssenkrupp, Tata Seal Long-Awaited European Steel Deal". The Wall Street Journal. New York City, New York, United States. Retrieved 21 September 2017.
  21. ^ "Press corner". European Commission – European Commission. Retrieved 23 March 2021.
  22. ^ "Press release". Thyssenkrupp AG. 3 December 2014. Archived from the original on 3 March 2016. Retrieved 18 February 2022.
  23. ^ "Alabama State Port Authority to Build New Steel Terminal" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 19 November 2010. Retrieved 14 July 2011.
  24. ^ "New owners of ThyssenKrupp stainless steel division plan visit in June". Press-Register. 31 May 2012. Retrieved 15 June 2013.
  25. ^ John W. Miller and Ike Henning, "Thiessen gets offers for mills: Final bids for steel complexes in Alabama, Brazil will likely fall short of the company's hopes", The Wall Street Journal 1 March 2013
  26. ^ II, Michael Finch (28 February 2014). "ThyssenKrupp no more, Calvert steel processing plant gets a new name after acquisition". AL.com. Retrieved 16 December 2018.
  27. ^ "Thyssenkrupp sells Brazilian steel business". Financial Times. 23 February 2017.
  28. ^ a b "Thyssenkrupp to sell Tailored Blanks to WISCO". Reuters. 28 September 2012. Archived from the original on 5 October 2016. Retrieved 30 September 2012.
  29. ^ Georgina Prodhan (24 April 2015). "Thyssenkrupp to invest $866 million in North America". Reuters. Retrieved 29 April 2015.
  30. ^ "StackPath". IndustryWeek.com. 27 February 2020. Retrieved 28 February 2020.
  31. ^ "ThyssenKrupp Bilanz, Gewinn und Umsatz | ThyssenKrupp Geschäftsbericht | 750000". wallstreet-online.de. Retrieved 5 November 2018.
  32. ^ "ThyssenKrupp – net sales 2021–2022". Statista. Retrieved 7 April 2023.
  33. ^ "ThyssenKrupp AG Net Income 2012–2022 | TYEKF". www.macrotrends.net. Retrieved 7 April 2023.
  34. ^ a b "Thyssenkrupp's ESG Datasheet for 2020Q3". Archived from the original on 18 January 2021. Alt URL
  35. ^ "Thyssenkrupp's ESG Datasheet for 2020Q3". Archived from the original on 18 January 2021. Alt URL
  36. ^ "Thyssenkrupp's ESG Datasheet for 2020Q3". Archived from the original on 18 January 2021. Alt URL
  37. ^ Miller, Joe (19 November 2020). "Thyssenkrupp to cut 5,000 more jobs after slumping to €5.5bn loss". Financial Times. Retrieved 19 November 2020.
  38. ^ "Business Areas". Thyssenkrupp.com. 20 November 2014.
  39. ^ "[phase eins]. – ThyssenKrupp Quartier in Essen – Architectural competition". www.phase1.de. Retrieved 7 April 2023.
  40. ^ a b c d "Elevator makers fined $1.3B for price-fixing" (news), Purchasing.com – Reed Business Information, Feb. 2007, webpage: Purchcom-8053[permanent dead link].
  41. ^ a b The Thyssen Krupp Accident in Torino: Investigation Methods, Accident Dynamics and Lesson Learned 2012, p 615-620
  42. ^ "Thyssen, a processo i sei imputati, "Fu omicidio volontario"". Corriere.it (in Italian). 17 November 2008. Retrieved 6 May 2009.
  43. ^ a b "Tödlicher Brand bei Thyssenkrupp: Italiener wollen Deutsche in Haft sehen". n-tv.de. 15 October 2017. Retrieved 29 November 2017.
  44. ^ "Israeli prosecutors announce charges over submarine deal with Germany". Reuters. 5 December 2019. Retrieved 5 November 2020.[dead link]
  45. ^ "Bribery scandal on Greek Submarines Project". greekcorruption.dk. 25 January 2020. Retrieved 5 November 2020.
  46. ^ אוני, אסף (29 March 2019). "פרשת הצוללות: כך פיתחה טיסנקרופ תלות בישראל ובמצרים". Globes. Retrieved 5 November 2020.
  47. ^ "Trade secrets stolen from Thyssenkrupp in major hack". The Stack. 8 December 2016. Retrieved 8 December 2016.
  48. ^ "EADS, Thyssenkrupp attacked by Chinese hackers: report". Reuters. 24 February 2017. Retrieved 8 December 2016.
  49. ^ "Thyssenkrupp-Halle brennt seit mehr als 30 Stunden". Bild (in German). 16 August 2024.
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