Kone $KNEBV to buy TK Elevator for $34.4B; Thyssenkrupp rises 8%
Original: Finland’s Kone to buy German rival TK Elevator in blockbuster $34.4 billion deal View original →
Kone $KNEBV agreed to buy TK Elevator in a 29.4 billion euro ($34.4 billion) cash-and-share transaction, while Thyssenkrupp shares rose 8% as investors marked up the value of an asset it spun out only six years ago. The deal would create the world's largest elevator maker and redraw a sector that has long been led by Otis and Schindler.
The hard numbers came from Kone's release. The company said the combination would generate roughly EUR 700 million of annual run-rate synergies. On an illustrative last-financial-year basis, the combined group would have about EUR 20.5 billion in sales, more than EUR 2.7 billion of adjusted EBIT before synergies, and roughly 3.2 million units under maintenance. About 65% of revenue would come from service and modernization, the most recurring part of the business.
CNBC added the market reaction and the ownership context. Thyssenkrupp rose as much as 14% before paring the move to an 8% gain, while Advent and Cinven bought TK Elevator for around EUR 17 billion in 2020. Kone also said shareholders holding just over 40% of outstanding shares and approximately 74.3% of total votes have already agreed to support the transaction, a sign that financing and governance risk is lower than the headline size suggests.
The industrial logic is straightforward. Kone brings scale in Asia, TKE brings depth in the Americas, and both companies want a larger installed base to sell maintenance, modernization, and data-driven service tools. In a market where equipment cycles swing but service revenue sticks, the 65% recurring-revenue mix matters as much as the 29.4 billion euro purchase price.
The next hurdle is antitrust. CNBC noted that Schindler told Reuters in March it was prepared to challenge a Kone-TK Elevator combination before regulators. That means the next trade is not only about deal size. It is about whether European and other antitrust authorities will accept a merger that rewrites the competitive order in one of industrial Europe's most stable oligopolies.
Not investment advice. Verify all figures with primary sources before acting.
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