A high-stakes deal that would have reshaped the European steel landscape is faltering. Negotiations between German industrial giant Thyssenkrupp and India’s Jindal Steel International for the sale of Thyssenkrupp Steel Europe (TKSE) are reportedly nearing a breakdown after six months of intense due diligence.
The Three Pillars of Disagreement
According to sources familiar with the discussions, three primary “deal-breakers” have emerged that are making an agreement increasingly unlikely:
- The Pension “Albatross”: TKSE carries approximately €2.4 billion ($2.8 billion) in pension liabilities. This massive financial obligation has historically derailed previous attempts to sell or spin off the steel unit.
- Skyrocketing Energy Costs: Jindal Steel has expressed growing concern over Europe’s energy prices. Already higher than those in Asia or the U.S., costs have surged further due to the ongoing Iran war, making energy-intensive steel production in Germany a risky prospect.
- Future Investment Gap: There are significant disagreements over the capital required for the “green transition.” While Jindal made an indicative offer to complete a green steel site in Duisburg, the parties remain divided on the total multi-billion-euro commitment needed for electric arc furnace capacity.
What’s at Stake for Thyssenkrupp?
For Thyssenkrupp CEO Miguel Lopez, a failure to close this deal would be a major strategic setback. His goal is to transform the storied engineering group into a lean holding company by divesting various divisions.
“We will continue with TKSE’s restructuring with or without Jindal.” — Miguel Lopez, CEO of Thyssenkrupp
Despite the friction, Lopez maintains that new EU measures designed to protect the domestic steel sector have actually strengthened Thyssenkrupp’s hand in negotiations by boosting the valuation of European assets.
The Current Landscape: A Comparison
| Factor | Thyssenkrupp/Jindal Negotiation Status |
| Status | Stalled; official termination possible by next month. |
| Core Asset | Thyssenkrupp Steel Europe (TKSE). |
| Pension Liability | €2.4 billion (A primary sticking point). |
| Proposed Investment | €2 billion+ for electric arc furnaces and green steel. |
| External Pressure | Rising energy costs in Europe driven by the Iran conflict. |
Next Steps
The companies could officially call off negotiations as early as April 2026. If the deal collapses, Thyssenkrupp will be forced to return to the drawing board for a business unit it has tried to offload via listings, joint ventures, and sales for decades.
