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thyssenkrupp AG (TKR.VI)

Vienna - Vienna Delayed price. Currency in EUR
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4.1180+0.0160 (+0.39%)
At close: 05:32PM CEST
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Previous close4.1020
Open4.1350
Bid4.0950 x 0
Ask4.1390 x 0
Day's range4.1180 - 4.1350
52-week range4.1020 - 7.4860
Volume100
Avg. volume1,095
Market cap2.564B
Beta (5Y monthly)1.97
PE ratio (TTM)N/A
EPS (TTM)-3.7200
Earnings date14 Aug 2024
Forward dividend & yield0.15 (3.64%)
Ex-dividend date05 Feb 2024
1y target estN/A
  • Reuters SG

    Deals of the day-Mergers and acquisitions

    ** Brazil's Diagnosticos da America (Dasa) and health insurance operator Amil have agreed to combine their hospital businesses, setting up a joint venture with almost 10 billion reais ($1.86 billion) in net revenue, the firms said. ** Privately owned fintech group ION has received a green light from Italy's central bank to buy bad loan and property manager Prelios from U.S. hedge fund Davidson Kempner, two sources with knowledge of the matter said. ** Spain's Sabadell has postponed the completion of the sale of its retailers' payments business to Nexi after becoming the target of a hostile takeover by BBVA, two sources with knowledge of the matter said.

  • Reuters

    Carlyle, KfW join forces in effort to buy Thyssenkrupp warship division, sources say

    Private equity firm Carlyle and German development bank KfW are in talks to jointly buy most of Thyssenkrupp's submarine unit, three people familiar with the matter said, in the latest sign of how the Ukraine war is reshaping Europe's defence sector. The plan to join forces and take a majority stake in Thyssenkrupp Marine Systems (TKMS) reflects growing investor interest in defence assets as well as efforts by Berlin to keep control over what it considers to be key military technology. All three parties are holding talks about a deal that would hand Carlyle a majority stake in TKMS, while state-owned lender KfW would hold a blocking minority, the people said.

  • Reuters

    Thyssenkrupp Steel to put forward Duisburg green steel plan in August

    Thyssenkrupp Steel Europe will put forward plans for a delayed green steel plant at Duisburg in August, its CEO said. The plans are meant to enable Thyssenkrupp to switch to direct reduction steelmaking, to gradually replace the fossil fuels based, conventional blast furnace route at its site. "We will put the first proposals on the table in August," Bernhard Osburg said at a Handelsblatt hydrogen conference.