European Union Blocks Tata Steel-Thyssenkrupp Merger Plan

INSUBCONTINENT EXCLUSIVE:
The companies last month abandoned the merger on expectations that the EU would refuse the dealThe European Union's powerful anti-trust
authority on Tuesday blocked the merger of German industrial conglomerate Thyssenkrupp with steel giant Tata, an expected veto that kills
the deal."We prohibited the merger to avoid serious harm to European industrial customers and consumers," EU competition commissioner
Margrethe Vestager said in a statement.The aim of the merger had been to create the second largest European steel company behind
multinational giant ArcelorMittal and to join forces in the face of the surge of Chinese steel.The companies last month abandoned the merger
on expectations that the EU would refuse the deal, with Thyssenkrupp announcing it would slash 6,000 jobs as a result, mainly in Germany.The
commission, the EU's executive arm, criticised the merger, which "would have reduced competition and increased prices for different types
plans and ruled out offering more concessions to Brussels in order to get a green light, Thyssenkrupp said it was now aiming for a stock
market listing of its elevators business as part of a massive restructuring.The failed tie-up contributed to dismal results posted by
Thyssenkrupp last month, with a net loss of 86 million euros ($96 million).The plunge into loss-making at the start of the year contrasted
with a 250-million-euro profit in early 2018, reflecting the difficult context for global steel companies.The European steel industry has
been hit by a wave of problems, including overcapacity, cheap Asian imports and punishing US tariffs.