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Tengelmann Group

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Tengelmann-Group
Company typeLimited commercial partnership
(Kommanditgesellschaft)
IndustryRetail, Real Estate, Venture Capital
Headquarters
Key people
Christian W. E. Haub, CEO[1]
Revenue8,385 Mrd. Euro (2021)[2]
Number of employees
65.050 (2021, worldwide)[2]
Websitetengelmann21.com

Tengelmann Twenty-One KG is the Munich-based Holding of the Tengelmann Group, a family-owned company established in 1867. The company identifies as an active entrepreneurial family investor, currently holding shares in more than 50 companies in Europe and North America. The diverse portfolio includes large retailers such as Obi and KiK, the real estate company TREI, the energy consulting company Tengelmann Energie, the insurance company Tengelmann Assekuranz as well as Tengelmann Audit. Their affiliated investment companies Tengelmann Ventures, Emil Capital Partners and Tengelmann Growth Partners invest in Start-ups and Grown-ups in Europe and North America.[3]

History

In the mid-19th century, Johann Wilhelm Meininghaus (1790-1869) established the colonial goods store Joh. Wilh. Meininghaus Sohn in the Villa Artis, located in the inner city park “Ruhranlage” in Mülheim an der Ruhr. On January 1, 1847, a 15-year-old named Wilhelm Schmitz began his commercial apprenticeship there, which later led to his professional career. Due to his abilities, he took over the company’s management, now known as Wilh. Schmitz & Lindgens, alongside Ludwig Lindgens (1827-1910) in 1857. Lindgens, who was primarily a financial partner and had already established the Lindgens leather factory with his wife in 1861, retired from the business at the end of 1866. To distinguish himself from the numerous Schmitz families in Rhineland, Schmitz added his wife Louise’s maiden name to his own, and Wilhelm Schmitz-Scholl oHG was founded on January 1, 1867. Louise Schmitz-Scholl became the first woman in Germany to have signing authority. In the early 1880s, Schmitz began roasting coffee and eventually opened a large roasting plant in 1882.

Following Wilhelm Schmitz’s death in 1887, his sons Wilhelm Jr. and Karl assumed control of the company. The brothers established their own retail outlets for their products. Their authorized representative, Emil Tengelmann, whose name inspired the company Hamburger Kaffee-Import-Gesellschaft Emil Tengelmann, founded in 1893, assisted them in expanding the business. The first branch for coffee, tea, and cocoa opened in Düsseldorf. Due to its tremendous success, an additional 560 branches were established throughout Germany by the onset of World War I.

Mainhouse in Ruhrstraße 3–5 in Mülheim an der Ruhr

In 1906, the first proprietary production company, the Rheinische Zuckerwarenfabrik, was established in Düsseldorf. In 1912, the Wissoll cocoa and chocolate factory (Wilhelm Schmitz-Scholl) was added in Speldorf, where the group’s headquarters were located until the property was sold to the Viennese real estate developer Soravia. The relocation to Munich occurred in the fall of 2021.

During the 1920s, additional production facilities were established, including factories for grain and malt coffee, pudding powder, cookies, and nutritional products. The number of branches increased again to 540 by 1927, the year Wilhelm Jr. passed away. After the death of Karl Schmitz-Scholl senior in 1933, the company was inherited by his two children Elisabeth Haub and Karl-Erivan Schmitz-Scholl, who became the sole managing director. During the Nazi era, Schmitz-Scholl was a supporter and member of the NSDAP and the SS (Hauptsturmführer). Tengelmann also produced special food for the Wehrmacht.[4] Since 2011, Lutz Niethammer’s team has been analyzing, using biographical, corporate strategy, and cultural studies approaches, whether and to what extent the company was involved in forced labor, Aryanization, occupation rule, and war profits. The SS membership of the then boss Karl Schmidt-Scholl Jr. and his conduct between the company, family, SS, and Wehrmacht were also investigated.[5]

Following the company’s reconstruction after World War II, the first Tengelmann self-service store was opened in Munich in 1953. In its anniversary year of 1967/68, the company operated over 400 stores, with sales exceeding the billion mark for the first time. In 1969, Erivan Haub, son of Elisabeth Haub, became the sole managing partner of Schmitz-Scholl/Tengelmann in accordance with the articles of association. In 1971, the company took over its competitor Kaiser’s Kaffee Geschäft AG in Viersen.

In 1972, Tengelmann founded the brand discounter Plus as a second mainstay. Tengelmann has owned the Plus brand since 1911. Subsequently, Tengelmann acquired stakes in companies around the world or took over a majority shareholding, such as in The Great Atlantic and Pacific Tea Company (New Jersey) in 1979, or A&P for short. In 1984, the company acquired a majority stake in Hermans Groep in the Netherlands and rebranded its supermarkets and hypermarkets as A&P in 1994. The Dutch business was sold again in 2000.

At the end of the 1980s, Tengelmann expanded its portfolio with the textile and consumer goods discounter Rudis Reste Rampe.[6] In 1997, the decision was made to concentrate on the food business and all 156 stores were sold to the Berlin-based Wand-&-Boden Group. After the fall of the Iron Curtain, the company also expanded into the former Eastern Bloc by opening Plus stores in Hungary and Poland. In 1990, Tengelmann took over the Modea textile chain. This was followed seven years later by a management buy-out and the renaming of the company to Takko ModeMarkt GmbH & Co. KG. Today, the company operates under the name Takko Holding GmbH. The Tengelmann Group is no longer involved.

In 2000, Erivan Haub handed over the operational business to his sons Karl-Erivan Haub and Christian W. E. Haub. The 111 department stores of Grosso and Magnet were sold, 66 of them to Lidl & Schwarz.[7] In the same year, the first OBI store was opened in the People’s Republic of China in Wuxi. Tengelmann-Warenhandelsgesellschaft has been a limited partnership since 2002. On June 30, 2003, Wilh. Schmitz-Scholl Schokoladen- und Zuckerwaren GmbH (Wissoll) was taken over by the Dortmund-based confectionery manufacturer van Netten GmbH. van Netten filed for insolvency on October 18, 2012; after an unsuccessful search for an investor, liquidation followed in June 2013. In April 2005, the Chinese Obi stores were sold to the British DIY chain Kingfisher. On May 1, 2005, Tengelmann sold the 307 stores of the drugstore chain kd kaiser’s drugstore GmbH to Rossmann GmbH. In the same year, the Hungarian and Slovenian Interfruct Cash & Carry stores and the Canadian subsidiary of the A&P Tea Company were also sold.

In 2007, A&P took over the American supermarket chain Pathmark with 141 stores. In the same year, the Spanish Plus stores were sold to the French retailer Carrefour and the stores in Poland and Portugal were sold to the Portuguese retail chain Jerónimo Martins.

Divestiture of Subsidiaries within the Group

Die „letzte“ Tengelmann-Tragetasche mit „I'm green“ aus Zuckerrohr von 2018
Die „letzte“ Tengelmann-Tragetasche mit „I'm green“ aus Zuckerrohr von 2018

On January 1, 2009, Plus merged with Netto Marken-Discount, part of the Edeka group; Edeka holds an 85 percent majority stake in the newly founded company. Plus and Netto together now achieve sales figures similar to the industry leaders Lidl and Aldi. The Plus stores were rebranded as Netto by mid-2010. In 2008, the Czech Plus stores were sold to Rewe Group, the Hungarian stores to Spar Austria and the Greek stores to the Belgian retail chain Delhaize Group. On February 19, 2010, the Bulgarian and Romanian Plus stores were sold to the discounter Lidl. The Austrian branches of the Plus brand, which are operated as Zielpunkt, were sold to the German-Luxembourgish financial investor BluO.

In 2010, Woolworth Germany was acquired, but these shares were sold in 2012. The Tengelmann supermarkets in the Rhine-Main region were sold to Rewe and Tegut.

The sale of the Tengelmann stores to Edeka initially failed in August 2015 due to antitrust concerns. In March 2016, the Federal Minister of Economics Sigmar Gabriel finally approved the sale to Edeka with a ministerial authorization.[8] At the end of October 2016, Sigmar Gabriel and Verdi boss Frank Bsirske announced the agreement between the bosses of Edeka and Rewe, Markus Mosa and Alain Caparros.

In December 2020, Tengelmann acquired all shares in Kik in exchange for the TEDi shares.[9]

In July 2022, the Obi business in Russia with 27 stores at the time was sold to the Russian financial and real estate investor MAX for a symbolic purchase price.[10]

Further information

During the 1994 general election campaign, the Haub family ran newspaper advertisements advocating for the re-election of the incumbent Chancellor, Helmut Kohl (CDU), under the slogan “When in doubt, vote for Kohl”. In 2005, this campaign was reprised for the then opposition leader, Angela Merkel (CDU), with the slogan “When in doubt, choose a woman”. In 2013, the Haub family once again used advertisements to encourage people to vote for the CDU/CSU. Referring to the Merkel diamond and the Steinbrück stink finger, they advised readers to “when in doubt, vote for the diamond”.[11]

Starting from 1995, the so-called “Run for Tengelmann” was held annually. The participation fees were donated to organizations that support disabled sports. In 2014, only a scaled-down run took place due to the Whitsun storm Ela. Only the school runs were initiated, as large parts of the senior courses were impassable due to fallen trees or falling branches. The event has not been held since 2016. With the withdrawal from the food business, sponsors from the food industry are no longer available.[12] In May 2017, an open day was held on a much smaller scale.

Karl-Erivan Haub, the former managing partner of Tengelmann Warenhandelsgesellschaft KG, has been missing since April 7, 2018. He disappeared during his training for the Patrouille des Glaciers in the Matterhorn region. On April 17, 2018, his brother Christian Haub assumed sole management of the Group.[13] On May 14, 2021, the Cologne District Court declared Karl-Erivan Haub dead. This was preceded by an application by the two brothers, Christian and Georg, who wanted to have their brother declared dead in October 2020; at that time, all three brothers each held a third of the company shares. However, Georg Haub withdrew from this application in January 2021. After reaching an agreement with Katrin Haub, Karl-Erivan’s widow, to sell the third of the company shares held by her husband to brother Christian after his death, she agreed in April 2021 to have her husband declared dead. The purchase price is said to be at least 1.1 billion euros.[14] In June 2021, Christian Haub became the majority shareholder of the Tengelmann Group with the purchase of additional shares in the company.[15]

Business Areas

The company has four business divisions (Retail, Venture & Growth, Real Estate and Other) to which the Group subsidiaries are subordinated as follows:

Retail

KiK

Tengelmann holds almost 100 percent of the textile discounter with 4047 stores in twelve countries, a total turnover of 1.8 billion euros and 29,000 employees:[16]

Staat Anzahl der
Märkte
 Germany 2583
 Croatia 85
 Austria 257
 Slovakia 101
 Slovenia 61
 Czech Republic 223
 Hungary 104
 Netherlands 43
 Poland 415
 Italy 74
 Romania 80
 Bulgaria 21

OBI

Tengelmann holds a 74 percent stake in Obi. Obi operates 645 DIY stores (chain stores and franchise partner stores) in 10 countries and generates total sales of 6.1 billion Euros with 34.932 employees:[17]

Staat Anzahl der
Märkte
 Germany 351
 Bosnia and Herzegovina 1
 Italy 57
 Austria 79
 Poland 59
 Slovakia 16
 Switzerland 11
 Slovenia 8
 Czech Republic 33
 Hungary 30

Venture & Growth

babymarkt.de

Tengelmann Growth Partners (TGP)

Emil Capital Partners (ECP)

Tengelmann Ventures (TEV)[18]

Real Estate

Trei Real Estate[19]

Other

Tengelmann Assekuranz

Tengelmann Audit (TAG)

Tengelmann Energie (TEG)

Sold supermarket chains

  • Kaiser’s Tengelmann, 531 retail outlets sold to Edeka in January 2017, which in turn transferred 25% of the outlets to REWE as dictated by the German Federal Cartel Office; all stores were rebranded according to the brands of their new owners
  • Plus Discount spol. s r. o. (Czech Republic) with 134 branches sold to REWE-Beteiligungs-Holding International GmbH
  • Plus Hellas E.P.E. & Sia E.E. (Greece) with 32 branches sold to Alfa-Beta Vassilopoulos
  • Plus Élelmiszer Diszkont Kft. (Hungary) with 174 Plus (in 2008) and 22 Kaiser's (in 2003) branches sold to Spar Magyarország Kereskedelmi Kft.
  • Plus Discount Bulgaria 25 branches (sold to Lidl & Schwarz)
  • Plus Discount sp. z o.o. (Poland) with 183 branches sold to Jerónimo Martins
  • Plus Discount-Supermercados Lda. (Portugal) with 72 branches sold to Jerónimo Martins
  • Plus Discount Romania S.C.S. (Romania) with 100 branches (sold to Lidl & Schwarz)
  • Plus Supermercados, S. A. (Spain) with 238 branches sold to Carrefour and rebranded as Dia
  • The Great Atlantic & Pacific Tea Company, exited as stockholder in 2012[20]
  • Plus Österreich, Zielpunkt [de] Warenhandels-AG (Austria), formerly Löwa, mostly badged as Zielpunkt, with 300 supermarkets. Also includes former branches of the defunct Konsum Österreich [de] and Julius Meinl chains. Sold to Blue O in 2010.[21]

References

  1. ^ mz-web.de
  2. ^ a b https://www.bundesanzeiger.de/pub/de/suchergebnis?13
  3. ^ https://tengelmann21.com/en/company/
  4. ^ https://www.ndr.de/fernsehen/sendungen/panorama_die_reporter/Aus-fuer-Haendler-des-Jahres,tengelmann159.html
  5. ^ Verlagsankündigung Klartext Verlag 2018, S. 43. Oktober 2018 erscheint ein Buch dazu. Lutz Niethammer (Hrsg.): Tengelmann im Dritten Reich, ISBN 978-3-8375-1223-6.
  6. ^ https://web.archive.org/web/20141112113648/http://www.textilwirtschaft.de/suche/show.php?ids%5B%5D=406650
  7. ^ https://www.tagesspiegel.de/wirtschaft/der-konzern-verkauft-grosso-und-magnet-konsortium-ubernimmt-grossmarkte-655189.html
  8. ^ https://www.tagesschau.de/wirtschaft/edeka-tengelmann-107.html
  9. ^ https://tengelmann21.com/unternehmen/
  10. ^ https://www.vedomosti.ru/business/articles/2023/01/09/958271-u-obi-v-tretii-raz-smenilis-sobstvenniki
  11. ^ https://www.spiegel.de/wirtschaft/unternehmen/tengelmann-schaltet-anzeige-fuer-merkel-a-923457.html
  12. ^ https://web.archive.org/web/20150311072725/http://www.tengelmann-lauf.de/
  13. ^ https://www.manager-magazin.de/unternehmen/handel/tengelmann-christian-haub-uebernimmt-alleinige-geschaeftsfuehrung-a-1203559.html
  14. ^ https://www.tagesspiegel.de/wirtschaft/11-milliarden-euro-zum-abschied-4203130.html
  15. ^ https://www.spiegel.de/wirtschaft/unternehmen/tengelmann-karl-erivan-haub-fuer-tot-erklaert-christian-haub-uebernimmt-mehrheit-a-87ccc191-f5a7-4a44-b69d-801fc50e0991
  16. ^ https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/KiK
  17. ^ https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Obi_(Baumarkt)
  18. ^ https://tengelmann21.com/unternehmen/
  19. ^ https://tengelmann21.com/unternehmen/
  20. ^ "Company History". Tengelmann. Archived from the original on 5 December 2013. Retrieved 18 December 2013.
  21. ^ "Neuer Arbeitgeber – und was nun?". diepresse.com. 28 June 2010. Retrieved 2016-07-09.