Thirty years ago, after the fall of the Berlin Wall, former German Chancellor Willy Brandt coined a bon mot that has since been quoted to death: "Now what belongs together is growing together." Brandt's statement can only be applied to a limited extent to the Ringier-Mobiliar deal : "Actually, our two companies don't fit together," said Mobiliar CEO Markus Hongler on Monday morning in the Ringier press house, before immediately countering - as counter-evidence - with an old love aphorism: "Opposites attract."
One thing is clear: the interest in investing in laos rcs data Ringier is great, surprisingly great for a media deal. There are various reasons for this:
For the first time, the family-run company Ringier has brought in an external partner from outside the industry, with the exception of CEO Marc Walder, who currently owns 10 percent of the shares. Walder is honest , his company needs money. Ringier is implementing costs a lot, a lot. An estimated two billion Swiss francs so far. But now 70 percent of the group's profits are said to come from online business, which is unusual worldwide. Which means that Ringgi and Zofi are fully in the transformation process. The model for this deal is the big brother in Germany, where the American stock exchange company KKR has a stake in Axel Springer.