Tengelmann Group

Last updated
Tengelmann-Group
Company typeLimited commercial partnership
(Kommanditgesellschaft)
Industry Retail, 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]
Website tengelmann21.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 (retail chain) 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]

Contents

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 Mulheim an der Ruhr Ruhrstrasse 3 (Mulheim) September 2013.jpg
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.

Bundesarchiv Bild 194-4688-55, Wissoll Schokoladenfabrik, Fahrzeugpark.jpg

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 Tengelmanneinkauftute 2seitig.gif
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. [3]

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. [9]

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”. [10]

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. [11] 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. [12] 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. [13] In June 2021, Christian Haub became the majority shareholder of the Tengelmann Group with the purchase of additional shares in the company. [14]

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

KiK-Logo.svg

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: [15]

CountryNumber of
Stores
Flag of Germany.svg  Germany 2583
Flag of Croatia.svg  Croatia 85
Flag of Austria.svg  Austria 257
Flag of Slovakia.svg  Slovakia 101
Flag of Slovenia.svg  Slovenia 61
Flag of the Czech Republic.svg  Czech Republic 223
Flag of Hungary.svg  Hungary 104
Flag of the Netherlands.svg  Netherlands 43
Flag of Poland.svg  Poland 415
Flag of Italy.svg  Italy 74
Flag of Romania.svg  Romania 80
Flag of Bulgaria.svg  Bulgaria 21

OBI

Obi.svg

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: [16]

CountryNumber of
Stores
Flag of Germany.svg  Germany 351
Flag of Bosnia and Herzegovina.svg  Bosnia and Herzegovina 1
Flag of Italy.svg  Italy 57
Flag of Austria.svg  Austria 79
Flag of Poland.svg  Poland 59
Flag of Slovakia.svg  Slovakia 16
Flag of Switzerland (Pantone).svg  Switzerland 11
Flag of Slovenia.svg  Slovenia 8
Flag of the Czech Republic.svg  Czech Republic 33
Flag of Hungary.svg  Hungary 30

Venture & Growth

babymarkt.de

Tengelmann Growth Partners (TGP)

Emil Capital Partners (ECP)

Tengelmann Ventures (TEV) [17]

Real Estate

Trei Real Estate [17]

Other

Tengelmann Assekuranz

Tengelmann Audit (TAG)

Tengelmann Energie (TEG) [17]

Former corporate participations

Tengelmann E-Commerce GmbH

was a 100 percent subsidiary. This included Garten XXL and Plus.de, as well as Tengelmann Ventures GmbH, through which the Tengelmann Group has been investing in e-commerce since 2010. This included, among others, Zalando, Westwing, [18] babymarkt.de, youtailor.de, Enólogos, stylight.de, and since mid-2011, the coffee startup Coffee Circle from Berlin. Garten XXL and Plus.de were taken over by the Edeka Group and integrated into Netto Marken-Discount. [3]

Netto Marken-Discount

15 percent of the food discounter as a silent participation from November 2009. In July 2020, the sale of the Netto participation to Edeka was announced for January 1, 2021. [19]

TEDi

Until January 1, 2021, Tengelmann held 35 percent of the one-euro discounter with 1794 branches. [20]

Former Distribution Lines

Accos

Food chain, existed from 1950, belonged to Tengelmann from 1978 and was rebranded to Kaiser’s Tengelmann in 1992 (except for four branches).

Grosso-Magnet

Self-service department store chain with branches in Germany and Austria. The German branches were sold in parts to Bartels-Langness, the Dohle Group, and the Schwarz Group in 2000. [21] The Magnet branches in Austria went to ADEG. [22]

Gubi

Gubi (abbreviation for Gut (Good) and Billig (cheap)), a food chain headquartered in Donauwörth, was founded in 1911 by the Proeller family and became part of the Tengelmann Group in 1987. By the turn of the millennium, the branches disappeared and were rebranded to Kaiser’s Tengelmann. The meat plant at the headquarters was attached to the subsidiary Birkenhof (now part of Edeka Südwest), and the in-house nursery and bakery were closed.

Kd Kaiser´s drugstore

Drugstore chain, founded in 1969 as a subsidiary of Kaiser’s, with over 500 branches in Germany at peak times. From 2003, there was a cooperation with Rossmann, and in 2005, the company along with the remaining branches was sold to Rossmann. [23]

Kaiser´s Tengelmann

Full-range supermarkets with 501 branches and 1.94 billion euros in sales in Germany, 16,514 employees (2013). In October 2014, it was announced that the supermarkets were to be sold to Edeka. The Cartel Office did not give its approval; however, the German Federal Minister of Economics, Sigmar Gabriel, indicated a ministerial permit under strict conditions, which was temporarily stopped by the Higher Regional Court of Düsseldorf in the summer of 2016. Nevertheless, the negotiation talks between Edeka and Tengelmann continued, and an agreement was reached regarding the takeover. On January 1, 2017, the Kaiser’s Tengelmann division changed owners. Since then, it is no longer part of the Tengelmann Group, but now belongs to Edeka. [24]

LeDi

LeDi (abbreviation for LebensmittelDiscount), a hard discounter, existed from 1992 and merged into the Plus Warenhandelsgesellschaft in 1999, the branches were rebranded to Plus.

Plus

Soft discounter with branches in several European countries. The German branches were sold to Edeka in 2009 and rebranded to Netto Marken-Discount. [25]

Literature

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Aldi</span> German multinational discount supermarket chain

Aldi is the common company brand name of two German multinational family-owned discount supermarket chains operating over 12,000 stores in 18 countries. The chain was founded by brothers Karl and Theo Albrecht in 1946, when they took over their mother's store in Essen. The business was split into two separate groups in 1960, that later became Aldi Nord, headquartered in Essen, and Aldi Süd, headquartered in neighbouring Mülheim.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">A&P</span> Defunct American grocery store chain

The Great Atlantic & Pacific Tea Company, better known as A&P, was an American chain of grocery stores that operated from 1859 to 2015. From 1915 through 1975, A&P was the largest grocery retailer in the United States.

A discount store or discounter offers a retail format in which products are sold at prices that are in principle lower than an actual or supposed "full retail price". Discounters rely on bulk purchasing and efficient distribution to keep down costs.

Erivan Karl Matthias Haub was a German billionaire businessman, and the managing director and part owner of Tengelmann Group, one of Germany's largest retailers. At the time of his death in March 2018, his net worth was estimated at US$6.4 billion.

Netto is a Danish discount supermarket brand operating in Denmark, Germany and Poland. Netto is a part Salling Group.

Salling Group A/S is Denmark's largest retailer, with a market share around 34%. It operates several chains of stores, including Netto, Føtex, Bilka, and Salling. Additionally, it holds franchise rights for Starbucks and Carl's Jr. in Denmark. Salling Group's international operations include Netto, which has expanded into Germany and Poland, and has made two unsuccessful attempts at operating in the United Kingdom. Its stores in Sweden were sold off in 2019.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Edeka</span> German supermarket corporation

The Edeka Group is the largest German supermarket corporation as of 2017, holding a market share of 25.3%. Founded in 1907, it currently consists of several co-operatives of independent supermarkets, all operating under the umbrella organisation Edeka Zentrale AG & Co KG, with headquarters in Hamburg. There are approximately 4,100 stores with the Edeka nameplate, ranging from small corner stores to hypermarkets. On 16 November 2007, Edeka reached an agreement with Tengelmann to purchase a 70% majority stake in Tengelmann's Plus discounter store division, which was then merged into Edeka's Netto brand, resulting in around 4,200 stores by 2018. Across all brands, the company operated a total of 13,646 stores at the end of 2017.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Woolworth Deutschland</span> German department store chain

Deutsche Woolworth GmbH & Company OHG is a chain of department stores in Germany and was a former subsidiary of the American F. W. Woolworth Company. As of 2022 the chain has more than 570 stores in Germany, 18 in Poland and 2 in Austria, they are aiming to have over 1,000 in the medium term and over 5,000 across Europe in the long term.

Christian W.E. Haub is a German billionaire businessman. He is the CEO of the Tengelmann Group, the chairman and president of Emil Capital Partners and a former director and CEO of Montvale, New Jersey's Great Atlantic and Pacific Tea Company from December 1991 to February 2002.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Netto (Les Mousquetaires)</span>

Netto is a French discount supermarket chain owned by the Les Mousquetaires group. Previously known as Comptoir des Marchands, the chain changed its name to Netto in 2001. As of 2005 there are over 360 Netto stores in France and Portugal.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Netto Marken-Discount</span> German chain of discount supermarkets

Netto Marken-Discount is a German discount supermarket chain owned by the German supermarket cooperative Edeka Group, and operates mostly in the south and west of Germany. The company reached its 1000th store in 2004, then aggressively expanded to the 4000th store in 2009, making it the largest discounter in Germany.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Mein Real</span> German hypermarket chain

Mein Real was a chain of hypermarkets in Germany owned by Metro AG until 2020 when it was sold to The SCP Group. It was formed in 1992, from the merger of chains divi, Basar, Continent, Esbella and real-kauf. Until 2014 it was also active internationally, in Poland, Romania, Russia, Ukraine and Turkey; most of these operations were bought by French retail company Auchan Group. In 2018, Metro decided to divest the Real chain and in 2021, many markets were taken over by either Edeka, Kaufland, Globus, Rewe or V-Markt and got rebranded with the brand of the respective new owner. The process of selling was finished by mid of 2022. However, the original plans to liquidate real completely were dropped in early 2022 when it was decided that the remaining 60 stores will continue under the real brand name under new ownership. Real's former website (real.de) was replaced by kaufland.de in 2021. The new website can be found at meinreal.de.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Plus (German supermarket)</span> Former German chain of discount supermarkets

Plus was a German multinational discount supermarket chain founded in 1972. It operated 2,840 stores in Germany with an approximate 27,000 employees and about 1,200 stores in several other European countries. The retail model was to sell low-cost groceries with no expense incurred for display or marketing of products. Groceries were stored in the shipping cartons they came in, rather than being stacked on shelves. In German advertising, the name "Plus" was used as a backronym for "Prima leben und sparen", featuring animated "little prices" as their mascot.

OBI GmbH & Co. Deutschland KG is a German multinational home improvement supplies retailing company. It is headquartered in Wermelskirchen and operates 668 stores in Europe, of which 351 are in Germany.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">REWE Group</span> German supermarket corporation

The REWE Group is a German diversified retail and tourism co-operative group based in Cologne, Germany. The name REWE comes from Revisionsverband der Westkauf-Genossenschaften", meaning "Western Buying Co-operatives Auditing Association".

Jost-Stefan Heinig is CEO of the major German company KiK Textilien und Non-Food GmbH from Bönen. KiK came under pressure by dumping salaries and abusing female workers in Bangladesh and other Third World countries. Heinig participates with his Dortmund Firma H. H. Holding GmbH by 65% from TEDi and with 15% an KiK. The main shareholder of KiK is the company Tengelmann International GmbH from Mülheim an der Ruhr with a stake of 83.02%.

Karl-Erivan Haub was an American-born German-Russian billionaire businessman. He was managing director and part owner of Tengelmann Group. He disappeared while mountaineering on April 7, 2018, and was legally declared dead by a German court in May 2021.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Netto UK</span> Former discount supermarket chain

Netto was a discount supermarket chain in the United Kingdom. Netto arrived in the United Kingdom in December 1990, as part of an internationalisation process by its Danish owner, Salling Group. By May 2010, it operated 193 stores, before it was sold to Asda. In June 2014, Salling Group returned Netto to the United Kingdom, as a 50:50 joint venture with Sainsbury's.

Amalie Luise Elisabeth Haub was a German heiress, philanthropist and environmentalist.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Karl Schmitz-Scholl</span>

Karl Friedrich Schmitz-Scholl officially Karl Friedrich Schmitz was a German businessman, merchant and controlling shareholder of Tengelmann, which was founded by his father Wilhelm Schmitz, in 1867.

References

  1. mz-web.de
  2. 1 2 "– Bundesanzeiger".
  3. 1 2 3 "Company". Tengelmann Twenty-One. Retrieved 2024-08-13.
  4. "Aus für "Händler des Jahres"?". www.ndr.de (in German). Retrieved 2024-08-13.
  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. "News, Fashion, Business, Jobs, Stellenangebote, Textilbranche | www.TextilWirtschaft.de". 2014-11-12. Archived from the original on 2014-11-12. Retrieved 2024-08-13.
  7. "Wirtschaft: Der Konzern verkauft Grosso und Magnet - Konsortium übernimmt Großmärkte". Der Tagesspiegel Online (in German). ISSN   1865-2263 . Retrieved 2024-08-13.
  8. "Gabriel erlaubt Fusion von Edeka und Tengelmann". tagesschau.de (in German). Retrieved 2024-08-13.
  9. "У российских гипермаркетов OBI в третий раз за год сменились собственники". Ведомости (in Russian). 2023-01-09. Retrieved 2024-08-13.
  10. "Tengelmann schaltet Anzeige für Merkel". Der Spiegel (in German). 2013-09-20. ISSN   2195-1349 . Retrieved 2024-08-13.
  11. "Home". 2015-03-11. Archived from the original on 2015-03-11. Retrieved 2024-08-13.
  12. "Tengelmann: Christian Haub übernimmt alleinige Geschäftsführung". www.manager-magazin.de (in German). 2018-04-18. Retrieved 2024-08-13.
  13. "Familienzoff im Hause Tengelmann: 1,1 Milliarden Euro zum Abschied". Der Tagesspiegel Online (in German). ISSN   1865-2263 . Retrieved 2024-08-13.
  14. "Tengelmann: Karl-Erivan Haub für tot erklärt – Christian Haub übernimmt Mehrheit". Der Spiegel (in German). 2021-06-24. ISSN   2195-1349 . Retrieved 2024-08-13.
  15. "KiK".
  16. "Obi (Baumarkt)".
  17. 1 2 3 "Unternehmen".
  18. "Tengelmann macht jetzt in Möbeln". n-tv.de (in German). Retrieved 2024-08-13.
  19. "Handelsblatt".
  20. "Tengelmann: Eigentümer von Kik und Tedi trennen sich". FAZ.NET (in German). 2020-12-23. Retrieved 2024-08-13.
  21. "Umsatzverluste: Tengelmann verkauft Grosso- und Magnet-Märkte". Der Spiegel (in German). 2000-02-10. ISSN   2195-1349 . Retrieved 2024-08-13.
  22. "Magnet-Märkte ab heute unter ADEG Flagge". pressetext. Retrieved 2024-08-13.
  23. "Tengelmann: Rossmann steigt bei KD ein". www.manager-magazin.de (in German). 2003-08-06. Retrieved 2024-08-13.
  24. "Die Zeit von Kaiser's Tengelmann ist zuende". n-tv.de (in German). Retrieved 2024-08-13.
  25. "Edeka darf Discounter kaufen". Süddeutsche.de (in German). 2010-05-17. Retrieved 2024-08-13.