Continental Sells ContiTech for €4.0 Billion, Becomes Pure-Play Tire Manufacturer
Continental announced the sale of its ContiTech industrial unit to Lone Star Funds for €4.0 billion, marking the final step in its realignment into a focused tire manufacturer.
€4.0 billion
€3.1 billion
€2.5 billion
What Happened
Continental has agreed to sell its ContiTech group sector to an affiliate of Lone Star Funds for €4.0 billion, with additional performance-based payments of up to €250 million. The transaction is the final step in Continental's realignment and, upon completion, will make it a pure-play tire manufacturer for the first time. The sale is subject to regulatory approval. Continental expects a cash inflow of around €3.1 billion after accounting for transferred net liabilities, and plans to allocate approximately €2.5 billion to a special dividend or a combination of dividends and share buybacks.
€4.0 billionEUR
plus up to €250 million in performance-based components
“With the sale of ContiTech, the Supervisory Board approved the final step in Continental's realignment. This strategic focus will make Continental and ContiTech even stronger.”
“The sale of ContiTech not only marks the final step in our strategic realignment, but also the beginning of a new era as a pure-play tire manufacturer.”
“We are convinced of ContiTech's significant potential. Together, we will further develop the business – through operational improvements and targeted investments in attractive growth markets.”
ContiTech employs around 22,000 people worldwide and achieved sales of approximately €4.4 billion in fiscal 2025, with 80% from industrial sectors. Its portfolio includes conveyor and drive systems, fluid management, and damping applications, serving mining, energy, construction, and other markets. Lone Star Funds will take over all ContiTech operations globally.
Continental's remaining tire business employs about 55,000 people across 19 plants, with strong brand recognition and multiple award-winning products. Passenger-car tires account for 77% of tire sales, with 53% from the EMEA region and 76% from replacement tires. The company is focusing on premium ultra-high-performance tires (18 inches and larger), which now represent 55% of passenger-car tire sales, and sees Asia and North America as key growth markets.
Why this matters
The sale transforms Continental into a pure-play tire company for the first time, returning €2.5 billion to shareholders via dividends or buybacks. It affects ContiTech's 22,000 employees and Continental's 55,000-strong tire workforce, and signals a strategic shift away from diversified industrial operations.
Terms in This Story
- pure-play
- A company focused on a single line of business, in this case tires.
- special dividend
- A one-time payment to shareholders, typically from a major transaction.
- share buyback
- A company repurchases its own shares from the market, reducing the number of outstanding shares.
Summarised from the linked release; details can be imperfect — always verify against the original source.