Vonovia
Mr. Rolf Eberhard Buch (Chairman of the Management Board & CEO)
Mr. Daniel Joachim Riedl FRICS (Chief Devel. Officer & Member of Management Board)
Ms. Helene von Roeder (Chief Transformation Officer & Member of Management Board)
Summary
History
Early years
At the end of the 1990s, the German government decided to privatize railway workers' homes as part of the railway reform. The Japanese financial group Nomura Holdings and its subsidiary Deutsche Annington sought to acquire them. After years of negotiations, the company finally received a significant share in 2000. The company responded to criticism of the sale with extensive exclusive rights, such as a lifetime right of residence and a restriction on rent increases. Besides, tenants were allowed to purchase their property. In the following years, Deutsche Annington invested in further smaller stocks of railway workers' apartments, which had previously remained in the ownership of the federal government.
Acquisitions
Deutsche Annington took over several smaller holdings, for example, from Allianz and RWE. In 2003, the E.ON energy group also put its real estate business up for sale under the name Viterra. With the acquisition of over 150,000 apartments, Deutsche Annington became the market leader in Germany. It was the largest transaction of its kind in the country's history, which met with criticism from unions and tenant protection associations alike. In the course of this, Terra Firma Capital Partner's majority shareholding in Deutsche Annington was repeatedly brought up as a central theme.Deutsche Annington achieved its returns with a combination of renting and selling apartments. It was instrumental in shaping the concept of socially responsible tenant privatization. In this way, the company wanted to raise funds to expand its portfolio to half a million and later even to one million apartments. In 2007, Deutsche Annington announced that it would again turn away from tenant privatization. From then on, the company concentrated on smaller acquisitions, such as the Sparkassen-Finanzgruppe's subsidiary Corpus.
Going public
In 2010, the profit of Deutsche Annington exceeded the 500 million euro mark for the first time. Nevertheless, the global economic and financial crisis made access to cheap debt capital more difficult. Refinancing became one of the main problems of the entire real estate industry. For this reason, an IPO was back on the agenda. To this end, the company hired Rolf Buch, a former member of the Bertelsmann executive board, as CEO. He emphasized above all the size of the company as a distinguishing feature. The rise in key interest rates dampened the interest of potential investors so that the IPO had to be postponed several times. In 2013, Deutsche Annington finally placed its shares on the Frankfurt Stock Exchange with a lower volume and a reduced issue price. Two years later, the company became the first representative of the real estate industry to be included in the DAX, the index of the largest listed stock corporations in Germany.
Vonovia origins
The media had already reported on Deutsche Annington's interest in GAGFAH in 2003. At the end of 2014, Deutsche Annington then officially offered to take over the competitor for around 3.9 billion euros to create a leading residential property group in Europe. Following the approval of the shareholders and the antitrust authorities, the transaction was completed ahead of schedule in March 2015. In 2015, the annual General Meeting voted to rename the company Vonovia to modernize its external image. The administrative and statutory headquarters were moved to the new offices in Bochum.
European expansion
In contrast, initially Vonovia failed with its 2015 offer for Deutsche Wohnen, but at least prevented Deutsche Wohnen's planned merger with LEG Immobilien. The company then turned to the neighboring states: A strategic partnership was agreed with the French housing company Société Nationale Immobilière in 2017. The acquisition of Conwert Immobilien and BUWOG made Vonovia the leading real estate group in Austria in 2018. In the same year, the company exceeded the threshold of 50% of the shares in the Swedish housing company Victoria Park, which has been 100% owned by Vonovia since 2019. Vonovia expanded its position there by acquiring its Swedish rival Hembla.
A renewed attempt at taking over Deutsche Wohnen in May 2021 was approved by the Federal Cartel Office but stalled when the 50% threshold was not met at first. Only the third offer from August 2021 resulted in more than 60% acceptances, thus successfully completing the takeover.
Mission
Vision
Key Team
Mr. Philip Grosse (CFO & Member of Management Board)
Mr. Rene Hoffmann (Head of Investor Relations)
Klaus Markus (Head of Corp. Communications)
Dr. Karsten Rech (CIO)
Mr. Alexander Weihe (Head of Innovation & Bus. Building)
Dr. Isabel Ohlies (Head of Innovation Management - Innovation & Bus. Building)
Mr. Arnd Fittkau (Chief Rental Officer & Member of Management Board)
Recognition and Awards
References
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Mr. Rolf Eberhard Buch (Chairman of the Management Board & CEO)
Mr. Daniel Joachim Riedl FRICS (Chief Devel. Officer & Member of Management Board)
Ms. Helene von Roeder (Chief Transformation Officer & Member of Management Board)
