Family Equity since 1756

Bold entrepreneurship and continuous transformation have accompanied Haniel's successful history for more than 265 years.

About Haniel

Franz Haniel & Cie. GmbH is a German family equity company headquartered in Duisburg-Ruhrort since its founding in 1756. We manage a diversified portfolio and pursue a long-term investment strategy as a 100 percent family-owned holding.

Our strategy combines two approaches into an integrated overall portfolio: First, through direct investments, we primarily develop majority holdings in market-leading business services companies across Europe. In addition, we create value with "FHC Capital" through a globally oriented multi-asset portfolio that covers various investment classes.

Direct investments
FHC Capital

Creating Value for Generations

Driven by this purpose, we combine entrepreneurial success with responsibility for the environment and society—in line with the “enkelfähig" ethos of our founding family.

Haniel Leadership Team

Extended management

At Haniel, decisions are made in close consultation between the Management Board and a diverse extended leadership team. The members of this team bring different personal strengths, perspectives and professional experience to the table.

Team

Management

Photo of Joachim Drees, Haniel CEO

was appointed to the Haniel Management Board as CEO in October 2024. From 2015 to 2020, he served as CEO of MAN SE and MAN Truck & Bus SE. Prior to that, he held several senior positions, including CFO at Drees & Sommer, a company founded by his father, and long-standing Partner at the international private equity firm HgCapital in London. A graduate in Business Administration and MBA holder, he began his career in management consulting at the auditing and consulting firm Price Waterhouse.

Joachim Drees

CEO

Joachim Drees

CEO

was appointed to the Haniel Management Board as CEO in October 2024. From 2015 to 2020, he served as CEO of MAN SE and MAN Truck & Bus SE. Prior to that, he held several senior positions, including CFO at Drees & Sommer, a company founded by his father, and long-standing Partner at the international private equity firm HgCapital in London. A graduate in Business Administration and MBA holder, he began his career in management consulting at the auditing and consulting firm Price Waterhouse.

Photo of Henk Derksen, Haniel CFO

has been CFO of Haniel since October 2023. The Dutchman started his career at Price Waterhouse Coopers and worked 21 years for the US company Belden Inc., serving as CFO since 2012. Before joining the Haniel management team, he was Executive Vice President and CFO at the technology company VIAVI Solutions. Henk Derksen studied economics, holds a master's degree in Accounting, Business Administration and Tax, and is a registered controller at Tias Business School in Tilburg.

Henk Derksen

CFO

Henk Derksen

CFO

has been CFO of Haniel since October 2023. The Dutchman started his career at Price Waterhouse Coopers and worked 21 years for the US company Belden Inc., serving as CFO since 2012. Before joining the Haniel management team, he was Executive Vice President and CFO at the technology company VIAVI Solutions. Henk Derksen studied economics, holds a master's degree in Accounting, Business Administration and Tax, and is a registered controller at Tias Business School in Tilburg.

Supervisory Board

Strong partners at the top

The Supervisory Board monitors the work of the Management Board and supports it in an advisory capacity. Both boards must agree on important strategic decisions. In this process, the Supervisory Board pays particular attention to ensuring that the Group develops in harmony with its traditional values. The Supervisory Board at Haniel is composed of six shareholder representatives and six employee representatives. 

 

Team

Supervisory Board

  • Maximilian Schwaiger,
  • Chairman
  • Diplom-Kaufmann (degree in business administration)
  •  
  • Prof. Dr. Kay Windthorst, 
  • Deputy Chairman
  • University professor
  •  
  •  
  • Georg Friedrich Baur,
  • Entrepreneur and farmer
  •  
  • Nadia Meier-Kirner,
  • Diplom-Kauffrau (degree in business administration)

  • Fabíola Fernandez,
  • CFO

    Dr. Thomas Vollmoeller,
    Independent consultant

Dirk Patermann
Deputy Chairman
Chairman of the Central Works Council
CWS Hygiene Deutschland GmbH

Miriam Bürger
Union Secretary
IG Metall

Thomas Kniehl
Chairman Works Council Kaiser + Kraft GmbH
Chairman of the Group Works Council

Lutz Leischner
Diplom-Mathematiker (degree in mathematics)
CWS-boco Supply Chain Management GmbH

  • Carsten Birnstiel
    Chairman Works Council Rovema GmbH

  • Michael Wagner
    Union secretary verdi

Portrait Aletta Haniel

Tradition of transformation

History

With a history spanning over 265 years, Haniel ranks among the most established family-owned companies in Germany. Our roots trace back to the former “Packhaus” in Duisburg-Ruhrort—a historic site that today houses the Haniel Museum. Discover how Haniel has evolved over more than two centuries from a colonial goods trading company into a modern investment enterprise.

1756

Foundation charter

On February 10, 1756, Frederick II, King of Prussia, personally signs a leasehold agreement for three plots of land outside the Ruhrort city walls. This entitles the local customs supervisor Jan Willem Noot to build a "Packhaus" which, in addition to storing tea, coffee, cotton and spices (so-called "colonial goods"), also serves as a residence for him and his family. Thus, 1756 becomes the founding year of the company, as the Packhaus becomes the nucleus of the later Haniel businesses. 

1761

Marriage Noot & Haniel

In November 1761, Aletta, the eldest daughter of Jan Willem Noot, marries the Duisburg wine merchant Jacob Wilhelm Haniel. During the marriage, which lasted 21 years, Aletta gave birth to eleven children, only four of whom reached adulthood. Johannes Franziscus was born on November 27, 1776. He is later known by the first name Franz and would lead his family's company to international success. 

1772

Trade in wine and colonial goods

When Jan Willem Noot dies, his daughter Aletta and her husband Jacob Wilhelm Haniel take over the Ruhrort Packhaus in 1772. The former warehouse and residential building is now run as a trading house for the first time. Wine trading and forwarding of a general nature now form the main business of the Jacob W. Haniel company.

1782

Jacob Wilhelm Haniel dies, Aletta continues the business

After the death of her husband in 1782, Aletta Haniel continues the wine trade and general forwarding business under the company name J.W. Haniel seel.Wittib. In 1792, Aletta took over the forwarding of iron goods from the St. Antony ironworks near Osterfeld. By 1795, business with the neighboring Neu-Essen and Gute Hoffnung ironworks was added. In 1796, Aletta Haniel becomes a partner in the coal trading company J.G. Müser & Comp. and was responsible for the forwarding of coal.

1800

Franz Haniel founds a company for coal trading

At the age of 26 and 21, Aletta's youngest sons, Gerhard and Franz, make their first entrepreneurial attempts. Franz Haniel writes in his biography: "At the beginning of this century, I also started the hard coal business in my own name." At the same time, the family enters into strategic alliances: Franz's sister Sophia marries Gottlob Jacobi in 1800. He managed the Neu-Essen and St. Antony ironworks for the Essen princess-abbess Maria Kunigunde and held a quarter stake in each of them.

1808

Foundation of JHH

In 1805, Gerhard and Franz buy Maria Kunigunde's shares in the Neu-Essen and St. Antony ironworks and found a steelworks company with their brother-in-law Jacobi. In 1806 and 1807, the Haniel brothers marry into the Huyssen family in Essen. Their new brother-in-law Heinrich Huyssen becomes the fourth partner in the new iron and steelworks and trading company Jacobi, Haniel & Huyssen (JHH): in 1808 he takes the opportunity to buy the Gute Hoffnung ironworks from Amalie Krupp and bring it into the family business. In the same year Franz becomes interested in Ruhr mining. In 1809, Aletta retires at the age of 67. She had been active as an entrepreneur for 27 years. 

1815

Aletta dies

On May 11, 1815, Aletta Haniel dies in the Ruhrort Packhaus at the age of 73. The church register records "debilitation" as the cause of death. Her estate is divided among her children Sophia, Gerhard and Franz Haniel. The eldest brother Wilhelm inherits nothing - presumably because he had already been compensated in 1809. One year later, the Ruhrort Packhaus is auctioned off among the three siblings. Franz wins the bid for 10,000 reichstaler. 

1829

Construction of a steamship yard in Ruhrort

In 1829, under the direction of the Englishman Nicholas Oliver Harvey, the JHH builds a hall for the construction of steamships and a workshop for steam boiler construction in Ruhrort. Just one year later, the "City of Mainz" is launched as the first steamship built in a Rhenish shipyard.

1834

First vertical shaft in the Ruhr area

In 1834, Franz Haniel succeeds for the first time in penetrating the thick layer of marl covering the hard coal reserves of the northern Ruhr area, and extracting bituminous coal. However, the coal seam, only 40 cm thick, in the vertical shaft in Essen Borbeck, at a depth of 54 meters, yields little coal. But Franz is not discouraged by this. Three years later, in August 1837, his miners in the Kronprinz shaft in Essen come across an economically productive seam of bituminous coal beneath the marl layer. 

1837

First company health insurance fund

In September 1837, Franz Haniel signs the statutes of what is probably the first corporate health insurance fund initiated by a company in Germany. JHH sets it up for its workers at the Ruhrort shipyard. In 1847, Franz Haniel also establishes a "support fund for sick workers" for the forwarding company Franz Haniel (ca. 1802 - 1870). By way of comparison, it was not until 1884 that Chancellor Bismarck introduced statutory health insurance for workers across Germany. After more than 150 years of independence, the Haniel health insurance fund would be merged into BKK Ruhrgebiet (today's BKK vor Ort) on January 1, 2001. 

1844

Construction of the Eisenheim workers' housing estate

From 1844, the Eisenheim workers' housing estate for the employees of JHH is being built in what would later become Oberhausen. It is the first workers' settlement in the Ruhr region. Around 1900, approximately 1,200 people live in Eisenheim. When the settlement, in need of renovation, is to be demolished in the early 1970s, its residents found one of the first citizens' movements in the Ruhr area. Today, the preserved houses are listed as historic buildings.

1851

Coal mine Zollverein

After four years of sinking and construction work, the Zollverein mine in Essen begins production on March 1, 1851. Just 35 years later, in 1888, the mine founded by Franz Haniel achieves the highest production rate in the Ruhr region with around 2,000 employees and 879,887 tons of coal. Today, Zollverein is an architectural and industrial monument and has been a UNESCO World Heritage Site since 2001.

1870

Formation of the general partnership Franz Haniel & Co.

After Franz Haniel's death in 1868, his descendants - above all his eldest son Hugo - are challenged to find new structures. The strong growth of the company and the group of shareholders and the industrial progress finally leads to the steelworks Jacobi, Haniel & Huyssen becoming a stock corporation. Thus the "Actienverein" Gutehoffnungshütte is formed. The Ruhrort company Franz Haniel becomes a general partnership. 

1917

Foundation of FHC and separation of capital and management

Franz Haniel & Cie. GmbH is founded in 1917. It bundles the trading and transport interests of Gutehoffnungshütte (GHH) and the family-owned mines. With Dr. Johann Wilhelm Welker from Bochum, a non-family member takes over the management of the company for the first time. A good choice: For 27 years, he will successfully manage the company and, in particular, expand the coal trading and shipping businesses. The principle of appointing management of the company outside the family has endured to this day.

1944

Haniel in the Second World War

During the Second World War, Haniel's headquarters in Ruhrort are badly hit by several bombing raids. A large part of Haniel's fleet is sunk and, at the end of the war, operations have to be almost completely shut down except for the national coal trade. Haniel and GHH operations employ at least 32,000 forced laborers in the period from 1939 to 1945, about 200 of them at the parent company in Ruhrort. In 1944, Dr. Johann Wilhelm Welker retires as managing director of Franz Haniel & Cie. He is succeeded by Werner Dietrich Ahlers and Alfred Graf von Waldersee, who hold almost equal positions until 1959.

1951

Gas stations and building materials trade

Haniel adapts to the new situation in post-war Germany and to reconstruction. The company increases its investments in the construction and fuel trade. Haniel's Rheinpreußen petrol stations are particularly successful. While 242 service stations are already open in March 1950, their number more than doubles in just one year to a network of over 557 stations throughout Germany. 

1964

METRO

Once again, Haniel adapts to the circumstances of the time: After the sale of the Rheinpreussen fuel business, investments begin in the demands of modern consumer society - and especially in the Metro "Cash & Carry" model. In 1963 and 1964, the first two Metro stores are opened in Essen and Mülheim. This is followed by Haniel's participation in the construction of the Metro facility in Berlin-Tiergarten. In 1966, three more Metro companies are founded in Hamburg, Munich and Cologne.

1970

Withdrawal from the coal, steel and mining industries

Haniel recognizes the effects of structural change early on and begins to withdraw from mining and the coal and steel industry. After the first shares in the mining sector are sold in 1959, the majority of the GHH shares and thus the coal and steel industry are transferred to Motorenwerke Augsburg Nürnberg (MAN) at the beginning of 1970. In 1975, Haniel sells its very last mining shares. By 1985, the last 9.6% of GHH is also sold.  Thus, by 1985 at the latest, the complete exit from mining and the coal and steel industry has been completed.

1981

Acquisition of CWS

First circular business models: Haniel acquires the Swiss company CWS in October 1981. It equips toilets with cloth towel dispensers and offers a washing service for the towel rolls. The company also rents dust control mats that help reduce cleaning costs in buildings. In the following decades, CWS expands its product range in the areas of sustainable workwear and fire protection.

1985

Acquisition of Kaiser+Kraft

Kaiser + Kraft GmbH, based in Stuttgart, is acquired in July 1985. The specialist mail order company for office and business equipment has subsidiaries in England, the Netherlands, Belgium, France, Switzerland and Austria. In 1999 Kaiser + Kraft is merged into the mail order group Takkt AG. Takkt subsequently expands in North America and expands its product range for the restaurant and hotel market as well as the retail trade. 

2002

Sale of the fleet to Imperial

After more than 200 years, Haniel disengages from shipping as of January 1, 2000, giving 51 percent of Haniel Reederei to Imperial Logistics International GmbH & Co. KG. The exit is finalized on December 30, 2002, when Imperial Logistics takes over the remaining stake in Haniel Reederei Holding GmbH. For the first time since the end of the 18th century, Haniel ships are no longer to be seen on the Rhine and Ruhr.

2010

Sustainability as guiding principle

Sustainability becomes the guiding principle for Haniel's entrepreneurial activities. The goal is to be one of the leading family-owned companies in this field by 2020. "Enkelfähigkeit" becomes the new word for what has actually been the company's aspiration for centuries. The aim is to create economic value and strengthen social equity in order to give subsequent generations the same opportunities.

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Since 2014

Portfolio development

Haniel begins the transformation towards a more diversified portfolio and sells Celesio (2014), the Metro shares (from 2015) and ELG (2021). New companies are added: Bekaert(Deslee) (2015), Optimar (2017), Rovema (2017), Emma (2020), Bauwatch (2021) and KMK kinderzimmer (2021). Haniel only invests in companies that, in addition to the expected returns on the portfolio, also make a positive contribution to a future worth living.

Picture of the Haniel Museum in Duisburg-Ruhrort

Haniel Museum

At the Haniel Museum, visitors can explore more than 270 years of corporate and Ruhr region history. The exhibition brings to life Haniel’s journey from a local trading business to an internationally active corporate group, featuring original documents, historical furniture, and carefully restored living and working spaces. Guided 90-minute tours (in German) take place every third Thursday of the month (except August), at 3:00 pm and 5:00 pm.

2024

Consolidated financial statements

Cover of the 2024 Annual Report

In 2024, Haniel defied a persistently volatile macroeconomic environment to stabilize the performance of the portfolio and increase both operating profit and cash flow.

Overview of the consolidated financial statements 2024
Revenue EUR 4,205 million
Operating profit (EBITA) EUR 276 million
Employees, annual average (headcount) 21,685
Price chart of the Dow Jones in a newspaper

Financing

Creditor Relations

Find all information about Haniel's financing options as well as current ratings, creditor updates and further downloads.

Portrait of a boy wearing a hoodie

Compliance

Doing what's right

No successful business model without compliance and integrity. Learn more about the Haniel Code of Ethics, our commitment to respect human rights and ways to report a concern.

Team

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