AMHERST, N.Y., Jan. 05, 2017 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Columbus McKinnon Corporation (NASDAQ:CMCO), (“Company”) announced today that
it has received approval from the German Bundeskartellamt regarding Columbus McKinnon’s acquisition of Konecranes’ STAHL
CraneSystems (“STAHL”) business. This approval was the final condition for closing.
With the European Commission’s approval late in December 2016, the closing of Konecranes’ acquisition of Terex Corporation’s
Material Handling and Port Solutions on January 4, 2017, and today’s approval from the German Bundeskartellamt, there are no
additional contingencies on the closing of the Company’s acquisition of STAHL. The acquisition is now expected to close on or
about January 31, 2017.
About Columbus McKinnon
Columbus McKinnon is a leading worldwide designer, manufacturer and marketer of material handling products,
technologies, systems and services, which efficiently and ergonomically move, lift, position and secure materials and people.
Key products include hoists, cranes, actuators, rigging tools, light rail work stations and digital power and motion control
systems. The Company is focused on commercial and industrial applications that require the safety and quality provided by its
superior design and engineering know-how.
Safe Harbor Statement
This news release contains “forward-looking statements” within the meaning of the Private Securities
Litigation Reform Act of 1995. Such statements include, but are not limited to, statements concerning future revenue and earnings,
involve known and unknown risks, uncertainties and other factors that could cause the actual results of the Company to differ
materially from the results expressed or implied by such statements, including the ability to complete the STAHL acquisition
or delays in its completion, increased exposure to markets and geographies in which STAHL is more concentrated than the Company’s
existing business, such as the oil and gas industry and Europe, risks related to integration, such as disruptions in customer or
vendor relationships or lost business, risks related to employee relations or risks related to diligence, such as contingent
liabilities of STAHL that are unknown to the Company or turn out to be greater than the Company expects, risks related to doing
business outside the United States, including varying legal protections, rights and obligations, and risks related to global legal
compliance, risks related to increased debt expected to be incurred to partially finance the acquisition, including the Company’s
ability to service and repay such debt and the possibility that debt service could reduce the Company’s ability to take advantage
of opportunities that would benefit the Company’s business, risks related to the Company’s ability to achieve synergies in the time
frame and magnitudes that the Company expects, the lack of audited financial statements relating to STAHL or pro forma financial
information prepared in accordance with SEC rules, and the possibility that the audit process could result in financial information
that investors consider adverse, which could affect the trading price of the Company’s common stock, general economic and business
conditions, conditions affecting the industries served by the Company and its subsidiaries, conditions affecting the Company's
customers and suppliers, competitor responses to the Company's products and services, the overall market acceptance of such
products and services, the effect of operating leverage, the pace of bookings relative to shipments, the ability to expand into new
markets and geographic regions, the success in acquiring additional new business and other factors disclosed in the Company's
periodic reports filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission. The Company assumes no obligation to update the
forward-looking information contained in this release.
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