MSC and City of Hamburg Seal €450M Port Investment as HHLA Minority Shareholders Forced Out at €21
11.06.2026 - 11:14:08 | boerse-global.de
The Mediterranean Shipping Company has pledged to double container traffic at the Port of Hamburg to one million standard containers annually by 2031, a commitment backed by a €450 million equity injection into HHLA. The ambitious expansion plan, which also includes a new German headquarters in the city, comes as the port operator moves to eliminate its remaining minority investors.
On Thursday, HHLA’s annual general meeting will formally approve a squeeze-out — a compulsory buyout of small shareholders who still hold stock in the company. Those affected will receive €21 per share, a figure more than 25% higher than MSC’s original 2023 offer of €16.75. The Port of Hamburg Beteiligungsgesellschaft, a joint venture between the city and the shipping line, now controls over 95% of HHLA shares, meeting the legal threshold for the forced exit.
The ownership restructuring was set in motion months earlier. In September 2024, the Hamburg state parliament, the Bürgerschaft, green-lighted MSC’s entry. The European Commission followed suit without raising competition concerns. Under the final arrangement, the City of Hamburg retains 50.1% of the company, while MSC holds 49.9%. In exchange for the stake, the shipping giant committed to massive capital spending to modernize port operations and boost volumes.
The €450 million infusion will strengthen HHLA’s equity base, a move designed to keep the terminal operator competitive in global container shipping. MSC’s traffic target — doubling throughput within seven years — would transform the port’s role in European logistics if achieved.
For minority holders, the €21-per-share payout marks the end of their involvement. The sum represents a significant premium over the initial bid, though some former investors have questioned whether the valuation fully reflects the company’s long-term prospects under the new joint ownership. The squeeze-out legally clears the path for the city and MSC to run HHLA without interference from small shareholders.
