Prettl
Prettl
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legal form | GmbH |
founding | 1953 |
Seat | Pfullingen , Germany |
management | Erhardt Prettl, Rolf Prettl, Peter Schaumann, Matthias Weber |
Number of employees | 7,488 |
sales | EUR 402.72 million |
Branch | Conglomerate |
Website | www.prettl.com |
As of December 31, 2018 |
The Prettl production Holding GmbH is a group of companies from Pfullingen , which in the five segments automotive , energy, electronics up build-, Components & Systems and Strategic is active. According to the principle of the company's founder Franz W. Prettl, the group does not want to make itself dependent on any market. The Prettl Group is currently represented in more than 25 countries with over 9500 employees and around 955 million euros in sales.
Prettl is privately owned and is managed by the brothers Rolf and Erhardt Prettl.
In 2007, Prettl became the first German company to acquire a property in North Korea in the Kaesŏng special economic zone . The location in the controversial Kaesŏng was not built after the incident with the Corvette Cheonan . Instead, the company is investing in setting up a production facility in Vietnam .
Group structure
The Prettl Group is run as a holding company and is divided into 5 segments: Automotive, Electronics, Energy, Components & System and Strategic build-up. The parent company is Prettl Produktions Holding GmbH. Independent companies within the group are:
- Prettl Produktions Holding GmbH
- Prettl Beteiligungs Holding GmbH
- Prettl Foundation
- Prettl Electronics GmbH
- Prettl Electronics Lübeck GmbH
- Prettl metal components GmbH
- Prettl Home Appliance Solutions GmbH
- Endress Elektrogerätebau GmbH
- Jupiter kitchen machines GmbH
- Kurz Kasch Inc.
- lesswire GmbH
- PAS Management Holding GmbH
- Protech GmbH
- Refu Electronics GmbH
Web links
Individual evidence
- ↑ www.prettl.com
- ↑ a b Consolidated Financial Statements as of December 31, 2018 in the electronic Federal Gazette
- ^ David Böcking: Kaesong industrial zone: North Korea stops its capitalist experiment. In: Spiegel Online . April 3, 2013, accessed November 21, 2013 .