Celonis and Sennder have not published balance sheets since 2019

Two German billion-dollar startups, Celonis and Sennder, have kept their financial data secret since 2019. The Federal Office of Justice has imposed fines totaling 187,500 euros on Celonis. Celonis cites competitiveness concerns for the lack of transparency.

Berlin. The software company Celonis has not published an annual balance sheet since 2019. According to Handelsblatt research, Celonis and the logistics firm Sennder have kept their figures secret longer than any other German startups valued in billions.

The Federal Office of Justice imposed fines totaling 187,500 euros on Celonis for violations of commercial disclosure requirements. Celonis justifies the secrecy with concerns over its competitiveness.

Celonis ranks as the third most valuable German startup after the fintech Trade Republic and the AI defense company Helsing. Valued at 13 billion dollars, it serves major clients including Deutsche Telekom, Mercedes-Benz, and Uniper.

Awọn iroyin ti o ni ibatan

Illustration of Brazil's Central Bank imposing eight-year secrecy on Banco Master liquidation documents, with locked files, stamps, and 2033 calendar.
Àwòrán tí AI ṣe

Central Bank imposes eight-year secrecy on Banco Master liquidation documents

Ti AI ṣe iroyin Àwòrán tí AI ṣe

Brazil's Central Bank has classified documents related to the extrajudicial liquidation of Banco Master as secret for eight years, with public release set for November 2033. The decision follows internal norms and aims to preserve the country's financial, economic, and monetary stability. It responds to a request by Folha under the Access to Information Law.

German AI translation firm DeepL from Cologne is reportedly planning a US IPO with a valuation of up to five billion dollars. A Handelsblatt investigation raises doubts about its financial forecasts and internal culture. Former managers and experts question the growth narrative.

Ti AI ṣe iroyin

Several Johannesburg Stock Exchange listed firms have posted encouraging results ahead of the reporting season. Tech companies Altron, Datatec and Lesaka, hotel group Southern Sun and brewer AB InBev all delivered positive trading updates for periods ending in February or March 2026.

Deutsche Bank reported a first-quarter net profit of 1.9 billion euros, up about eight percent from the previous year and beating analyst expectations. CEO Christian Sewing praised the results as a strong start to the new strategy phase. Shares dropped more than two percent anyway.

Ti AI ṣe iroyin

Greens politician Sebastian Schäfer asked Finance Minister Lars Klingbeil (SPD) for details on construction projects funded by the 500 billion euro infrastructure special fund. After nearly two months, the Federal Ministry of Finance provided mostly evasive answers without a proper overview. Critics accuse the government of misusing the debt-financed funds.

Federal judge Ariel Lijo ordered on Thursday the lifting of banking, tax, and anti-money laundering secrecy for Chief of Cabinet Manuel Adorni, his wife Bettina Angeletti, their firm AS Innovación Profesional, and six women listed as lenders. The measure, requested by prosecutor Gerardo Pollicita, aims to reconstruct Adorni's financial circuit since January 2022 in an alleged illicit enrichment case.

Ti AI ṣe iroyin

Leading German business associations warn of the consequences of unpredictable US policy on transatlantic data transfers. A failure of the EU-US Data Privacy Framework would plunge companies into chaos and legal uncertainty. Holger Lösch from the BDI stressed the essential need for reliable data traffic.

 

 

 

Ojú-ìwé yìí nlo kuki

A nlo kuki fun itupalẹ lati mu ilọsiwaju wa. Ka ìlànà àṣírí wa fun alaye siwaju sii.
Kọ