[36] Other financial liabilities

Non-current and current other financial liabilities comprised the following items:

Other financial liabilities

in € million

Dec. 31, 2024

Dec. 31, 2023

Liabilities from procurement leases

621.2

515.9

Derivative financial instruments

34.9

33.6

Sundry financial liabilities

7.1

6.5

Other non-current financial liabilities

663.1

556.0

 

 

 

Liabilities from procurement leases

148.9

123.2

Derivative financial instruments

41.0

21.2

Liabilities from accrued interest

11.2

11.7

Sundry financial liabilities

112.7

172.5

Other current financial liabilities

313.9

328.5

 

 

 

Total other financial liabilities

977.0

884.5

Liabilities from procurement leases had the following underlying maturities:

Maturity analysis of procurement leases

in € million

Dec. 31, 2024

Dec. 31, 2023

Total future payments (gross)

939.3

780.9

due within one year

175.7

144.7

due in one to two years

141.7

115.9

due in two to three years

109.4

91.1

due in three to four years

86.4

69.0

due in four to five years

64.0

53.4

due in more than five years

362.2

306.9

When entering into procurement leases for land and buildings, the KION Group strives to ensure that extension and termination options are included in the lease in order to maximize its operational flexibility. If, in the KION Group’s assessment, it is reasonably certain that extension options will be exercised, or that termination options will not be exercised, the lease payments for these periods are included in the measurement of the liabilities from procurement leases. Extension and termination options for which the assessment is not reasonably certain could potentially result in future undiscounted lease payments of €151.7 million as at December 31, 2024 (December 31, 2023: €155.9 million) in the event that, contrary to current expectations, the KION Group does exercise its contractual options.

As at December 31, 2024, there were also obligations of €6.0 million resulting from procurement leases that already existed but had not yet started (December 31, 2023: €10.6 million).

Derivative financial instruments comprise currency forwards and interest-rate swaps with a negative fair value that are used to reduce currency risk and interest-rate risk. Some of these derivative financial instruments are part of a formally documented hedge with a hedged item and are recognized in accordance with the hedge accounting rules (see note [42]).

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