Credit Check | Company Investigation | Employer Investigation

Our corporate investigation agency in Stuttgart is able to determine the financial and social background of your debtor, relative, potential property seller, borrower and others. Before entering into a contract, you naturally wish to know whether the contracting partner has fulfilled their payment obligations in the past. The Schufa score is far too generalised to be truly meaningful on its own.

 

In addition to address identification, our Stuttgart-based corporate investigators check bank accounts, registered companies, outstanding debts and mortgages, employment relationships – in other words, creditworthiness.

 

Gain certainty and commission Kurtz Detective Agency Stuttgart: +49 711 7153 0028.

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Stuttgart – a financial metropolis

With the public Stuttgart Stock Exchange and more than 100 banking institutions – including Germany’s largest public bank, Landesbank Baden-Württemberg – the city ranks among the leading financial metropolises in the country. After Frankfurt am Main, Stuttgart’s stock exchange is the most important in Germany.

 

Through the “Stuttgart Financial” initiative, citizens are intentionally informed and educated in the fields of economics, finance and securities, among other things, to reduce the population’s general scepticism towards stock trading. A scepticism that has persisted stubbornly since the major stock market boom of the 1990s and the subsequent crash of the so-called “people’s share” Telekom. By providing education from a financial-economic perspective, it may also be possible to identify habitual non-payers at an early stage, thereby reducing the need for debtor searches.

Potential future supply issues for manufacturers in Stuttgart and Baden-Württemberg

For some time now, the electricity supply in southern Germany has been a hotly debated topic, as the Bavarian state government vehemently opposes the expansion of electricity transmission routes. The problem: far more electricity is produced in northern Germany than is needed there, while the opposite is true in the south. Consequently, electricity transfers are necessary to avoid jeopardising the production capacities of companies based in Swabia, among others. But without power lines, there can be no electricity deliveries. The result could be enormous increases in electricity prices, prompting some companies to relocate their production abroad – a nightmare scenario for Stuttgart’s economy.