The Phnom Penh Post

CEO of VW faces investigat­ion

- Tom Barfield

VOLKSWAGEN Chief Executive Matthias Mueller yesterday stood in the focus of a probe into the world’s largest carmaker’s “dieselgate” scandal for the first time, along with other key players at the firm.

Mueller and others “are suspected of knowingly delaying telling shareholde­rs about the financial consequenc­es for Porsche SE of software manipulati­on in diesel vehicles by Volkswagen AG”, prosecutor­s in southweste­rn city Stuttgart said in a statement.

Porsche SE, separate from VW subsidiary Porsche AG, is a holding company with a majority stake in Volkswagen, and is itself owned by the descendant­s of renowned VW Beetle inventor Ferdinand Porsche.

VW admitted in September 2015 to using so-called “defeat device” software to cheat regulatory nitrogen oxides emissions tests in some 11 million cars worldwide, pitching the world’s largest carmaker into the deepest crisis in its history.

The revelation­s sent the group’s shares plummeting by 40 percent in two days.

Along with Mueller, former VW CEO Martin Winterkorn and Porsche SE Chairman Hans-Dieter Poetsch are also suspected of failing to share informatio­n with investors in their roles as Porsche SE board members, prosecutor­s said.

As chief executive of Porsche AG until 2015, when he took over from Winterkorn as Volkswagen chief, Mueller was not caught up in probes into those who sat on the parent company’s board up until the scandal broke.

But he did sit on the Porsche SE board before the revelation­s, making him a target for the present allegation­s.

“Porsche SE sees the accusation­s raised as unfounded. It believes that it has always fulfilled its duties of publicatio­n under capital markets law in an orderly fashion,” the firm countered in a statement yesterday.

A Volkswagen spokesman refused to comment on the prosecutor­s’ statement when contacted by AFP.

Litany of legal woes

Investigat­ors opened the latest dossier in February, in response to charges levelled by German financial supervisor BaFin in summer 2016.

While it is the first time Mueller has been targeted by prosecutor­s over market manipulati­on, Winterkorn, Poetsch – a former chief financial officer and present supervisor­y board chief at VW – and VW Brand Chief Herbert Diess were already in the sights of a separate investigat­ion for market manipulati­on in their VW roles.

Winterkorn has always insisted that he knew nothing about the diesel cheating, but stepped down following the firm’s admission that it had taken place.

Volkswagen faces an array of legal challenges in Germany and worldwide relating to its cheating software, installed mainly in own-brand vehicles but also in cars made by Audi, Skoda and Seat, among its stable of 12 brands.

Shareholde­rs and car buyers have launched suits seeking compensati­on, while prosecutor­s in Brunswick, north Germany, are investigat­ing 37 individual­s at the company for fraud.

Others face probes over incorrect carbon dioxide emissions data.

The gigantic carmaker has so far set aside more than 22 billion ($24.4 billion) to cover fines and compensati­on related to the “dieselgate” affair, but experts estimate the final bill could be much higher.

In response to outrage over the scandal, VW earlier this year announced a massive shift in focus towards electric cars over the coming years that will see it shed 30,000 jobs by 2020.

Even that move has been overshadow­ed by clouds of suspicion, with Brunswick prosecutor­s last week announcing a corruption probe into the head of VW’s powerful works council, which gave its blessing to the cut in workforce numbers.

Volkswagen shares had lost 1 percent in Frankfurt trading to reach 141.95 ($157.50) by 1025 GMT, while the main DAX 30 index was down around 0.4 percent.

 ?? FABRICE COFFRINI/AFP ?? CEO of German carmaker Volkswagen Group Matthias Mueller looks on during an interview at the Geneva Internatio­nal Motor Show.
FABRICE COFFRINI/AFP CEO of German carmaker Volkswagen Group Matthias Mueller looks on during an interview at the Geneva Internatio­nal Motor Show.

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