Business Standard

AUDI CEO STADLER ARRESTED OVER DIESEL SCANDAL

- BLOOMBERG

Audi’s Chief Executive Officer Rupert Stadler was arrested in Munich on Monday in connection with the diesel-cheating scandal. This made him the highest-profile target in the probe that has engulfed the carmaker and parent Volkswagen for three years. The decision throws into doubt his future at the helm of Volkswagen’s most important earnings contributo­r.

Audi CEO Rupert Stadler was arrested in Munich today in connection with the dieselchea­ting scandal, making him the highest-profile target in the probe that’s engulfed the carmaker and parent Volkswagen for almost three years.

Munich prosecutor­s investigat­ing Audi’s role in the 2015 scandal confirmed they arrested Stadler, 55, in the Bavarian capital because of risk he may tamper with evidence, according to an emailed statement Monday.

The decision throws into doubt the manager’s future at the helm of Volkswagen’s most important earnings contributo­r. Pressure on Stadler has steadily built over the past few months, including a raid at his home last week. Until now, backing of the Porsche and Piech families, who control the world’s biggest carmaker, ensured him continuing in the role he’s held since 2007. Volkswagen’s supervisor­y board is meeting today, where Stadler’s future will be among the topics of discussion.

Prosecutor­s in Munich, Stuttgart and Braunschwe­ig are continuing their investigat­ions of the carmaker and its units. In April, Stuttgart authoritie­s arrested a senior engine manager at the company’s luxury Porsche brand, after conducted raids at 10 sites as part of a longrunnin­g probe. Wolfgang Hatz, a former VW manager who joined Audi unit in 2001 and from 2007 to 2011 ran VW’s motor developmen­t, remains in custody in Munich.

Volkswagen declined 2.2 percent to ^157.88 and traded 2 per cent lower in local trading, extending losses this year to 5.2 per cent.

Nearly three years on from the scandal, VW faces a multitude of probes both in Germany and abroad, with legal proceeding­s in 55 countries pending and investigat­ions into stock-market manipulati­on in its home market. The company has earmarked more than ^27 billion ($31 billion) in fines, buybacks and costs. Investors have accused the company of informing investors too late about the probe, a view the carmaker has contested.

Just last week, Volkswagen agreed to pay a ^1 billion fine imposed by German prosecutor­s for cheating to get around diesel-emissions regulation­s.

 ??  ?? After Audi CEO Rupert Stadler’s arrest, the stock of Volkswagen declined 2 per cent
After Audi CEO Rupert Stadler’s arrest, the stock of Volkswagen declined 2 per cent

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