Business Standard

VW keeps option open for luxury car IPO

- CHRISTOPH RAUWALD 8 September

Volkswagen CFO Frank Witter was asked this week whether the carmaker would be open to selling shares in the luxury-car unit. He didn’t say no to the option, which could unlock billions of dollars in value for investors.

Volkswagen AG Chief Financial Officer Frank Witter was asked this week whether the world’s largest carmaker would be open to selling shares in the luxurycar unit that includes Porsche and Lamborghin­i.

He didn’t say no to the option, which could potentiall­y unlock billions of dollars in value for Volkswagen investors.

“It is a legitimate question, without a doubt,” Witter said Wednesday, speaking in a Bloomberg Intelligen­ce webinar for investors and analysts in London. The focus for now is preparing Volkswagen’s heavytruck­s division for a potential IPO, and making the German manufactur­er’s 12 automotive brands to work together more efficientl­y, to boost profit margins and “unleash the potential we have,” he said. “Every other considerat­ion might be down the road, but it’s currently not a priority the management is working on.”

Volkswagen raked in record sales and revenue last year despite wrestling with the fallout from its diesel-emissions crisis. Still, its stock is down 19 percent this year, and the company’s market value has languished at 67 billion euros ($78 billion). Prospects for the auto sector remain clouded amid developing trade wars and a looming industry shift toward electric vehicles and new digital services.

Any concrete step toward a partial separation of the highmargin luxury brands that generate some 60 percent of group profit might provide an even bigger catalyst. Earnings multiples for more specialise­d manufactur­ers such as supercar maker Ferrari NV and truck manufactur­er Volvo AB are substantia­lly higher than for diversifie­d conglomera­tes like VW or German rival Daimler AG. British sportscar maker Aston Martin last week announced plans for an IPO in London.

New Chief Executive Officer Herbert Diess has taken steps that could pave the way for structural changes. VW plans to shift Lamborghin­i from the Audi unit to Porsche to forge a so-called “super-premium” brand group that also includes Bentley and Bugatti. That division alone could be valued at more than 120 billion euros, according to Bloomberg Intelligen­ce senior analyst Michael Dean, almost twice the current valuation of the entire group.

VW’s complex shareholde­r structure in the past has limited management’s ability to push through deeper reforms. Early deliberati­ons over a possible sale of the Ducati motorbike brand were shot down last year by key stakeholde­rs.

But the German manufactur­er has been making progress toward a possible sale of a minority stake in the heavytruck­s division Traton, and the timing of the project remains on track, Witter said.

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