Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

Volkswagen agrees to $1.2 bn fine as diesel crisis grinds on

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Volkswagen AG will pay a €1 billion ($1.2 billion) fine imposed by German prosecutor­s for cheating to get around dieselemis­sions regulation­s, closing one chapter in a three-year-old crisis even as new developmen­ts arise.

The world’s biggest automaker accepts the fine and takes responsibi­lity for its actions, Wolfsburg, Germany-based Volkswagen said in a regulatory filing on Wednesday after markets closed. The settlement of the criminal case will have a positive impact on other proceeding­s in Europe, it said.

“We work with vigor on dealing with our past,” chief executive officer Herbert Diess said in a separate statement. “Further steps are necessary to gradually restore trust again in the company and the auto industry.”

VW still faces a multitude of probes both in Germany and abroad, with legal proceeding­s in 55 countries pending and investigat­ionsintost­ock-marketmani­pulation in its home market. Investors have accused the company of informing investors too late about the probe, a view the carmaker has contested, saying it couldn’t have known the issue would balloon as it did.

Volkswagen shares fell 0.7% to €158.70 as of 9:06am in Frankfurt. The stock is down 4.7% this year, valuing the auto manufactur­er at 79.5 billion euros.

FRANKFURT:

The new fine comes on top of the €25.8 billion in provisions related to rigged engine-control software that the company has already set aside. It will add €1 billion to the diesel-related cash outflow of about €4 billion that VW had anticipate­d for this year. VW had net cash of about €24 billion at the end of the first quarter, providing a substantia­l liquidity buffer to digest the impact.

The rigging of as many as 11 million diesel cars worldwide was disclosed by US authoritie­s in September 2015 and triggered the deepest crisis in the manufactur­er’s history.

“The fact that the criminal risk has now been dealt with is good news,” said Arndt Ellinghors­t, an analyst with Evercore ISI. “Paying out 1 billion euros is extremely painful but in the broader context it isn’t a material number.”

While the company has shaken up management and introduced internal reforms, the crisis has continued to grind on. The settlement announced on Wednesday covers the company’s role in a diesel-rigging investigat­ion in Braunschwe­ig, whose court district includes Wolfsburg, but it doesn’t affect criminal probes against individual­s, or civil claims and the shareholde­r lawsuits against Volkswagen. There are also probes in Munich focused on the Audi brand, and in Stuttgart covering Porsche.

Just this week, Rupert Stadler, the head of Audi, was named a suspect in the Munich case, and his home was raided along with another member of the unit’s management board.

 ?? REUTERS/FILE ?? Volkswagen CEO Herbert Diess
REUTERS/FILE Volkswagen CEO Herbert Diess

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