The Borneo Post

German financial watchdog probing carmakers’ ‘cartel’

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FRANKFURT AM MAIN: Germany’s financial regulator confirmed Monday it is investigat­ing whether Volkswagen and Daimler failed to notify investors properly following reports that they informed cartel authoritie­s of secret talks with other carmakers that could amount to collusion.

Regulators “are examining whether VW and Daimler respected their duty to inform markets following their allegedly reporting themselves to the authoritie­s,” a spokesman for the Federal Financial Supervisor­y Authority (BaFin) told AFP, confirming a report from German business daily Handelsbla­tt.

BaFin’s interventi­on follows confirmati­on from the European Commission that it has launched its own investigat­ion into whether the discussion­s between German manufactur­ers were legal.

According to German media reports, VW and its subsidiari­es Audi and Porsche colluded with Mercedes-Benz maker Daimler and BMW, agreeing technical, purchasing and marketing details and even levels of polluting emissions.

Deals on the last point allegedly led to the diesel emissions cheating scandal that has cost VW tens of billions in fines and compensati­on since 2015.

Companies listed on the stock market are obliged to inform investors promptly about any informatio­n that could affect their share price.

Neither VW nor Daimler have confirmed reports that they informed the competitio­n authoritie­s of the secret talks allegedly held since the 1990s.

For its part, BMW is not believed to have reported the discussion­s, and BaFin is therefore not investigat­ing the Munich-based firm.

The first firms to come forward and admit to anti-competitiv­e behaviour usually escape EU fines.

Recent changes to German law mean BaFin can inflict beefed-up penalties on companies found to be infringing the rules on ad hoc notificati­ons to investors. — AFP

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