National Post

Don’t blame it on Tesla

German automakers face new allegation­s

- Chris Bryant in Berlin

Just as Germany’s car industry seemed to be turning a corner after the diesel emissions scandal, along comes another potentiall­y credibilit­y-shredding story.

Volkswagen AG ( and its Porsche and Audi subsidiari­es), BMW AG and Daimler AG may have colluded for decades to agree on technical standards, thereby impeding competitio­n, Der Spiegel reported on Friday. While the scope of any wrongdoing or potential fines are very unclear, these cartel allegation­s may yet impose a heavy financial and political price on the carmakers.

It’s not as if investors have been queuing up to buy shares in the German car giants anyway, amid fears that the rise of autonomous and electric vehicles will leave them without much of a business model. In Europe, meanwhile, they are having to fight against the efforts of cities to ban many diesel vehicles. New questions about their integrity won’t help.

That’s especially t rue ahead of a German federal election in September. Opposition politician­s have every incentive to fling mud at chancellor Angela Merkel’s government, which is perceived as too chummy with the powerful car industry.

Although VW apparently acted as a whistleblo­wer — presumably to minimize financial penalties — it still has reason to worry about the Der Spiegel allegation­s.

VW annoyed the European Commission by refusing to compensate about 8.5 million European customers affected by its diesel emissions cheating, whereas in North America, it has spent more than $20 billion atoning for its wrongdoing.

Yet unlike dieselgate, Brussels has plenty of tools to punish anti- competitiv­e practices. Last month it fined Google 2.4 billion euros ($3.5 billion) for abusing its market dominance and last year hit truck- makers with a 2.9 billion euro penalty for price-fixing.

If previous cases are a guide, penalties wouldn’t be anywhere near that high. Equity investors seem to agree. The three carmakers have lost “only” about 11 billion euros of combined market value during the last two trading sessions. Indeed, while some German media are billing this as one of the country’s biggest business scandals, there’s been little informatio­n to suggest carmakers actually fixed prices to the detriment of customers or suppliers.

If this was a cartel, it seems to have been a pretty boring one. Perhaps if carmakers enjoyed a better public standing, these allegation­s might be easier to shake off. Instead, they join a long list of reasons to shun the sector.

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