Bangkok Post

BMW exec tipped as next Audi chief

- CHRISTOPH RAUWALD

FRANKFURT: Volkswagen AG yesterday has poached BMW AG’s purchasing chief Markus Duesmann, lining up a possible successor for its luxury Audi brand’s longtime boss following his surprise arrest last month.

“Duesmann, 49, will join Volkswagen’s management board in an undefined role as soon as possible,’’ the Wolfsburg-based company said in a statement yesterday.

He will be a top contender to eventually replace Audi’s interim chief executive Bram Schot, according to people familiar with the matter.

“Duesmann is also being considered for other top positions within the group, depending on when he can resolve contractua­l obligation­s to BMW,’’ the people said.

“No decision has been made yet regarding responsibi­lities for the executive,’’ a spokesman for VW’s supervisor­y board said by phone.

Restoring Audi’s muscle is vital for Volkswagen. The upscale brand fell behind BMW and Mercedes-Benz in profitabil­ity and deliveries in recent years. The woes culminated last month with the arrest of now-suspended CEO Rupert Stadler.

The long-time Audi boss, who also oversaw groupwide sales activities for Volkswagen, is still incarcerat­ed over allegation­s that he tried to tamper with evidence in the diesel-cheating scandal.

Duesmann’s start date at

VW has yet to be determined as his contract with BMW only expires in autumn next year and includes a clause that prevents him from joining a rival straight away, according to the people, who asked not to be identified because the discussion­s are private.

A spokesman for the Munich-based BMW declined to comment.

With Duesmann’s hiring, Volkswagen CEO Herbert Diess, who joined the automaker from BMW in 2015, is pushing ahead with an overhaul of the management ranks.

To speed up decision making and make t he German giant more nimble, the initiative includes hiring more external executives at a manufactur­er that has been dominated for years by home-grown managers.

Many VW lifers have left the company since the diesel scandal erupted in September 2015. Stadler, whose future is in limbo following the arrest, and China chief Jochem Heizmann are among the few remaining long-time members of the group’s senior management ranks.

“For VW’s Diess, it is proof of leadership and skill to attract top talent,” Arndt Ellinghors­t, a London-based analyst at Evercore ISI, said in a note to clients. “We expect Audi will benefit from his fresh style and technical background.”

Duesmann, a mechanical engineer born in a small municipali­ty called Heek close to the Dutch border, joined BMW from Daimler AG’s Mercedes in 2007, where he was head of Formula 1 developmen­t. He became BMW’s purchasing chief, a role previously filled by Volkswagen’s Diess, in 2016.

His departure is a surprise for BMW, where he was one of CEO Harald Krueger’s close confidante­s and could now set himself up as a major rival.

Audi has long held ambitions to challenge for the top spot and is a critical part of Diess’s plans to transform Volkswagen into a leader of self-driving, electric cars.

Interim CEO Schot — a sales expert who lacks an engineerin­g background — is considered a long shot to permanentl­y lead the world’s third-largest luxurycar brand given its technology-driven cachet.

 ??  ?? Duesmann: Possible successor to Stadler
Duesmann: Possible successor to Stadler

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