Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

VW chief in struggle to fill posts, change company, sources say

- CHRISTOPH RAUWALD

Volkswagen’s chief is struggling to win support for his picks to fill top executive posts and is pushing the carmaker’s board to back more significan­t reforms, according to people familiar with the matter.

Herbert Diess has proposed more than three candidates to succeed Chief Financial Officer Frank Witter who didn’t win backing from key stakeholde­rs ahead of a vote by the automaker’s supervisor­y board, said the people, who asked not to be identified as the discussion­s were confidenti­al.

One of the candidates was Audi CFO Arno Antlitz, who moved to the luxury-car division in March after clashing with powerful labor leaders in his previous job as finance chief for the main VW car brand, the people said. There’s also no agreement yet on filling the vacant purchasing chief position. The two roles are key to Diess’ efforts to cut costs and boost efficiency at VW, which just approved a $178 billion investment plan.

Diess, 62, has been trying for four years to untangle VW’s unwieldy conglomera­te structure and focus on its main car operations, but his efforts so far have yielded only modest results. In talks with top stakeholde­rs, the CEO has raised the prospect of lengthenin­g his contract past 2023, but winning support for a required two-thirds voting majority from VW’s supervisor­y board would be an uphill battle, according to the people. Usually the contract would be up for renewal a year before it expires.

VW’s works council chief and supervisor­y board member Bernd Osterloh said in a LinkedIn post last week he’s unaware of a dispute and wants to continue to work with Diess “to successful­ly develop Volkswagen further in the next years.”

VW declined to comment. Representa­tives for the Porsche and Piech family, who own the majority of the company’s voting shares, didn’t respond to requests for comment.

Diess has mounted an aggressive push into electric vehicles that analysts see becoming a competitiv­e advantage, but his hard-nosed management style has ruffled feathers across the organizati­on. He joined VW from BMW five years ago and pushed aside several executives in a sweeping shakeup of management this summer.

Renewed infighting could bog down VW’s efforts to challenge Tesla Inc.’s electric-car leadership by spending a record 73 billion euros on technology over the next five years. Diess has said the company’s survival rests on undergoing a massive transforma­tion to run its cars on batteries and sophistica­ted software.

VW’s CFO Witter, 61, plans to step down from the post at the end of June 2021 for personal reasons. The carmaker has been looking for a purchasing chief since announcing in June of this year that Stefan Sommer would leave after less than two years in the job.

Some investors have questioned VW’s commitment to reform, citing the company’s stubbornly high costs and more decisive steps taken by rivals to restructur­e legacy operations.

Diess has frequently clashed with the influentia­l unions that often are backed by the German state of Lower Saxony, the company’s secondlarg­est shareholde­r with a 20% stake. The board took away the CEO’s direct control of the namesake VW brand in June following a dust-up over his request for a contract extension and other issues.

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