Volkswagen faces leadership crisis as CEO demands vote of confidence

Volkswagen is convening its Executive Committee to discuss CEO Herbert Diess' demand for the contract extension, more than a year before his current t
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File photo of Volkswagen logo (REUTERS)
File photo of Volkswagen logo

Volkswagen, the world's largest vehicle maker by sales, risked a leadership crisis on Tuesday after Chief Executive Herbert Diess forced a vote of confidence in his reform efforts by asking for an early contract extension.

The multi-brand car and truck maker is convening its Executive Committee to discuss Diess's demand for the contract extension, more than a year before his current term comes to an end in 2023, three sources told Reuters on Monday.

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The Austrian manager, who defected from BMW in 2015, and helped VW to reform after its diesel scandal with a 73 billion euro ($87 billion) electric vehicle investment plan, has grown frustrated with German labour leaders blocking cost cuts.

Also Read : Tensions flare as VW CEO takes swipe at company owners

The supervisory board's Executive Committee, which is headed by VW Chairman Hans Dieter Poetsch, and includes Wolfgang Porsche and Hans Michel Piech, members of the carmaker's owning families, as well as labour boss Bernd Osterloh, is due to meet on Tuesday, the three sources told Reuters.

Volkswagen declined to comment.

The meeting comes on the same day that Tesla's CEO Elon Musk is due to receive the Axel Springer award for his achievements in the area of engineering in Berlin, after the electric carmaker decided to build a factory on the outskirts of the German capital.

Analysts said the Volkswagen committee meeting highlighted the difficulties in reforming a carmaker where labour representatives control half the seats on the board of directors and local politicians have a 20% voting stake, allowing them to vote down significant strategic reform proposals.

A Volkswagen (VW) logo (Bloomberg)
A Volkswagen (VW) logo (Bloomberg)

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"The company has some of the most amazing and most global brands, it has the scale to deploy any technology and the innovation power to be an early mover. What it appears to be lacking is the right corporate governance," Bernstein autos analyst Arndt Ellinghorst said in a note late on Monday.

"There should be no illusion, this transformation will always trigger conflicts. Whether there is a new CEO or not, the questions will remain the same, and any VW CEO will need the full backing from VW's largest shareholders, the Porsche families."

Volkswagen is worth 77.2 billion euros, far below rival Toyota, which enjoys a $155.7 billion valuation, and Tesla's $555 billion.

And that's despite the fact that VW sold 10.96 million vehicles last year - the most by any carmaker in the world - while Toyota came in second with 10.74 million. Tesla sold only 367,500 cars in the same period.

Analysts say that's because Volkswagen is less efficient and has higher costs. Volkswagen Group had 671,205 employees at the end of 2019, well above the 359,542 staff at Toyota at the end of its fiscal year, and the 48,016 workers at Tesla last year.

FORCING THE ISSUE

German companies customarily deliberate contract extensions for management board members only a year ahead of expiration. Diess, whose contract expires in 2023, however forced the issue after labour leader Bernd Osterloh stifled his reform efforts.

These included installing two allies Arno Antlitz as chief financial officer and Thomas Schmall as chief procurement officer on the management board, the three sources told Reuters.

Rather than approving each individual appointment, the labour leaders insist on approving a "package solution" which is "harmonious", two people familiar with the deliberations said.

Osterloh is also said to oppose an early contract extension for Diess, one of the three sources said.

In a post on LinkedIn this week, Osterloh said there was no fight about management appointments because no committee on the supervisory board had been formally consulted about the issue.

Diess, for his part, voiced his frustration in a column in the German daily Handelsblatt published on Friday.

"When I took office in Wolfsburg, I had firmly resolved to change the VW system. This meant breaking up old, encrusted structures and making the company more agile and modern," he said.

"Together with many companions with the same level of motivation, I succeeded in doing this in many places, but not in some, especially not yet at our corporate headquarters in Wolfsburg."

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First Published Date: 01 Dec 2020, 14:35 PM IST
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