VW shareholders question
bonuses in wake of U.S. diesel deal
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[January 12, 2017]
By Edward Taylor and Simon Jessop
FRANKFURT/LONDON
(Reuters) - Volkswagen investors demanded reforms and questioned
executive bonuses after the carmaker admitted to criminal offences in
rigging U.S. emissions tests and U.S. prosecutors indicted six current
and former managers over the scandal.
The German company agreed to pay $4.3 billion in civil and criminal
fines in a settlement with the U.S. Department of Justice (DoJ) on
Wednesday, the largest ever U.S. penalty levied on an automaker.
Volkswagen (VW) admitted about 40 employees at its VW and Audi brands
deleted thousands of documents in an effort to hide from U.S.
authorities the systematic use of so-called defeat devices to rig diesel
emissions tests, a scale of wrongdoing that led some investors to call
for deep reforms.
"For senior management to receive any bonuses in 2017, we would now
expect VW to deliver a dramatic improvement in profits," said Ben
Walker, partner at activist hedge fund TCI, which last year publicly
criticized "corporate excess on an epic scale" at the carmaker.
"Seventeen billion euros of EBIT (earnings before interest and tax)
should be the minimum amount for any bonus to be received by executive
management. Below that, zero bonus," he wrote in an email, noting VW's
admissions of guilt in the DoJ settlement did not extend to any
board-level managers.
VW has forecast an operating margin of 5-6 percent on expected sales of
around 213 billion euros ($227 billion) for 2016, implying EBIT of
around 10.6-12.8 billion euros.
It has set aside more than 18 billion euros to cover the cost of the
diesel scandal, a figure it is expected to raise in light of the DoJ
deal.
Moody's credit-rating agency said the deal could raise its provisions
expectation of 21.2 billion euros by around 1 billion euros, but
welcomed the removal of uncertainties.
"The settlement agreement ... should also help VW and VW's management to
refocus its efforts into the development of its operations, and
therefore is a positive partially balancing the need to increase its
provision," it wrote.
VW still faces lawsuits from about 20 U.S. states and from U.S.
investors, and will spend years buying back or fixing nearly 580,000
polluting U.S. vehicles. It also faces claims from investors and
customers in Europe and Asia, after it admitted in September 2015 that
up to 11 million vehicles worldwide could have defeat device software
installed.
MORE INDEPENDENT DIRECTORS, OPENNESS
"What is most disturbing... is the pattern of deception, both in
developing and perfecting the defeat devices, as well as deliberately
obstructing the subsequent investigation," said Annie Bersagel, an
adviser for responsible investments at Norwegian Mutual Insurance
company Kommunal Landspensjonskasse (KLP). KLP and KLP mutual funds have
small investments in both VW equities and fixed income products.
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A Volkswagen logo is seen at a dealership in Seoul, South Korea,
August 2, 2016. REUTERS/Kim Hong-Ji/File Photo - RTX2YF74
"Going forward we would like to see more truly independent directors.
This may change governance at the company where we see some issues, for
example the awarding of large bonuses to current and former managers. We
would like to see a clawback provision relating to violations."
Ingo Speich, a fund manager at Union Investment which holds about 0.6
percent of VW preference shares, said on Wednesday the company needed to
"put everything on the table" about its wrongdoing to regain the trust
of investors.
For 2015, the year the scandal was uncovered, VW agreed to pay 12
current and former members of the management board at total of 63.2
million euros in fixed and flexible remuneration. It said board members
would have 30 percent of their variable bonus withheld if the share
price remained below 140 euros.
VW shares are currently trading at 149.85 euros, around 7 percent below
pre-scandal levels.
SIX EMPLOYEES INDICTED
In total, six current and former VW managers have been indicted,
including Heinz-Jakob Neusser, former head of development for the VW
brand. Five of them are in Germany and it is unclear if they will come
to the United States to face charges since Germany typically does not
extradite its citizens.
While senior managers, none of them are - or were - members of VW's
management board.
At a press conference in Washington, U.S. attorney general Loretta E.
Lynch said U.S. authorities would continue to pursue those responsible
for emissions cheating.
"This announcement does not mean that our investigation is complete ...
We will continue to pursue the individuals responsible for orchestrating
this damaging conspiracy," Lynch said.
The indictment said the six managers engaged in a 10-year conspiracy to
cheat U.S. emissions tests and then cover up excessive emissions even as
regulators questioned irregularities.
VW Chief Executive Matthias Mueller said in a statement the company
"deeply regrets the behavior that gave rise to the diesel crisis" and
vowed to continue changes in how the company operates.
See graphic on emissions affair: (http://tmsnrt.rs/2fYcm9Q)
(Additional reporting by Andreas Cremer in Berlin; Editing by Mark
Potter)
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