VW's Ferdinand Piech resigns after more than 20 years.

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Well, here's some news. Piech is out after more than two decades.

Here's the story:

http://www.autonews.com/article/201...igns-as-vw-chairman-after-failing-to-oust-ceo


FRANKFURT -- Ferdinand Piech, a towering figure at Volkswagen for more than two decades, resigned as chairman of the company on Saturday after losing a showdown with Chief Executive Martin Winterkorn.

Piech, the 78-year-old grandson of the inventor of the Volkswagen Beetle, had previously succeeded in ousting other executives who crossed him, including his hand-picked successor as Volkswagen CEO, Bernd Pischetsrieder.

But this time, he was unexpectedly isolated in a five-to-one vote of Volkswagen's steering committee last week as labor representatives, the state of Lower Saxony and even his own cousin Wolfgang Porsche stood firmly behind Winterkorn.

"The members of the steering committee came to a consensus that, in the light of the past weeks, the mutual trust necessary for successful cooperation was no longer there," the six-member panel said in a statement after another meeting on Saturday.

"Against this background, Professor Doctor Ferdinand K. Piech resigned from his office as chairman as well as all his supervisory board mandates within the Volkswagen group with immediate effect," the statement said.

"The uncertainty had to be ended today," said Deputy Chairman Berthold Huber, the senior trade unionist who will take over until a new chairman is elected. "The steering committee was and is conscious of its responsibility to Volkswagen and its many thousand staff."

Piech’s term as chairman of VW’s supervisory board was due to expire in April 2017.


Two sources with knowledge of the matter said Piech had resigned without forcing a vote of the committee at its second crisis gathering in 10 days. Piech's second wife, Ursula, a former nanny who joined the supervisory board in 2012, also resigned.

"Piech's departure represents a seismic shift in Volkswagen's power structure, and could foretell drastic changes in how one of the world's largest automakers operates," wrote Karl Brauer, senior analyst at analysis firm Kelley Blue Book.

"VW has kept pace with General Motors and Toyota's growth in recent years, making it a very tight three-way race for the title of largest global automaker, but VW's struggles in markets like the U.S. and Brazil, along with lower profit margins versus GM and Toyota, shows there's still much work to be done."

Volkswagen's biggest shareholder, Porsche SE, backed the carmaker's management after Piech's resignation.

"We have complete faith in the management of Volkswagen and regret the developments of recent days," Porsche SE Chairman Wolfgang Porsche said in a statement.

He added that Porsche SE, which controls 51 percent of Volkswagen's common stock, would continue to live up to its responsibility as a major shareholder of the carmaker.

The leadership crisis burst into the open this month when the news weekly Der Spiegel quoted Piech, the patriarch of the family that owns 51 percent of voting rights in VW, as saying he had "distanced" himself from CEO Winterkorn.

The comment came at a time when VW is slashing costs and revamping operations to boost profitability. It has struggled in the United States and posted lower profits at its core auto division.

The supervjsory board’s leadership committee backed Winterkorn on April 17, saying he’s the “best possible” head of the company.

Winterkorn, 67, who has led Volkswagen to record profits and put it within grasp of overtaking Toyota Motor Corp. as the world’s biggest carmaker, appeared at a meeting of the steering committee in Piech’s hometown of Salzburg, Austria, on April 16 to fight for his job.

The six-member body proposed extending Winterkorn’s contract beyond 2016.

The group usually prepares the meetings of VW's 20-person supervisory board, which is comprised of voting-shareholder and labor representatives and has the power to hire and fire executives, in addition to making other major corporate decisions.

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A decision on Winterkorn’s term as CEO isn’t likely before early 2016. In Germany, top executives’ contracts are generally only extended in their final year.

Photo credit: BLOOMBERG

May meeting

The full board is scheduled to convene in a regular session the day before Volkswagen’s annual shareholders meeting on May 5. Any ruling on Winterkorn’s term isn’t likely before early 2016. In Germany, top executives’ contracts are generally only extended in their final year.

But last week's agreement to back Winterkorn included a commitment to discuss an extension.

Piech's departure increases the chances of Winterkorn succeeding him as chairman -- something that Piech wanted to prevent at all costs, Volkswagen insiders believe. That would leave the way open for Porsche CEO and VW management board member Matthias Mueller, already seen as a favorite to succeed Winterkorn, to take over.

"What changes will we see to fill the void left by Piech? Do we have Winterkorn stepping up to chairman and Matthias Mueller as CEO? That could happen," said analyst Stuart Pearson of Exane BNP Paribas.

But Piech's influence may still make itself felt through the 51-percent voting rights the Piech-Porsche clan owns in Volkswagen, now represented on the supervisory board by Wolfgang Porsche, if family ties withstand the recent turmoil.

While he may have failed to unseat the CEO, Piech's departure is unlikely to end the increased scrutiny the public duel has drawn to the group's strategic shortcomings.

Low-cost car

Volkswagen's management may still have to address the criticisms Piech raised, which include the failure to engineer a low-cost car.

When Piech became CEO of VW in 1993, the company was losing money, prompting him to cut pay and working hours at German plants and streamline production

During his nine-year tenure, he turned a loss equivalent to 1 billion euros ($1.09 billion) into a 2.6 billion euro profit while spearheading VW's expansion to a 12-brand holding group that makes everything from fuel-efficient city cars to 40-ton trucks.

Exane BNP Paribas' Pearson said Piech's abrupt resignation would come as a shock to investors despite the recent drama.

"Those seeing the glass half full may view this as an opportunity to improve corporate governance at VW," he said. "However, first VW will need to demonstrate that its operating performance is on track and not the cause of Piech and Winterkorn's discord."

In addition to Piech, the leadership committee has been made up of Stephan Weil, prime minister of the German state of Lower Saxony; works council chief Bernd Osterloh and his deputy, Stephan Wolf; Huber, representing the IG Metall union; and Wolfgang Porsche, a representative of the other shareholder family.

CEO change

A survey by the advisory firm Evercore ISI shortly after the crisis broke out found that 65 percent of institutional investors would welcome a change of CEO and 80 percent were in favor of a new chairman.

"VW cannot be managed with such ongoing uncertainty surrounding management succession," Evercore automotive analyst Arnd Ellinghorst wrote in a note on Friday.

"In the interest of shareholders, workers and customers, it might be best to accelerate change now, rather than muddling through for a couple of years and fighting similar succession battles over and over again at a later stage."

Tensions between Piech and Winterkorn appeared to have eased a week ago when senior supervisory board members backed the CEO, leaving Piech the odd man out and forcing him to agree to a joint statement supporting Winterkorn.

But sources said at the time he would have faced calls for his own resignation had he not backed the CEO, and a source close to VW said on Friday that the Piech and Porsche families had held another meeting this week, indicating that there are still ongoing differences.

Weil, the premier of Lower Saxony, which owns 20 percent of VW, said Piech's resignation was necessary to create clarity about the carmaker's leadership.



Said Weil: "I regret the resignation of Ferdinand Piech, but it was unavoidable in the end."
 
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CIF

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Very interesting and unexpected. I wonder if this is going to stabilize VW management.
 

mmcartalk

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such politics!

Even that, though, is nothing compared to the iron-fist politics and turmoil that once ruled the roost at Ford, back in the days of King Henry II, when he ultimately fired almost every exec that ever came to work for him.......often for no other reason that he just got tired of looking at them in the same office (including Lee Iacocca). Henry II's management was something that had to be seen and experienced to be believed. Though formally "retiring" at age 65 (only to fullfull, on paper, his own law at Ford for the mandatory retirement age), he still called the shots until he passed away in 1987.
 
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mmcartalk

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It's going to be tough for VW without their Führer. :D:D:D:D


Might (?) even end up better, though, for VW of America. VW's upper management, under Piech, for various reasons, tended to short-change the American market.
 
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mikeavelli

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Those families have been fighting for years...Piech might have miscalculated trying to position VW upmarket but his influence in transforming Audi cannot be questioned. The man is a legend, period, but it might be time for a new era at VW.
 

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Those families have been fighting for years...Piech might have miscalculated trying to position VW upmarket but his influence in transforming Audi cannot be questioned. The man is a legend, period, but it might be time for a new era at VW.

Yep, no question Audi has recently prospered. It has also done something that would have been almost unthinkable some years ago.......eaten into BMW's Yuppie market.
 
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Here's the latest news from VW about how they are going to reorganize the corporation, now that Piech is gone.

I felt this did not need a new thread...just an addition to the existing one.


http://europe.autonews.com/article/...revamped-into-4-holding-companies-report-says

FRANKFURT -- Volkswagen Group's corporate structure will be reorganized into a decentralized system with four holding companies running the company's 12 brands, reports said.

Former BMW manager Herbert Diess will be in charge of the holding company that will run the VW, Skoda and Seat passenger car brands. The Audi, Lamborghini and Ducati brands will form another holding company led by Audi CEO Rupert Stadler, according to reports.

Porsche, Bentley and Bugatti will be grouped together in a single unit under current Porsche boss Matthias Mueller. VW Commercial vehicles and the Scania and MAN heavy truck brands will form another division led by former Daimler trucks boss Andreas Renschler, the reports said.

VW is also examining whether it still needs separate group-level executives for sales, production and the Chinese market, reports said. This leaves the future of sales and marketing chief Christoph Klingler and VW's China head Jochem Heizmann in doubt. The group production chief job has been vacant since Michael Macht left in August.

German business daily Handelsblatt first reported the plans on Monday. Reuters and Bloomberg later reported that their sources had confirmed the plans for the new structure.

VW declined to comment.

Breaking with Piech

The reorganization would overturn former VW Chairman Ferdinand Piech's strategy of giving individual brands autonomy to maximize competition between them. It would also break from the centralized management structure developed under Piech.

Piech favored a decision-making approach that relied on a strong leader and a small group of key advisers. VW CEO Martin Winterkorn is pushing for a sweeping overhaul to streamline the automaker after surviving a power struggle with Piech. Winterkorn is seeking to give the group's three largest brands -- VW, Audi and Porsche -- as well as regional chiefs more leeway.

The new structure is designed to improve efficiency and make decision-making quicker, Handelsblattsaid. Each business group would decide which models it sells and which markets they are sold in. The head of each holding company will sit on a smaller management board.

VW intends to finalize the structure over the summer with the goal of getting supervisory board approval at the next scheduled meeting at the end of September, Bloomberg reported, citing company sources. Plans may also change after Diess joins VW in July. In addition to overseeing the VW brand, Diess could take on oversight of China in this role, Bloomberg said.

Many industry watchers said Piech made VW Group difficult to control and slow to react to market changes. The group has 600,000 employees worldwide and 119 factories.

Evercore ISI said the bundling of the mass-market brands VW, Skoda and Seat would create a unit that sells 7.6 million vehicles a year with with combined revenues of 119.2 billion euros, earnings of 3.2 billion euros and an operating margin of 2.7 percent, according to 2014 financial figures.

The new structure primarily addresses VW's mass market businesses, Evercore ISI's global automotive research head Arndt Ellinghorst said in a note to investors on Monday. "VW, rightly so in our view, didn't go to the extreme of bundling Audi and Porsche under one roof," he said.

Porsche, Bentley

Ellinghorst also wrote: "Allocating Bugatti and Bentley to Porsche isn't a big deal, at least not for shareholders. For Audi things remain unchanged. Skoda would be most affected and potentially disappointed given its very strong performance over the years."

M.M. Warburg analyst Marc-Rene Tonn said: "VW has in the past often responded slowly to market parameters which are changing quickly. Realigning brands in that way makes good sense. It would clarify responsibilities and speed up decision-making."
 

CIF

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Not sure this is much of an improvement. Sounds like a very complicated reorganization.

I am of the firm belief that all companies need a strong leader to excel and to stay focused and efficient. A decentralized system without a clear leader just sounds like problems down the road.
 

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Not sure this is much of an improvement. Sounds like a very complicated reorganization.

I am of the firm belief that all companies need a strong leader to excel and to stay focused and efficient. A decentralized system without a clear leader just sounds like problems down the road.


Well, yes, too many cooks in the kitchen all trying to stir the same pot of soup can ultimately be a problem, but in this case, I don't know if it will really be a improvement or not....especially in VW's American arm, which tends to sometimes be neglected. I just passed the reorganization article along because I thought it important news at VW as to how it will deal with Piech's departure. Having said that though, as strong leaders go, if they can get a good one, fine (and I agree with your assessment), but the last thing an auto firm needs today is someone like Henry Ford II, who ran his company as a personal fiefdom, or Roger Smith at GM, who looked at nothing but the bottom line. Carmaker1 and I have already touched on some of those problems in another thread (though we may have strayed a little from topic while doing so).
 
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mmcartalk

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One thing I can't help wondering, though, after reading the reorganization article (it didn't say), is whether they will consider bringing VW's Skoda line to the U.S. market. Top Gear Magazine has liked Skoda's products for quite some time, and have had some very good things to say about them. They basically offer VW design and performance at a lower cost. But, of course, their vehicles would have to meet American safety and emission standards, which would probably cost money to implement.
 

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With Hyundai and Kias.improvement is there more room for another volume car maker here? I don't see it.


Yes, I agree there is probably no room in the U.S. market for another Toyota, Ford, or Hyundai, but Skoda wouldn't be a volume maker in that sense. With the interchangeability of parts and design with VW products, they could be handled through VW dealers.

Anyhow, it was just a thought. Top Gear seems to really think highly of Skoda products..might be nice to see if they had any appeal here.
 
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mmcartalk

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I'm not talking about Skoda I'm talking about VW fortunes in the states.

OK....Thanks for clarifying. VW is trying to become a volume manufacturer here but I'm not sure they are going to succeed. One problem is that they just won't bring enough of their models over here. For a good example (though this may change next year), the only non-SUV currently sold here in the U.S. with the optional 4Motion AWD system is the CC. IMO, that's ludicrous.
 
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