Volkswagen bosses told costs of emissions saga a month before disclosure

10 Jul, 2017

A Volkswagen manager told the chief executive and other managers that the carmaker's diesel emissions cheating could cost up to $18.5 billion almost a month before investors were informed, German newspaper Bild am Sonntag reported. Investors were told about VW's systematic emissions test cheating using illegal software on September 18 2015, when the US Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) informed markets.
The Sunday newspaper Bild am Sonntag reported that Oliver Schmidt, a VW executive who was arrested in Miami in January this year, told the then CEO Martin Winterkorn about possible financial implications at an August 25, 2015 presentation.
German securities law requires firms publish any market sensitive news in a timely fashion. A probe by German prosecutors includes investigating whether VW disclosed details promptly. The newspaper said Schmidt informed Winterkorn about the maximum possible penalty at the meeting that was also attended by Heinz-Jakob Neusser, VW's development chief at the time, and Herbert Diess, who still works as VW's brand chief. Bild am Sonntag cited US investigation documents.
A VW spokesman said the firm would not comment on the report because of ongoing legal and regulatory investigations. It has previously said it did not violate disclosure rules. The VW spokesman also said Diess had no comment. Lawyers for Winterkorn, who stepped down as VW CEO in September 2015, could not immediately be reached for comment. Annette Voges, the lawyer for Neusser who also left his position in September 2015, declined to comment on behalf of her client saying she had not seen the statements by Schmidt.
Schmidt and his lawyers could not be reached for comment. VW admitted using a "defeat device", the name used to describe software to deceive regulators about the real extent of diesel pollution, to the US EPA and California's Air Resources Board on September 3 2015, according to VW's annual report for 2016. In the annual report, VW said its management did not make details of the scandal public before September 18, 2015 because board members considered costs would be "controllable overall with a view to the business activities of Volkswagen Group."
German prosecutors are investigating Diess, Winterkorn and VW's current chairman Hans Dieter Poetsch, as part of a wider probe into market manipulation. The executives have denied wrongdoing. German prosecutors conducting the investigation into market manipulation declined to comment on Sunday. Bild am Sonntag also reported that Winterkorn and Diess were informed VW had used a "defeat device" at a meeting on July 27, 2015. Diess had joined VW just weeks earlier.

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