The world’s biggest sovereign wealth fund criticized Volkswagen AG’s ownership structure, saying it concentrates too much power with the Porsche-Piech family and puts minority shareholders at a disadvantage amid the carmaker’s emissions crisis.
“This cannot be a role model for Germany,” Yngve Slyngstad, chief executive officer of Norway’s sovereign wealth fund, said in an interview published on Saturday with Frankfurter Allgemeine Sonntagszeitung. Through family holding company Porsche Automobil Holding SE, the Porsche-Piech clan controls 50.73 percent of Volkswagen’s voting shares, while only owning 31.5 percent of the company equity.
“I don’t think the family wants to change anything about the structure,” Slyngstad was quoted as saying. “We don’t have the impression they want to listen to other Volkswagen shareholders’ concerns.”
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Norway’s US$810 billion fund, which holds a 1.2 percent stake in Volkswagen, takes ethical rules on human rights, some weapons production, the environment and tobacco into account when it makes investment decisions. It previously criticized Volkswagen’s shareholder structure in 2009, after the VW-Porsche takeover battle.
A call for comment to Norges Bank Investment Management outside of normal business hours was not answered. Volkswagen spokesman Eric Felber declined to comment on the report.
The German carmaker is seeking to restore its reputation after revelations it cheated to meet emissions regulations. On Friday, the company took the unusual step of delaying the publication of its annual results and pushed back its shareholders’ meeting.
The delay is a further admission that Volkswagen does not yet know the full financial fallout from the scandal. More than four months after the scandal broke in the US, Europe’s leading carmaker is still to come up with a technical fix for almost 600,000 diesel cars and is facing a growing number of legal claims. Volkswagen has already revised its earnings targets and set aside 6.7 billion euros (US$7.5 billion) to cover the cost of repairs for about 11 million vehicles around the world. Still uncertain is how to meet tough pollution regulations in the US, where authorities rejected Volkswagen’s first proposal earlier this year.
The company said it will announce new dates for the publication of last year’s results and the general meeting “as soon as possible.” Germany’s Securities Trading Act compels companies to publish their annual reports no later than four months after the end of their fiscal year.
A source at the carmaker said last year’s results and the annual shareholders’ meeting, due to be held on April 21, would both be delayed by four to six weeks.
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