Frankfurt: Days before production starts on Volkswagen AG’s cornerstone electric vehicle, the German manufacturer is stepping up a campaign to more than double the market value and gain investor recognition for the industry’s most ambitious technology push.
In an internal newsletter sent last week, Chief Financial Officer Frank Witter prodded managers to get behind a goal to reach a valuation of 200 billion euros ($221 billion), arguing that a higher stock price will help VW keep pace with rivals and strengthen its hand in negotiations with future partners. Witter’s message confirms a goal reported earlier this month by Bloomberg.
“We must increase our company value in order to stay competitive,” Witter said in the newsletter seen by Bloomberg. “A higher capital market value reflects profitability and financial strength along with the future viability of a company.”
The need to act is evident in VW’s numbers. The world’s biggest carmaker leads Toyota Motor Corp in deliveries and generates robust cash and profits. But its main global rival has more cost-efficient manufacturing operations and a market value of 24.4 trillion yen ($225 billion), versus about $95 billion for VW.
VW’s lower valuation and earnings multiples suggest investors aren’t convinced the company’s 44 billion-euro plan will succeed in making VW a leader in electrification with new, money-spinning software-based services. The company starts production on the all-electric ID.3, a key entry in an e-car onslaught that will eventually span 70 models across the group, at its plant in Zwickau on Nov. 4, with an event to be attended by German Chancellor Angela Merkel.
“We are tackling crucial future areas, among them e-mobility and digitalisation, with resolution and determination,” Witter said. “That boosts our credibility and the capital market gains more trust in our future viability.”
A VW spokesman confirmed the authenticity of the newsletter, which will be used to regularly update managers on developments in the capital markets, and declined to comment further. The company has linked compensation of its top executives more closely with share-price performance, and is phasing in the system across management ranks.
The seven-point plan includes strengthening individual brands such as VW, Audi and Porsche, growth in China and boosting software operations.
Industry peers like General Motors, Ford Motor and Daimler AG also trade at relatively low multiples, far behind Apple Inc and Waymo parent Alphabet Inc that are plotting to grab valuable turf as technology challenges traditional automaking businesses.