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Giant Norway fund slams “unacceptable” VW-Porsche deal

October 8 2009 at 6:55 PM
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  (Login USCaribbean)
from IP address 24.129.116.102


Giant Norway fund slams unacceptable VW-Porsche deal in second governance campaign in a week

Announcement follows controversial US and UK governance broadsides.

by Daniel Brooksbank | October 8th, 2009

The asset manager of the Norwegian Government Pension Fund Global has made its second major international public corporate governance stand within a week by writing to the board of Germanys Volkswagen saying its planned acquisition of Porsche is unacceptable. In a letter addressed to VW supervisory board chairman, Ferdinand Piech, the NOK2,385bn (280bn) Norges Bank Investment Management (NBIM), which runs the sovereign wealth funds assets, said: We write to you to express our deep concerns over Volkswagens agreed and planned dealing with Porsche entities and their controlling owners, concerns we believe are widely shared among investors in the equity market,
NBIM head of corporate governance Anne Kvam and analyst Ola Peter Krohn Gjessing said the takeover plans: leave the impression of being designed to suit the needs of the Porsche controlling families at the expense of Volkswagen and its non-controlling owners. The letter added that the transactions are compromised by conflicts of interest. Last week, NBIM announced a major corporate global governance campaign challenging four major US companies to split their chairman and chief executive roles. It is also threw its considerable weight in the UK stock market as owner of £32bn worth of UK listed shares behind moves to push all UK corporate directors to be re-elected every year, a tougher position than recommended by the recent draft Walker review on corporate governance by Sir David Walker. That position was criticised by UK investors including Hermes and the Universities Superannuation Scheme, who said it risked making the relationship between shareholders and boards short-termist.

In its latest governance broadside, NBIM, Europes largest equity investor, questioned whether individual VW supervisory board members had fulfilled their fiduciary duty to the company. Unless the supervisory board takes steps to alleviate our concerns, we see little reason to support the execution of the proposed transactions. As [an] investor we will consider the options open to us in this respect.
The funds decision could represent a key moment in addressing some of the complexities of cross-shareholdings in Germany AG.
NBIM held NOK2.6bn (311m) of VW shares at the end of last year, according to its web site giving it a 0.15% voting stake and 0.35% ownership in the Wolfsburg-based car giant. It held NOK529m of Porsche stock, giving it 0.57% ownership. Foreign institutional investors held 11.9% of VW at the start of this year, down from 25.6% a year before.
NBIMs intervention follows VWs agreement in August to buy 42% of Porsche SEs car arm for 3.3bn as part of a gradual merger of the firms. The deal is effectively a bailout for Porsche which has run up billions of euros of debt in a bid to swallow its larger peer. The saga at one point saw VW briefly become the worlds most valuable company. VW chairman Piech is a member of the Porsche and Piech families that control Porsches voting shares. The families that control Porsche have four representatives on VW supervisory board. VW spokespersons were not speaking to the press on the matter. VW shares were up around 2% at 115.39 today.



http://www.responsible-investor.com/home/article/giant_norway_fund_slams_unacceptable_vw_porsche_deal_in_second_governance_c/


    
This message has been edited by USCaribbean from IP address 24.129.116.102 on Oct 8, 2009 6:58 PM


 
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(Login privateinvestors)
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VW vs Porsche

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October 8 2009, 7:32 PM 

It is indeed a huge mess.

I think they should keep both brands alone and focus in building a better car. The 4 door Porsche (The Panamera) is one ugly car. What a waste of money.

Porsche should stick to what they know best. Making sport cars.

[linked image]


P.I.



    
This message has been edited by privateinvestors from IP address 76.167.222.92 on Oct 8, 2009 7:34 PM


 
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