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Volkswagen eyes overhaul with job cuts, plant closures to challenge structure



<p>The move could test the Volkswagen law, setting up a clash with powerful stakeholders as investors push for urgent reforms.</p>
<p>“/><figcaption class= The move could test the Volkswagen law, setting up a clash with powerful stakeholders as investors push for urgent reforms.

Volkswagen CEO Oliver Blume’s plan to cut up to 100,000 jobs and close high-cost German factories is about more than cost savings: it could also mark an attempt to challenge a corporate structure that has long held back change.

Europe’s biggest automaker is weighing its largest-ever restructuring, including doubling planned job cuts and shutting four German factories, sources told Reuters, as it battles tariffs, rising costs and intensifying competition from ‌Asia.

It is also ⁠weighing plans ⁠to carve out passenger cars and components into separate divisions, a move that could test the limits of the Volkswagen law, which entrenches the influence of labour and the company’s home state of Lower Saxony, its second-largest shareholder.

The law effectively limits management’s ability to close plants. But because it applies to VW AG – which controls the group’s six core German factories – creating separate entities could open a path to sidestep those constraints.

Three financial and legal sources said spinning off the passenger car division – heavily exposed to tariffs, weak European demand and a price war in China – could be a step in that process.

But that would set up a direct confrontation with powerful unions and ⁠political stakeholders. The ‌IG Metall union has already warned the carve-out plans amount to an “attack on the VW law”, signalling Blume faces a fight.

With the sector in crisis, Volkswagen’s shares near 16-year lows and internal tensions rising, some investors say management has ⁠little choice but to challenge the status quo.

Ulrich Hocker, president of shareholder lobby group DSW, said labour’s influence was “excessive” and rooted in a bygone era. With labour and Lower Saxony together holding a majority on Volkswagen’s supervisory board, the company has a history of compromises that ultimately fell short.

“At some point, everyone has to realise that a major transformation must be carried out to ensure the survival of this company,” he said.

Spinning off the ‘bad bank’

In practice, however, any spin-off would still require shareholder approval of more than 80 per cent under the Volkswagen law, effectively giving Lower Saxony – with 20 per cent of voting rights – a blocking stake.

“Lower Saxony would never back a vote aimed at diminishing its own power,” one of the sources ‌said.

UBS expects a compromise, warning that any restructuring will likely come with provisions and a downgrade to Volkswagen’s 2026 outlook.

Olaf Lies, Lower Saxony’s premier and a supervisory board member, said the state would not agree to measures to weaken the influence of workers, which he said ⁠was an “integral part of Volkswagen’s success story”.

He has instead suggested shifting production of China-focused models to Germany to support underused plants – an idea Blume has also floated.

Beyond governance, investors see a financial logic in simplifying Volkswagen’s sprawling structure, which spans 10 brands and has drawn criticism from investors, including top shareholder Porsche SE.

The company might take a page out of Siemens’ playbook in streamlining its empire to address the long-standing gap between its market value and the value analysts ascribe to its assets.

The imbalance is stark: Volkswagen’s majority stakes in truck unit Traton and sports-car maker Porsche are together worth about €44 billion ($50 billion), exceeding the group’s roughly €37.6 billion market value.

Citi analysts say carving out the core business could unlock value, likening the move to a “bad bank” that would isolate weaker operations and leave a leaner holding company less exposed to geopolitics and weak growth.

  • Published On Jun 30, 2026 at 11:21 AM IST

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