$140 million offered to Wiedeking to quit Porsche
Editor | Jul 20, 2009 | Comments 0
Porsche CEO Wendelin Wiedeking could be offered a $141 million (100 million euros) payoff to quit the sports car maker to make way for a merger with Volkswagen, Germany’s Sueddeutsche Zeitung newspaper reported Friday.
The newspaper said Wiedeking has been visited by Porsche Chairman Wolfgang Porsche in the past few days, who “made it clear” that the embattled CEO should step down.
Wiedeking has come under fire for allowing Porsche’s holding company to amass debts of more than $12.7 billion (9 billion euros) during a failed attempt to take over VW. He also opposes a plan by Ferdinand Piech, VW’s chairman and a part owner of Porsche, that would have VW to take a stake of nearly 50 percent in Porsche to reduce the company’s debt burden.
On Thursday, Wiedeking gave no hint that he could step down from the company he has led since 1993. Wiedeking transformed Porsche from a bankruptcy candidate into the world’s most profitable carmaker until the economic crisis hit.
“I am a happy CEO and feel fit and well in the role,” he told journalists as he arrived in a Porsche Panamera at a 100th anniversary party for Audi in Ingolstadt, Germany.
Wiedeking said Porsche and VW could agree to a deal on a stake
Wiedeking’s rival Piech is pushing a plan that has cash-rich VW buying a 49.9 percent stake in Porsche for more than $5.6 billion (4 billion euros).
Uwe Hueck, Porsche’s top labor leader, said the offer is not enough to ensure Porsche’s liquidity. Hueck said the correct price for such a stake is $9.9 billion to $11.3 billion (7 billion to 8 billion euros).
Hueck has also said that Wiedeking will remain at the helm “for as long as his contract permits, and that’s until 2012.”
source: autoweek
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