The logos of Suzuki Motor and Volkswagen are displayed at the Tokyo Motor Show 2011 (file). Volkswagen will sell a Suzuki Motor stake valued at about $3.8bn following a decision from arbitrators that ended a four-year dispute over a failed partnership.

Bloomberg/Tokyo

Volkswagen will sell a Suzuki Motor Corp stake valued at about ¥463bn ($3.8bn) following a decision from arbitrators that ended a four-year dispute over a failed partnership.
VW will sell its 19.9% holding after the arbitrators upheld the Japanese automaker’s request to end the cooperation, the companies said in separate statements yesterday. The value of the stake, which VW bought from Suzuki in 2010 for ¥222.5bn, is based on Friday’s closing price.
The end of the dispute provides Suzuki with the opportunity to find a new partner, after its cooperation with VW failed to result in a single joint project. The Japanese carmaker, which specialises in inexpensive cars, is pursuing a goal to boost annual revenue to ¥3.7tn by March 2020. It’s small compared to VW and other global competitors.
“It’s like taking out a tiny bone stuck in my throat,” Chairman Osamu Suzuki, who brokered the deal in 2009, said at a press conference Sunday in Tokyo. “I feel refreshed.”
The goal of the partnership was to cooperate on small, fuel-efficient cars for emerging economies, providing Suzuki with access to technology while giving VW a wider role in the Indian market through Suzuki’s business there.
Relations soured in 2011 after the Japanese company agreed to buy diesel engines from Fiat. As trust broke down, the companies accused each other of breaching the accord.
“After their irreconcilable quarrelling, the separation was unavoidable,” said Ferdinand Dudenhoeffer, director of the Center for Automotive Research at the University of Duisburg- Essen “Mr. Suzuki didn’t want to be a VW employee, and that’s understandable.”
Even in winding down the relationship, the two companies were at odds. Suzuki said that VW has to sell the stake back to them or a party of the Japanese company’s choosing, while VW said the buyer of the stake hasn’t been decided yet. The German company, which has hired a bank for the sale, said it’s still analysing the ruling and will determine later to whom to sell the shares.
Suzuki also faces the prospect of having to pay damages after arbitrators ruled the Japanese company breached the agreement. The amount of any penalties would be addressed in a further stage of the arbitration proceedings, Suzuki said. The Hamamatsu-based company said it wouldn’t amend profit forecasts as a result of the ruling.
Volkswagen said it expects a “positive effect” on earnings and liquidity from the sale of the shares. It will decide next steps after analysing the ruling.
As it reviews its strategic options, Suzuki plans to remain independent. The one thing that’s clear is that it won’t be working with VW again.
“You don’t remarry someone who you’ve divorced,” Osamu Suzuki said.