Volkswagen shares are near their 2016 high and valuations have rebounded after last year’s emissions scandal but experience of previous corporate crises suggests a full recovery will take time.
With first-quarter earnings due, shares in the German automaker are up more than 50% from lows hit in October following revelations that it had cheated diesel emissions tests.
A US judge said on Tuesday that Volkswagen had made substantial progress toward reaching a final settlement with car owners and the US
government, for which the company has set aside $18bn while warning the bill could rise.
But the history of corporate crises – including Michael Woodford’s 2012 ouster from Olympus and BP’s Gulf of Mexico oil spill in 2010 – suggests Volkswagen could be feeling the effects of “Dieselgate” for a long time to come.
Eight months after evidence of Volkswagen’s rule-breaking emerged, its share price has caught up with some peers, but analysts warn the firm is not out of the woods yet.
“It will take years to recover, in terms of the stock price, sorting out all the fines, and the reputation.
Analysts are struggling to assess what the damage actually is, as there’s still a steady corrosive drip-drip of news,” said Mike Ingram, market analyst at BGC Partners.
“Yes, they’ve bumped up their provisions, but you have to wonder whether they’re prepared for a moderately bad outcome, let alone a “worst-case” scenario.”
Shares in both BP and Olympus remained below pre-crisis levels a year after their respective scandals broke and Volkswagen shares are still some 20% below their early-September level.
A Reuters poll expects operating profit to fall 17% when the carmaker reports first quarter earnings next week.
There are signs, however, that investors are beginning to take a more positive view of the stock.
The higher share price has also restored VW’s valuation to its five-year median of 7.3 times forward earnings, in line with the sector average.
Rather than being deterred by this higher valuation, some analysts are raising their own ratings on the stock, having slashed them in the aftermath of the crisis.
Analysts are more optimistic than at any time since the scandal first broke last September, with only five “sell” ratings on the stock and three “strong sells”, according to Thomson Reuters Eikon data.
That is the lowest number of analysts to hold a sell rating on VW in eight months, although there were no more than five sell ratings on the stock at any time in the 12 months before the scandal and no analyst rated it a sell in August 2014.
Analyst Klaus Breitenbach at Baader Bank in Frankfurt lifted his rating on Volkswagen to “hold” from “sell” this week, citing the progress made in reaching a deal with the US authorities.
“It will be a relief for the investor community if there is a settlement in the United States and we know the final number (including potential fines and how many cars will be fixed or repurchased),” he said.
He remains cautious on the outlook for the stock, however, warning that further losses from the scandal are possible even after the final cost of US fines and compensation is tallied.
“I’m not sure if I could become positive on the stock...
because even if they settle in the US, there is still a risk in what’s happening outside...That risk is still there,” Breitenbach said.
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