Bloomberg
Volkswagen AG plans to widen cost-saving efforts and standardise key technologies as the German manufacturer seeks to rival Tesla Inc. on electric cars and keep traditional rivals at bay.
VW targets 1 million electric-vehicle sales this year and aims to become the global EV market leader by 2025 at the latest, the company said. By 2030, the share of fully electric vehicles in Europe is set to rise to as much as 60% of its deliveries.
“We think that we can prove this year that we are strong in EV,†Chief Executive Officer Herbert Diess said in an interview with Bloomberg Television.
Volkswagen is setting a high bar for the first electric vehicle it will build around the globe.
Europe’s largest automaker is overhauling its sprawling operations to free up funds for new technologies as it plans to build the industry’s largest fleet of electric vehicles. The company is introducing several new battery-powered models, has unveiled Europe’s boldest battery-production push and struck a deal with unions to cut more jobs in Germany.
VW’s preference shares rise as much as 5% in Frankfurt to 204.50 euros, the highest intraday since July 2015. The Wolfsburg-based manufacturer is now valued at about 117 billion euros ($139 billion).
VW said it will use a “platform†approach to leverage economies of scale and raise the efficiency of deploying technologies including software, batteries and charging infrastructure.
The company plans to bolster its software operations to 10,000 staff as it develops automated-driving features and in-car operating systems. The hiring push would make VW one of Europe’s largest software firms behind SAP SE, improving its chances of catching up to Tesla and counter the existential risks posed by the automotive ambitions of Apple Inc. and Alphabet Inc.
Last month, the company said it expects profitability to improve this year. It kept its dividend proposal unchanged even as analysts braced for a cut, and said rising vehicle deliveries will push up revenue up significantly.
By 2025 at the latest, VW wants to generate an operating return on sales of 7% to as much as 8%.
VW’s revamp efforts were jolted last year by the health crisis, which shuttered factories and showrooms. While many European countries still wrestle with rising infections and slow vaccinating, the industry is also suffering from a shortage of semiconductors that has disrupted production.