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Electric vehicles

Volkswagen vaults this tech giant to become Germany’s most valuable company as EV exuberance grips markets

By
Christoph Rauwald
Christoph Rauwald
,
Lukas Strobl
Lukas Strobl
and
Bloomberg
Bloomberg
Down Arrow Button Icon
By
Christoph Rauwald
Christoph Rauwald
,
Lukas Strobl
Lukas Strobl
and
Bloomberg
Bloomberg
Down Arrow Button Icon
March 18, 2021, 5:05 AM ET

Volkswagen AG surpassed SAP SE to become Germany’s most valuable public company, driven by growing investor confidence it can supplant Tesla Inc. As the global electric vehicle leader.

VW’s preference shares rose 11% on Wednesday in Frankfurt, valuing the automaker at more than 140 billion euros ($166 billion). SAP’s market value slipped to about 127 billion euros.

Vaulting past Europe’s biggest software company marks a spectacular comeback for the German industrial giant, which last topped the country’s DAX Index six years ago, shortly before the bruising experience of the diesel-emissions cheating crisis. Several companies have held the title since including Wirecard AG, the financial technology firm that went bust in one of Germany’s biggest accounting scandals.

While Tesla remains the world’s most valuable automaker by far at more than $640 billion, VW’s recent rise shows that investors have started to give credit to the most aggressive push into electric cars by a traditional manufacturer.

VW’s common shares have soared more than 80% this year while the more liquid preference shares are up more than 50%. The outsize gain in the common stock is partly driven by U.S. Retail investor buying and high short interest.

Chief Executive Officer Herbert Diess this week made back-to-back announcements on how he plans to turn VW into the leading electric-car company, earmarking investments in battery factories and a slew of new plug-in models.

The amount of market value VW added this month alone is well over half the total capitalization of Diess’s former employer, BMW AG. The smaller rival on Wednesday set a goal for roughly half of sales to be all-electric by the end of the decade, sending its shares to the highest since Sept. 2018.

VW plans also to bolster its software operations to 10,000 staff, making it one of Europe’s biggest technology outfits after SAP, which first snatched the German stock-market crown from Siemens AG in July 2012.

About the Authors
By Christoph Rauwald
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By Lukas Strobl
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By Bloomberg
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