Volkswagen has taken major writedown on Northvolt stake, sources say

Nov 26, 2024

The writedowns at Volkswagen were done throughout the current financial year, the people said, without giving the stake's current value.
Volkswagen, Northvolt's top shareholder, has significantly written down its 21% stake in the Swedish battery cells maker that filed for bankruptcy protection in the United States last week, two people familiar with the matter said. Several of Northvolt's top shareholders have been cutting or reviewing the value of their holdings in the firm, which has kept missing production targets as an expected boom in electric vehicle demand has failed to materialise in Europe.

The writedowns at Volkswagen were done throughout the current financial year, the people said, without giving the stake's current value.

At the end of 2023, Volkswagen reported the book value of its shareholding in the Swedish firm at 693 million euros (USD 726 million), down nearly a quarter from a year earlier.

That value dropped dramatically over the course of 2024, the people said. They declined to be identified because the information is confidential. One of the people said the writedowns would have no impact on Volkswagen's annual results, pointing to the fact that writedowns on the carmaker's Northvolt stake had already been made prior to the Chapter 11 filings.

Volkswagen expects an operating profit margin of 5.6% and net cash flow in the automobile division of 2 billion euros in 2024.

Volkswagen declined to comment on the writedowns, reiterating that it would not make any statements on the impact Northvolt's filing will have on the company. The Financial Times on Saturday reported that funds managed by Goldman Sachs, Northvolt's second-largest shareholder with a 19.2% stake, would write off their USD 900 million stake in Northvolt to zero by year-end, citing letters to investors.

Swedish pension fund AMF, also among Northvolt's top 10 shareholders, said it was regularly reviewing and adjusting the values of its unlisted holdings, but offered no details when asked about its Northvolt stake.

"As is obvious to everyone, the value of Northvolt is considerably lower than it was compared to a year ago," an AMF spokesman said, adding the pension fund had invested the equivalent of 1.95 billion Swedish crowns (USD 178 million) through the years.

Scottish money manager Baillie Gifford, Northvolt's sixth-largest shareholder with a 4.8% stake according to its annual report, valued its investment in the company at around 20 million pounds (USD 25 million) at end of September, down from 375 million at the end of March.

The investment firm declined to comment.