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Report: VW has struck a deal with the US government over emissions-cheating scandal

Apr 21, 2016, 21:11 IST

AP

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Volkswagen has struck a deal with the US government over the diesel-emissions-cheating scandal that has plagued the car maker, Reuters reported Thursday.

"Under the terms of the agreement, Volkswagen would include 'substantial compensation' to owners of VW's diesel vehicles, and would establish an environmental compensation fund," Reuters reported.

Bloomberg reported that the deal "will cost at least $10 billion," citing "a
person with direct knowledge of the matter."

Reuters noted that buybacks are also in the picture, which would be notable as 500,000 vehicles are affected by the cheating scandal.

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Buybacks for recall-related problems are rare in the auto industry - automakers prefer to come up with a mechanical or technological fix - but VW has struggled to resolve the diesel-emissions flaws in its cars and has seen its US sales plummet at a time when the industry is booming.

Regulators and prosecutors around the world are investigating the German company after it admitted in September to installing software in its cars to cheat exhaust emissions tests, unleashing a scandal dubbed Dieselgate in the media.

Analysts and shareholders applauded the prospect of a deal, sending VW shares up 6.4 percent to 128.6 euros per share on Germany's blue-chip DAX index.

"We welcome the fact that VW appears to be pursuing a broad compensation program," said Arndt Ellinghorst, analyst at Evercore ISI.

Two people familiar with the matter said on Wednesday that Volkswagen would raise its provisions to a double-digit billion euro amount from 6.7 billion euros to pay for the buyback and regulatory issues.

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Evercore ISI estimates that the costs for cleaning up Dieselgate will reach 11.4 billion euros.

(Reporting by Edward Taylor; editing by Jason Neely)

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