Investors sue Porsche SE over VW scandal

Clean diesel? No such thing
Clean diesel? No such thing

Porsche SE, the main shareholder of Volkswagen Group, is facing lawsuits from investors claiming the firm did not disclose the financial risks of VW's emissions scandal uncovered a year ago.

Frankfurt-based law firm Nieding + Barth has filed 12 lawsuits against Porsche SE, which controls 52.2 percent of VW's voting shares, while lawyer Andreas Tilp has submitted another three suits.

Tilp, who has represented investors in many German cases over capital market-disclosure issues, has also been pushing a case against VW filed on behalf of hundreds of investors and worth over 3 billion euros ($3.37 billion).

"We consider all complaints to be unfounded," a Porsche SE spokesman said on Tuesday, noting that as a holding company, Porsche SE is principally not involved in VW's operating business. Porsche SE is controlled by the Porsche and Piech families.

The Porsche investors claim they lost out from the fall in Porsche SE preference shares after VW's manipulations were brought to light by authorities in the United States last September.

The regional court in Stuttgart, where Porsche is based, has received 80 lawsuits targeting Porsche and VW, Germany's Stuttgarter Zeitung reported on Tuesday, citing a spokeswoman at the court.

VW is also caught up in legal action in the U.S., South Korea and elsewhere and is facing billions of dollars in costs related to its emissions-test manipulations.