US Lawsuits Could Cost Volkswagen $1.5B 'on the Low End'

Aaron Cole
by Aaron Cole

Analysts are estimating that more than 400 lawsuits (for now) pending against Volkswagen for fraudulent “clean diesel” claims could cost the automaker billions in court — if they even go that far.

Bloomberg reported (via Automotive News) that as lawyers for owners and Volkswagen wrangle over where to eventually hold a consolidated trial against the automaker, many analysts believe Volkswagen — who has already admitted to committing fraud — may end up paying at least $1.5 billion to customers, before damages or a potential buy back. That figure could rise to $8.9 billion if Volkswagen has to buy back their cars, according to Bloomberg Intelligence analyst Brandon Barnes.

(Presumably, those billions would be spent outside of a single wrench being turned on one of its illegally polluting cars.)

Despite the looming litigation, it’s likely that Volkswagen will settle claims before any trial, experts say. The automaker has already admitted wrongdoing, well before many of the lawsuits against Volkswagen were filed.

“I’ve never been in any case where, before it ever gets filed, the defendant admits publicly that it engaged in a fraudulent activity,” Paul Hanly, a lawyer with experience in multi-district cases such as Volkswagen’s, told Bloomberg. “The only thing to prove is the extent of the fraud.”

Its unclear what the fix for U.S. cars could be, or how much it could cost in the States. Volkswagen’s fix for cars in Europe cost less than many expected, but Volkswagen said it wouldn’t revise its earlier plans to take a $7 billion charge to help pay for the fixes.

In the U.S., any potential civil penalty would be outside what federal regulators could hand down as punishment to Volkswagen. Although initial estimates pegged the federal penalty as high as $18 billion, it’s likely that Volkswagen won’t face such a steep penalty. ( It may be closer to $3 billion if you use the feds’ own worksheets.)

According to Bloomberg, Volkswagen has about $20 billion cash on hand, and the automaker announced it had secured $20 billion in bridge financing from banks to help cover the cost of the scandal, according to Reuters.

Volkswagen may need every penny of that in the U.S.


Aaron Cole
Aaron Cole

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  • Pch101 Pch101 on Dec 03, 2015

    I'll take a wild guess and say that the cost of a US recall + fines will run somewhere between $500 million - $1 billion (EPA will account for the recall costs when setting the fine), and civil litigation will add a similar amount to the tab (lots of plaintiffs, but relatively low damages per plaintiff -- the lawyers will be the winners here.) That would be painful but manageable. VW's larger problem is its US market share was already lousy to begin with, and this won't help.

  • Kendahl Kendahl on Dec 04, 2015

    In the end, it might have been cheaper for VW to tell all the owners of non-compliant cars, "Bring in your illegal car and we'll swap it for a comparable, brand new, legal one." Rather than sending the trade-ins to the crusher, VW could sell them in third world markets to replace even dirtier vehicles.

  • ToolGuy "Nothing is greater than the original. Same goes for original Ford Parts. They’re the parts we built to build your Ford. Anything else is imitation."
  • Slavuta I don't know how they calc this. My newest cars are 2017 and 2019, 40 and 45K. Both needed tires at 30K+, OEM tires are now don't last too long. This is $1000 in average (may be less). Brakes DYI, filters, oil, wipers. I would say, under $1500 under 45K miles. But with the new tires that will last 60K, new brakes, this sum could be less in the next 40K miles.
  • BeauCharles I had a 2010 Sportback GTS for 10 years. Most reliable car I ever own. Never once needed to use that super long warranty - nothing ever went wrong. Regular maintenance and tires was all I did. It's styling was great too. Even after all those years it looked better than many current models. Biggest gripe I had was the interior. Cheap (but durable) materials and no sound insulation to speak of. If Mitsubishi had addressed those items I'm sure it would have sold better.
  • Marty S I learned to drive on a Crosley. Also, I had a brand new 75 Buick Riviera and the doors were huge. Bent the inside edge of the hood when opening it while the passenger door was open. Pretty poor assembly quality.
  • 3-On-The-Tree Alan, I was an Apache pilot and after my second back surgery I was medically boarded off of flying status due to vibrations, climbing on and off aircraft, so I was given the choice of getting out or re-branching so I switched to Military Intel. Yes your right if you can’t perform your out doesn’t matter if your at 17 years. Dad always said your just a number, he was a retired command master chief 25 years.
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