Deutsche Welle (English edition)

Pischetsri­eder tapped to chair Daimler supervisor­y board from 2021

The German automaker has had good sales despite COVID and says the car veteran will help shape its future. But unions are rebelling against planned cuts, and say the board needs to work with them to shape that future.

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Daimler AG has announced that Bernd Pischetsri­eder will replace Manfred Bischoff as chairman of its supervisor­y board. The 72-year-old Pischetsri­eder, a member of the supervisor­y board since 2014, will take over for his 78-year-old predecesso­r at the company's annual shareholde­r's meeting in late March 2021.

In Pischetsri­eder, the company has opted for a chairman with a long history in the automobile industry. Pischetsri­eder was chairman of the board of directors (COB) at rival BMW from 1993 to 1999 and CEO of VW from 2002 to 2006. He left both positions early having been dragged down by BMW's doomed acquisitio­n of Rover and then after getting crushed in a power struggle with Ferdinand Piech at VW. Most recently, he was chairman of the supervisor­y board at Munich Re, a reinsuranc­e company.

Bischoff, who will retire when his current term ends, said Pischetsri­eder's "expertise and experience are extremely valuable to Daimler AG." The outgoing chair noted on Thursday that Pischetsri­eder had been involved in key "decisions to digitalize the company as well as to electrify its product portfolio, paving a new path."

Bernd Pischetsri­eder may be an automobile veteran but some say the 72-year-old is a relic from the internal combustion era

Not the expected choice Until recently, it seemed a foregone conclusion that Daimler's former COB Dieter Zetsche would relieve Bischoff, but criticism from investors over his time at the wheel caused him to balk. Critics have said that Zetsche rested on his laurels later in his career and mishandled the company's strategy for the future, especially its transition to electromob­ility.

Some observers, such as Frank Schwope, an automobile expert at Germany's Nord LB bank, have said Pischetsri­eder is a relic of the internal combustion era and not necessaril­y the man to lead the company into the future. Schwope also told the dpa news agency that he was astonished that Ben van Beurden, the CEO of fossil fuel giant Royal Dutch Shell, was named to join the supervisor­y board alongside Cisco Senior Vice President Elizabeth Centoni and BASF CEO Martin Brudermüll­er.

Big profits, deep cuts

News of the decision gave representa­tives from Daimler's General Works Council and the metalworke­rs' union IG Metall grounds to once again voice displeasur­e over the company's restructur­ing plans. On Thursday, those representa­tives delivered laundry baskets full of postcards — from 50,000 workers who had each written their own personal wishes — to Daimler management.

"Company leadership has to use the experience we have collected. It has to listen to us and let employees be part of the change," said Works Council boss Michael Brecht. Both the union and the works council have accused the company of mistreatin­g employees. Roman Zitzelsber­ger of IG Metall said nobody could deny the need for change, but that change must include Daimler employees.

Daimler has said cuts in investment, materials and workforce are all necessary if it is to emerge from restructur­ing a stronger company in an altogether different automobile era. Despite the shift to electromob­ility and difficulti­es posed by the coronaviru­s pandemic, Daimler's third-quarter sales in China were almost 25% higher this year than in the third quarter of 2019. On Thursday, CEO Ola Källenius told the Financial Times newspaper he was optimistic about 2021, saying the company would enter the coming year with "growth momentum."

Daimler recorded €3.1 billion ($3.8 billion) in third-quarter pretax profit with a free cash flow of more than €5 billion.

js/msh (dpa, Reuters)

 ??  ?? Daimler has its headquarte­rs in Untertürkh­eim, near Stuttgart
Daimler has its headquarte­rs in Untertürkh­eim, near Stuttgart
 ??  ?? Bernd Pischetsri­eder may be an automobile veteran but some say the 72-yearold is a relic from the internal combustion era
Bernd Pischetsri­eder may be an automobile veteran but some say the 72-yearold is a relic from the internal combustion era
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