Volkswagen Sells Majority Stake in Marine Engine Unit Everllence

Newsworm
Newsworm
with
AFP
June 25, 2026
Volkswagen has agreed to sell a 51% stake in Everllence, its marine engine and clean energy technology unit, to US private equity firm Bain Capital for 7.4 billion euros ($8.4 billion). The deal is part of VW's broader restructuring drive as it battles falling profits, fierce Chinese competition and a troubled shift to electric vehicles. VW will retain a 49% stake in the medium term.
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Volkswagen Sells Majority Stake in Marine Engine Unit Everllence
Volkswagen is pursuing a sweeping overhaul as it struggles with weak European demand amid fierce Chinese competition - AFP

VW Strikes €7.4 Billion Deal to Offload Marine Engine Unit

Volkswagen said Thursday that it would sell a majority stake in its marine engine unit to a US investment firm for 7.4 billion euros ($8.4 billion) as the struggling German carmaker pushes ahead with an overhaul. Battered by fierce Chinese competition, weak demand in Europe and a troubled shift to electric vehicles, the 10-brand carmaker has seen its profits sink and is in the process of cutting 50,000 jobs in Germany.

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Bain Capital Wins Hotly Contested Bidding War for Everllence

Seeking to slim down its sprawling operations, Volkswagen has agreed to sell a 51 percent stake in Everllence, which makes ship engines as well as technology related to clean energy, to the US private equity group Bain Capital. The Financial Times reported there was a bidding war for the stake, with Bain Capital seeing off rival private equity groups including CVC and EQT. VW said it would remain a major shareholder "in the medium term" with a 49 percent stake, though no decision has yet been taken on the use of the proceeds. The company's car brands also include Audi, Seat and Skoda.

The Case for Restructuring

"We are systematically driving forward the transformation of the Volkswagen Group and creating competitive structures," said VW's finance chief Arno Antlitz. The group aims to reduce the complexity of its structures, streamline its management, strengthen its financial position and increase its financial flexibility.

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Jobs Protected and Deal Timeline Confirmed

Safeguards for Everllence's five German sites have been agreed as part of the deal, with compulsory redundancies ruled out until the end of 2030. The sale is subject to the completion of consultations with staff representatives and regulatory approvals, and is expected to be finalised by the end of 2026. Everllence has more than 16,000 employees worldwide and last year generated revenues of 4.9 billion euros.

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