Volkswagen used to be an engineering company that happened to offer loans. Now, it is a financial services company that happens to build very good cars. And that is a revolution you won’t see on a test drive.
In Germany, as energy prices soared, late payment rates on auto loans ticked up to levels not seen since the 2008 financial crisis. Furthermore, the transition to direct sales (agency model) is forcing VWFS to compete with independent banks for the first time. When a customer buys a car online from VW, the law requires VWFS to offer them a loan from a competitor as an option. The monopoly on captive finance is cracking. financial services volkswagen
"We are no longer the default option; we are the best option," a senior VWFS treasury executive told Finance Forward on condition of anonymity. "If we don't beat the rate of a direct bank, we lose the customer forever. It keeps us honest, but it keeps us lean." For investors, VWFS is the ultimate hedge. When new car sales fall, people hold onto their cars longer, extending leases and paying maintenance fees (often financed through VWFS). When sales rise, financing volume explodes. Volkswagen used to be an engineering company that
Yet, in the shadow of the world’s largest auto factory in Wolfsburg, a financial juggernaut is quietly printing money. In a year where car sales fluctuate with supply chain chaos and interest rate hikes, has emerged not just as a support division, but as the group’s most reliable pillar of stability. The Bank You Didn't Know You Were Borrowing From For the average driver leasing an ID.4 or financing a used Golf, the transaction feels like a dealership perk. In reality, it is a sophisticated banking operation. VWFS is one of Europe’s largest private financial institutions, managing a portfolio of over €240 billion in assets. In Germany, as energy prices soared, late payment