By Andreas Cremer and Maria Sheahan
WOLFSBURG/BERLIN, Germany (Reuters) - Volkswagen's new Chief Executive Herbert Diess embarked on the most far-reaching shake-up in the carmaker's history on Friday, seeking to unite a company whose feuding factions have often slowed reform.
Diess answered questions at VW group headquarters in the German town of Wolfsburg, saying he will pool the company's 12 brands into three automotive groups and a truck business, while signalling that some businesses may be sold.
"This is an evolution and not a revolution," Diess, 59, told journalists, carefully understating the significance of carving Volkswagen up into new divisions, adding that details still needed to be worked out over the coming months.
"The creation of brand groups has been under consideration for a while," he said about the biggest overhaul since VW became a multi-brand conglomerate under former CEO Ferdinand Piech, a grandson of VW Beetle designer Ferdinand Porsche.
However, analysts welcomed signs of genuine movement at Europe's largest automaker where changes to corporate structure have often been stifled by warring stakeholders. VW has also had to pay out billions of euros in fines following its 2015 emissions cheating scandal.
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"This is all we could have asked for, and expect the market to take the news positively," Evercore ISI analyst Arndt Ellinghorst said in a note on Friday.
Shares in Volkswagen rose 0.6 percent to 177.64 euros by 1250 GMT, against a similar rise for the STOXX 600 automotive index.
FACING THE MEDIA
Dressed in a dark blue suit and a burgundy tie, Diess and chairman Hans Dieter Poetsch were the only executives to field questions about the carmaker, even though VW announced a raft of new appointments on Thursday.
Audi boss Rupert Stadler who becomes head of sales for the entire group and Porsche CEO Oliver Blume who becomes head of production, and Gunnar Kilian the company's new HR chief, were notably absent.
Diess, who has been head of the VW brand since moving from BMW in 2015, will also assume direct responsibility for research and development and vehicle connectivity.
Blume, Stadler and Frank Witter take on production, sales and IT in what is reminiscent of a set-up that has worked well at FiatChrysler.
"We want to create a slimmed down company with strong brands," Diess said, explaining that Audi would form the group's core brand in the premium segment with a goal of overtaking Mercedes-Benz and BMW.
Blume will head up a "super premium" cars division which groups Bentley, Porsche, Bugatti and possibly Lamborghini, which is currently integrated with Audi.
Diess himself will lead a "volume brands" segment which consists of VW, Spanish brand Seat, Czech division Skoda and VW commercial vehicles.
Upon being asked what could happen to MAN Diesel and Renk, Diess said the company has assets which will be subject to a review. Whether these businesses will be invested in or sold off remains to be seen, Diess said.
LABOUR BLESSING
A renowned cost-cutter, Diess took over from Matthias Mueller on Thursday, thanks to an unprecedented pact with VW's powerful labour bosses, handing them a seat on the company's management board.
He was installed after Mueller's attempts to reshape the automotive group foundered amid labour opposition, including his plans to sell motorbike brand Ducati. Mueller had taken on the job days after the "Dieselgate" scandal broke in Sept. 2015.
VW's powerful labour chiefs took pains to endorse the new boss ahead of Friday's news conference.
"We are convinced that, with Diess, we have the right man on board," works council chief Bernd Osterloh said in a letter to employees on Friday. [nL8N1RQ0TT]
Osterloh's comments come after repeated clashes over Diess's drive to cut costs and improve profits at the carmaker's core VW brand, where Diess was handed the reins only three months before the Dieselgate scandal erupted.
Diess appeared to be on his way out at VW after a public clash with Osterloh who then accused him publicly of breaking promises and unduly pushing cost cuts.
The labour chief had accused Diess of betraying workers and trying to use the emissions scandal as a pretext for pushing through job cuts.
"Back then, we were not immediately on the same page," Osterloh said in his letter. "But, as is well known, that issue was laid to rest a long time ago."
(Reporting by Andreas Cremer; Writing by Edward Taylor and Maria Sheahan; Editing by David Goodman)
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