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Nissan’s new CEO faces investor grilling over job cuts, losses and mounting debt

by Sarkiya Ranen
in Technology
Nissan’s new CEO faces investor grilling over job cuts, losses and mounting debt
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NISSAN Motor chief executive officer Ivan Espinosa’s first shareholder meeting will be overshadowed by tough questions over tariffs, funding and a mid-term plan to turn around the struggling Japanese carmaker. 

The key objective will be to convince Tuesday’s annual gathering of investors, who have seen the stock drop 28 per cent this year, that planned job cuts and plant closures will get the struggling manufacturer back on its feet.

“Nissan’s ability to reduce its tariff exposure by moving other production to the US appears limited in the near term,” said Bloomberg Intelligence senior auto analyst Tatsuo Yoshida. “Capacity may be less of a constraint even as the automaker moves to consolidate global manufacturing.”

With roughly 800 billion yen (S$6.9 billion) in debt due next year, Nissan is seeking to raise funds to keep operations on stable footing.

Management turmoil has distracted the company ever since the 2018 arrest and ouster of former Chairman Carlos Ghosn, leading to an aging product lineup, shrinking margins and the loss of an early lead in mass-market electric cars.

The carmaker could incur as much as US$2.1 billion in additional costs for this fiscal year through March if US tariffs on autos and parts remain in place, according to Yoshida. 

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Nissan withheld its profit guidance for the period, owing to the uncertainty of its own finances as well as the global automobile industry, given President Donald Trump’s tariffs on cars and car parts imported to the US.

Internal documents seen by Bloomberg show that Nissan expects to see an operating loss of as much as 450 billion yen for the 12 months through March 2026 if the tariffs remain in place. Without them, the loss is forecast to be 300 billion yen. Either would mark the biggest operating deficit in the company’s history.

In May, Espinosa, 46, vowed to eliminate 20,000 jobs and shutter seven of its 17 manufacturing sites after posting one of its biggest annual losses since French carmaker Renault SA saved it from bankruptcy more than a quarter century ago. While the alliance partners still own stakes in each other, they are charting separate courses.

The full scale of Nissan’s plight became clear in early November when it announced a 94 per cent drop in first half net income, along with plans to cut jobs and reduce production capacity.

That was followed by news that a fund controlled by activist investor Effissimo Capital Management had bought a stake in Nissan, fueling market turmoil. A filing on Monday, however, showed the investor was no longer included in a list of Nissan’s major shareholders.

Proxy advisory firms Institutional Shareholder Services and Glass Lewis & Co. are backing Espinosa’s appointment to Nissan’s board.

Although the company fails to meet guidelines on return of investments and capital efficiency, these won’t be reflected on Espinosa’s position because he’s new to the board, ISS said in a report.

Espinosa, who took the helm in April, said his restructuring plan will work. Nissan has 2.1 trillion yen in unused credit lines in addition to its own liquid reserves, he said, but cash flow turned negative in its latest fiscal year and ratings agencies have cut its creditworthiness status to junk.

Annual shareholder meetings in Japan can be lively, drawing retail investors seeking a rare chance to trade words with top executives, though in Nissan’s case they tended to be dominated by talk of cutting costs and getting back on track.

Earlier in June, one of Nissan’s key suppliers — Marelli Holdings — filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection in the US, pointing to the impacts that tariffs and the industry’s shift away from fossil fuels had on its efforts to slash debt and restructure.

Espinosa may also face questions over plans to raise more than 1 trillion yen from debt and asset sales, including the issuance of convertible securities and bonds, and the sale of stakes in Renault and other entities, according to the documents seen by Bloomberg. 

The funding proposal doesn’t appear to have been approved by Nissan’s board yet, leaving it unclear whether it will happen, people familiar with the matter have said, declining to be identified discussing details that are private. BLOOMBERG



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Tags: CEOCutsDebtFacesGrillingInvestorJobLossesMountingNissans
Sarkiya Ranen

Sarkiya Ranen

I am an editor for Ny Journals, focusing on business and entrepreneurship. I love uncovering emerging trends and crafting stories that inspire and inform readers about innovative ventures and industry insights.

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