Tag: Renault
UPDATE 2-Nissan delays decision on Ghosn successor
TOKYO (Reuters) – Nissan Motor Co (7201.T) failed on Tuesday to nominate a successor to Carlos Ghosn as chairman in the wake of his arrest and dismissal for alleged financial misconduct last month, a source familiar with the situation said. FILE PHOTO – Carlos Ghosn, chairman and CEO of the Renault-Nissan-Mitsubishi Alliance, attends the Tomorrow… Continue reading UPDATE 2-Nissan delays decision on Ghosn successor
Nissan delays decision on Ghosn successor
TOKYO (Reuters) – Nissan Motor Co (7201.T) failed on Tuesday to nominate a successor to Carlos Ghosn as chairman of the carmaker in the wake of his arrest and dismissal for alleged financial misconduct last month, Kyodo News said. FILE PHOTO – Carlos Ghosn, chairman and CEO of the Renault-Nissan-Mitsubishi Alliance, attends the Tomorrow In… Continue reading Nissan delays decision on Ghosn successor
Tesla (again) says buyers must order today for full tax credit
Tesla Model 3 all-wheel drive Performance rolls off a new assembly line in a temporary structure
If you want to buy a Tesla and get the full tax credit, today is your last day to order for Tesla to guarantee delivery by December 31.
With the tick-over of the new year, the federal tax credits on Teslas will be reduced from $7,500 to $3,750.
That could raise base price of a Tesla from $39,700 after the tax credit to $43,450 (including delivery fee).
DON'T MISS: Tesla sells 200,000th car, starting phaseout of federal tax credits
The order deadline to receive the full tax credit applies to any Tesla model, the Model S, Model X, or Model 3.
The federal tax credits were structured so that after any automaker sells 200,000 plug-in cars, the credits start a wind-down period. At that point, buyers can continue to claim the credit for the remainder of that quarter and for the full quarter following. After that, the credits are cut in half for six months, in half again for another six months, and get eliminated completely after that.
Tesla crossed the threshold last July, and the end of this year marks the last of its full credits.
CHECK OUT: Tesla sets Monday deadline for full tax credit
The company has joined forces with GM, Nissan, and other automakers, along with other electric-car advocates to lobby for the credits to be extended and restructured so they expire simultaneously for all automakers. That lobbying effort has just begun.
This is the second time Tesla has repeated the message that buyers have to order now to be guaranteed the full credit. On October 12, the company claimed they wouldn't guarantee that orders placed after October 15 would receive the credit.
Refuting that warning, the company sent out a notice just last week, setting today (Friday) as the new date, which the company confirmed today.
READ THIS: EV Drive coalition begins lobbying effort to save tax credit
The good news for Tesla and its fans is that this indicates the company has been able to produce cars more quickly than it anticipated in early October.
Many buyers have been able to buy Teslas directly from the company's inventory and take delivery in a matter of hours or days in the past several months. If you want the full tax credit, that option is likely to continue until near the end of the year. As long as buyers take delivery of their car by Dec. 31, the full tax credit applies. Pictures of lots overflowing with inventory around the country have become a fixture of Twitter and forums for weeks. Even so, based on deliveries, the Tesla Model 3 became the fifth bestselling sedan in the country in the third quarter.
Those who want to make custom selections from the options or color menu, however, need to do so today, the company says, or they could lose the full tax credit.
Truly, at some point, Tesla won't be able to fulfill a new order before Dec. 31. This might be that point, though it's hard to say for sure.
FCA México reportó ventas por 8,108 unidades
3 de diciembre de 2018 , Ciudad de México – En noviembre, FCA México reportó ventas de 8,108 unidades, convirtiéndose en el mejor mes en ventas del año. “Nuestro portafolio de productos continúa creciendo y ofreciendo vehículos que marcan tendencia en sus respectivos segmentos. El mes pasado se presentó Jeep Gladiator 2020, una pickup con la mejor… Continue reading FCA México reportó ventas por 8,108 unidades
Nissan: Nissan Group reports November 2018 U.S. sales
November 2018 November 2017 % Change Nissan Group Total sales (units) 110,513 135,985 -18.7 Nissan Division sales 96,427 122,959 -21.6 INFINITI sales* 14,086 13,026 8.1 NASHVILLE, Tenn. – Nissan Group today announced total U.S. sales for November 2018 of 110,513 units, a decrease of 19 percent compared to the previous year. Nissan highlights: Several key… Continue reading Nissan: Nissan Group reports November 2018 U.S. sales
World Debut of the New TRITON/L200Start of sales in Thailand November 17 to Rollout to 150 Countries
Bangkok, November 9, 2018 – Mitsubishi Motors Corporation(MMC) today announces the world premiere of the new TRITON/L200 1-ton pickup truck in Bangkok, and is to start sales in Thailand on November 17. The New TRITON/L200 is the latest version of a model which is celebrating its 40th birthday this year, and is produced at… Continue reading World Debut of the New TRITON/L200Start of sales in Thailand November 17 to Rollout to 150 Countries
Arrest of ousted Nissan Chairman Ghosn raises conspiracy theories, talk of ‘a coup’
Marlene Awaad | Bloomberg | Getty Images
Carlos Ghosn, chairman of the alliance between Renault SA, Nissan Motor Co. and Mitsubishi Motors Corp., pauses during a Bloomberg Television interview at the Paris Motor Show in Paris, France, on Tuesday, Oct. 2, 2018.
If all had gone according to plan, Carlos Ghosn would have been winging his way to Amsterdam on his corporate jet Wednesday night en route to a potentially critical meeting of senior members of the Renault-Nissan-Mitsubishi Alliance — of which he has long served as CEO.
Instead, the 64-year-old executive is in solitary confinement occupying a tiny cell in the Tokyo Detention Centre, where he's been stuck since Nov. 19 when he was arrested minutes after arriving in the Japanese capital for a visit to alliance member Nissan's headquarters. Following what was described as a “months-long” investigation, which Nissan said was triggered by a whistleblower, Ghosn stands accused of a number of financial irregularities. Chiefly, he's accused of misusing company funds and underreporting his income at Nissan, where he served as chairman.
Japan won't tolerate corporate wrongdoing for personal gain: WisdomTree
14 Hours Ago | 03:30
Ghosn reportedly failed to report about $82 million in compensation that was deferred until after his retirement, among other things, The Wall Street Journal said Thursday, citing an unnamed person familiar with Nissan's investigation.
Mounting questions
But, as the investigation drags on without formal charges, there are mounting questions about what the case is really about.
Ghosn wouldn't be the first senior industry executive to face allegations of financial abuses. But barring instances of bribery or other serious crimes, arrests are extremely rare.
If anything, a number of industry executives — as well as some Nissan insiders — are asking whether the Brazilian-born Ghosn has actually become a pawn in an increasingly bitter dispute between France's Renault and Nissan over control of their global empire, according to interviews with at least a half-dozen people close to Nissan, the alliance or Ghosn himself. They asked not to be named because they still have strong ties to the industry or directly to Nissan.
Ghosn's abrupt arrest, lack of charges and the timing — just before what was expected to be an important meeting of alliance leaders — has industry executives wondering whether the charges are justified or even real. His immediate dismissal from Nissan and lengthy detention, without being able to address the accusations, has elicited questions across the globe about the lack of due process, with even French officials weighing in.
“It's a coup,” contended George Peterson, an auto-industry veteran and head of the California-based consulting firm Auto Pacific, Inc.
Peterson said he believes the Japanese side of the nearly 20-year-old alliance wanted to see Ghosn out before he made an anticipated move that would have seen the French side of the alliance formally take over its two Asian allies, both of which have continued to operate as independent companies, despite their close ties to Renault.
Conspiracy talk
Talks of a possible conspiracy within Nissan's senior ranks have surfaced in news reports on both sides of the Pacific in recent days, and they normally might have been greeted with a laugh. But a number of people close to Nissan are not dismissing the subject outright, the people said. Some, if anything, are taking it quite seriously.
“The timing seems more than coincidental,” suggested one former top auto executive who has high-level ties with Nissan.
Nissan spokeswoman Christina Adamski declined to comment for this story, pointing to the company's previous statement on Ghosn's arrest Nov. 19. Nissan accused then-Chairman Ghosn and board member Greg Kelly of conspiring to conceal Ghosn's full pay from Japanese authorities as well as “numerous other significant acts of misconduct.”
Nissan CEO Hirota Saikawa appointed himself as chairman and also fired Kelly. Mitsubishi Motors also removed Ghosn as chairman of its board. Renault's chief operating officer, Thierry Bollore, is filling in for Ghosn as CEO on a temporary basis. Both Renault and the alliance have retained Ghosn as chairman and CEO so far.
Ghosn couldn't be reached for comment, and his U.S.-based attorneys at Paul, Weiss, Rifkind, Wharton and Garrison didn't respond to requests for comment.
Mitsubishi and Renault didn't return requests for comment for this story.
Following Ghosn's ouster at Mitsubishi, CEO Osamu Masuko said the move was “unavoidable,” though it was also “an agonizing decision.” He added that, “The priority was what to do to protect the company, what to do to protect our employees and their families.”
'Strange'
Kelly, who was arrested with Ghosn, has denied any wrongdoing and said Ghosn was paid appropriately. Japanese prosecutors won court approval Friday to detain the two executives for another 10 days.
“It seems pretty harsh when it involves a major corporate executive, who has been credited with saving the company, and another board member. It just seems strange,” Kelly's attorney Aubrey Harwell said of their treatment.
Ghosn was arrested a little more than two weeks before the alliance's top officials were due to meet in Amsterdam on Thursday. They were there to discuss a number of key issues that could reshape, perhaps even fracture, a partnership that in 2017 claimed to be the best-selling automotive group in the world, according to the former auto executive with high-level ties with Nissan. The group sold more cars than industry powerhouses Toyota, Volkswagen and General Motors.
Little news came out of the meeting. But Renault, Nissan and Mitsubishi issued a joint statement Thursday saying their three boards “have all — individually and collectively — emphatically reiterated their strong commitment to the Alliance” and remain “fully committed.”
'Le Cost-Cutter'
What was originally known as the Renault-Nissan Alliance was formed in 1999 when the French automaker decided to invest $5 billion to keep the foundering Japanese company alive. Ghosn, who had earned a reputation as a miracle worker — and a nickname of “Le Cost-Cutter” for salvaging troubled Renault two years earlier — headed to Japan with an aggressive Nissan turnaround plan. Within three years, the carmaker was in the black and had shed billions of dollars in debt.
Originally appointed chief operating officer, Ghosn was elevated to CEO, a post he subsequently took at Renault while also becoming head of the alliance.
In 2016, the executive moved to expand the empire, acquiring a controlling stake in Mitsubishi, a long-troubled Japanese company that teetered on the edge of bankruptcy after revealing a lengthy scheme to falsify fuel economy numbers. Ghosn appointed himself Mitsubishi chairman while stepping back from day-to-day duties at Nissan. He took the chairman's title, handing the chief executive role to Saikawa.
Nissan CEO Saikawa
The Japanese executive was once seen as something of a protege of Ghosn's, but any semblance of collegiality disappeared immediately after the arrest when Saikawa told reporters assembled for a hastily called news conference, “I feel strong anger and disappointment.”
Saikawa hasn't backed off since then. He told Nissan employees in Japan on Monday that Ghosn had grown too powerful, The Wall Street Journal reported. And he made it clear that he and other senior leaders at Nissan wanted to see some major changes in the relationship with Renault.
“They've long bridled over the relationship,” said a former Nissan executive who spent a number of years working close to Ghosn in Japan. “They felt they were being treated like second-class citizens.”
For its initial, $5 billion, investment, the French carmaker took a controlling stake in Nissan and subsequently increased that to 43.4 percent. The Japanese carmaker, in turn, has a 15 percent stake in its ally. Things are even more lopsided than that might suggest. Renault claims the right to appoint board members to Nissan and to name the head of the alliance umbrella organization.
'Not equal partners'
“We've been an equal partner based on mutual trust. But at the core, there were parts where we were not equal partners,” Saikawa said three years ago, following changes made to their agreement limiting the French government's ability to use its double voting rights in Renault. Nissan, referring to the change as “deterrence,” got the right to boost its own holdings in its partner if the agreement was violated.
Recent developments seem to have raised new concerns on the part of the Japanese. “When Ghosn made himself chairman of Mitsubishi, that was seen as a step too far..
Nissan uses bidirectional charging tech to to power North American facilities
Bidirectional charging technology (vehicle-to-grid or vehicle-to-building) has the potential to help reduce utility costs by using EV batteries to store energy and release it at times of peak consumption. Now Nissan, in partnership with with Fermata Energy, a vehicle-to-grid systems company, has launched a pilot program that uses LEAFs equipped with bidirectional charging capability to… Continue reading Nissan uses bidirectional charging tech to to power North American facilities
France’s Macron urges Renault-Nissan stability in talks with Japan’s Abe
PARIS, Nov 30 (Reuters) – French President Emmanuel Macron met Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe and stressed that the Renault-Nissan alliance should be preserved, following Chairman Carlos Ghosn’s arrest in Tokyo, an Elysee official said on Friday. During a bilateral meeting on the sidelines of a G20 gathering of global leaders in Argentina, Abe told… Continue reading France’s Macron urges Renault-Nissan stability in talks with Japan’s Abe