YOKOHAMA, Japan – Nissan Motor Co., Ltd. (NML), today announced that Toru Ihara, currently division general manager of Japan talent management, will be promoted to vice president effective Jan. 1, 2019. He will be in charge of Japan Human Resources, Japan talent management, and will report to Corporate Vice President Yusuke Takahashi. About Nissan Motor… Continue reading Nissan announces management appointment
Tag: Nissan
UPDATE 2-Renault-Nissan leaders to meet amid alliance crisis
TOKYO/PARIS (Reuters) – The head of Nissan and acting CEO of Renault will hold talks during a two day meeting of their carmaking partnership starting on Tuesday, sources said, amid a crisis in relations sparked by the arrest of long-time alliance supremo Carlos Ghosn. FILE PHOTO: Carlos Ghosn, former CEO of the Renault-Nissan Alliance arrives… Continue reading UPDATE 2-Renault-Nissan leaders to meet amid alliance crisis
Expect heads to roll at Nissan over Ghosn scandal
Chesnot | Getty Images News | Getty Images
Carlos Ghosn, Renault-Nissan CEO.
It is shaping up to be a bad year for Nissan.
The arrest of auto industry titan Carlos Ghosn in Tokyo last month was believed by some to be a palace coup designed to remove him from power at Japanese automaker Nissan, just one of the companies Ghosn had a hand in running.
Now it's looking like a big problem for Nissan as well.
Ghosn was indicted Monday on allegations of underreporting income and misusing company funds, but investors weren't necessarily expecting Japanese prosecutors to slap Nissan with an indictment as well.
That could spell trouble for Hiroto Saikawa, Nissan's CEO and a onetime protege of Ghosn's, said Jefferies analyst Philippe Houchois.
Ghosn files complaint over extension of his detention
6:52 AM ET Tue, 11 Dec 2018 | 00:41
“Nissan takes this situation extremely seriously,” the company said in a statement. “Making false disclosures in annual securities reports greatly harms the integrity of Nissan's public disclosures in the securities markets, and the company expresses its deepest regret.” The company said it will strengthen its compliance efforts and improve the accuracy of its financial disclosures.
Saikawa was the one who stood to benefit the most from Ghosn's downfall. Ghosn, who was chairman of Nissan, had planned to replace Saikawa at a November board meeting, The Wall Street Journal reported. Some industry watchers say Saikawa's career at the automaker is in danger.
“I suspect Saikawa knows his days are numbered as well. Because the indictment of Mr. Ghosn today is also an indictment of Nissan,” Houchois said. In the wake of this new indictment, “it is likely heads will roll at Nissan as well.”
Nissan's shares traded in the U.S. fell 3.1 percent Monday and were down 2.7 percent in intraday trading Tuesday.
The indictment comes on the heels of scandals involving the falsification of vehicle inspection data. The automaker had to recall more than 1 million vehicles in 2017 over faulty vehicle checks, and reports filed in 2018 revealed even more misconduct.
Morningstar analyst Richard Hilgert told CNBC he thinks investor confidence in Nissan's management has been compromised by both the Ghosn scandal and the inspection fiasco.
Ghosn was in many ways the glue holding together an alliance between French automaker Renault and Japanese manufacturers Nissan and Mitsubishi. Renault saved Nissan from the brink of bankruptcy in 1999, and took a 40 percent stake in the company. Nissan, in turn, took a nonvoting 15 percent stake in Renault. But since then Nissan has become a far bigger financial contributor to the alliance, generating a lopsided share of the group's earnings. Tensions over the now two-decades-old arrangement have simmered as the relationship has grown more uneven.
Carlos Ghosn's arrest is prosecutorial overreach, says management guru
7:46 AM ET Mon, 10 Dec 2018 | 05:50
The scandal has created its fair share share of problems for Renault as well, Houchois said.
“The press has been quick to blame this on Nissan, but the reality is the governance issues are just as severe at Renault, we think,” he said.
For one thing, Ghosn was chairman and CEO of both companies for years, and he seems to have held too much power at the company.
The companies will likely have to redefine their alliance if they expect it to survive, Houchois said. He said he expects that to happen some time in the next three months or so. The problem is that there could be considerable turnover in the ranks at both companies in the meantime.
“You will have to come up with a number of new individuals who will run Nissan and run Renault,” he said.
Nissan CEO plans one-on-one meeting with Renault boss in Amsterdam: sources
TOKYO/PARIS (Reuters) – Nissan Motor’s (7201.T) CEO plans to meet one-on-one with the deputy CEO of automaking partner Renault (RENA.PA) in Amsterdam this week, sources told Reuters, amid tensions over the future of the alliance after Chairman Carlos Ghosn’s arrest last month. FILE PHOTO: Carlos Ghosn, former CEO of the Renault-Nissan Alliance arrives to a… Continue reading Nissan CEO plans one-on-one meeting with Renault boss in Amsterdam: sources
Nissan announces senior management change for North America
YOKOHAMA, Japan – To meet the demands of an increasingly competitive North American market, Nissan Motor Co., Ltd. President and CEO Hiroto Saikawa and Nissan North America Chairman Denis Le Vot have announced Nissan Latin America Chairman Jose Valls is appointed vice chairman, Nissan North America, in charge of U.S. sales and marketing, effective January 2,… Continue reading Nissan announces senior management change for North America
The lieutenant who turned on Carlos Ghosn in Nissan’s civil war – Financial Times
The lieutenant who turned on Carlos Ghosn in Nissan’s civil war Financial Times In mid-April, Carlos Ghosn paid one of his increasingly rare visits to Japan and sat down with journalists in Tokyo for a sweeping interview on his plans to review … Go to Source
The Fall of the House of Ghosn – The Wall Street Journal
118 Comments By Sean McLain, Sean McLain The Wall Street Journal Biography @McLainSean sean.mclain@wsj.com Phred Dvorak, Phred Dvorak The Wall Street Journal Biography @Phred_Dvorak Google+ phred.dvorak@wsj.com Sam Schechner and Sam Schechner The Wall Street Journal Biography @samschech samschechner Google+ Sam.Schechner@wsj.com Patricia Kowsmann Patricia Kowsmann The Wall Street Journal Biography @kowsmann Dec. 16, 2018 6:35 p.m.… Continue reading The Fall of the House of Ghosn – The Wall Street Journal
Nissan Holds Off on Picking Ghosn’s Successor as Tensions Brew – Bloomberg
Nissan Holds Off on Picking Ghosn’s Successor as Tensions Brew BloombergRenault Asks Nissan to Call for Shareholder Meeting Yahoo FinanceNissan board holds off picking successor for Ghosn as tensions with Renault brew BNNBloomberg.caRenault seeks Nissan shareholder meeting as Ghosn crisis deepens, report says Automotive News EuropeNissan board fails to pick successor for Ghosn as tensions brew SFGateView full coverage on… Continue reading Nissan Holds Off on Picking Ghosn’s Successor as Tensions Brew – Bloomberg
Nissan board holds off picking successor for Ghosn as tensions with Renault brew – BNNBloomberg.ca
Nissan Motor Co.’s (NSANY.PK) board failed to pick a successor for former Chairman Carlos Ghosn, leaving the carmaker without a top official as it enters the fifth week since the car titan’s arrest and faces escalating tensions with partner Renault SA. The directors convened Monday to chart a path forward following the shock arrest of… Continue reading Nissan board holds off picking successor for Ghosn as tensions with Renault brew – BNNBloomberg.ca
Detention of Nissan’s Ghosn extended through Dec. 20
Detention of Nissan’s Ghosn extended through Dec. 20Tokyo – A Tokyo court ruled Tuesday that Nissan Motor Co.’s former chairman, Carlos Ghosn, and another executive will remain in custody through Dec. 20, more than a month after their arrest. Their detention could continue for months more under the Japanese legal system.
The Tokyo District Court said Tuesday that it had rejected a protest filed by Ghosn’s lawyer against the prolonged detention.
The court decision comes a day after Ghosn, fellow Nissan executive Greg Kelly and Nissan Motor were charged with violating financial laws by underreporting Ghosn’s pay by about 5 billion yen ($44 million) in 2011-2015. They were arrested on Nov. 19 and are being held at a Tokyo detention center.
The extension of their detention is to allow time for investigation into additional allegations prosecutors issued Monday, against Ghosn and Kelly, of underreporting another 4 billion yen ($36 million) in 2016-2018.
The arrest of the man credited with saving Nissan when it was on the verge of bankruptcy two decades ago has stunned many and has raised concerns over the Japanese automaker and the future of its alliance with Renault SA of France.
No trial date has been set, as is routine in Japan. Prosecutors can add more allegations to extend detention, and it remains unclear when Ghosn and Kelly might be released.
The prosecutors say they consider Ghosn and Kelly flight risks.
Ghosn’s legal team has not issued an official statement, but those close to him have said he is asserting innocence. The office of Motonari Ohtsuru, one of the lawyers, declined comment, saying he was not there.
The U.S. lawyer for Kelly, Aubrey Harwell, has said his client insists he is innocent and that Nissan insiders and outside experts had advised him that their financial reporting was proper.
The maximum penalty for violating Japan’s financial laws is 10 years in prison, a 10 million yen ($89,000) fine, or both. The conviction rate in Japan is over 99 percent.
Nissan has said an internal investigation found three types of misconduct: underreporting income to financial authorities, using investment funds for personal gain and illicit use of company expenses.
Nissan, as a legal entity, was also charged Monday. Nissan is not under supervision or being monitored, although it is cooperating with the prosecutors’ investigation, according to company spokesman Nicholas Maxfield. Nissan said in a statement that it takes the indictment “extremely seriously.” It promised to strengthen its governance.
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