Nissan Is Said to Spell Out Allegations on Ghosn to Renault Bloomberg Nissan Motor Co. is taking the first comprehensive steps to share details with Renault SA about allegations against Carlos Ghosn, according to a person familiar … Go to Source
Tag: Nissan
First Nissan Global Digital Hub inaugurated in India
The facility will be the first of its kind in a number of software and information technology development centers in Asia, Europe North America and Latin America THIRUVANANTHAPURAM, India – The first Nissan Global Digital Hub at Technopark in Trivandrum was inaugurated on Monday in India. The state of the art facility – located in… Continue reading First Nissan Global Digital Hub inaugurated in India
Rivian off-road rally performance car could follow electric pickup, SUV
Rivian R1T electric pickup concept
Rivian announced a new electric pickup and SUV at the LA Auto Show—but apparently the startup electric automaker is so full of ideas it couldn't resist teasing yet another plan.
Rivian CEO R.J. Scaringe told British auto magazine Autocar that the company plans a third model that will take advantage of all the power and all-wheel drive that the company's pickup and SUV boast, but with a sporty twist: an off-road rally car.
The new model could share the R1T pickup and R1S SUV's four electric motors producing a total of 750 horsepower and 820 pound-feet of torque, as well as the smaller of its two battery packs, containing 105-kilowatt-hours, to save weight compared with the larger 180-kwh pack. (Not to rule out the larger pack, but even the smaller battery could give a smaller rally car a range in the neighborhood of 300 miles, driven conservatively.)
DON'T MISS: Rivian R1T all-electric pickup revealed: 400-mile range, 160-kw DC fast charging
Scaringe told Autocar that the company's third model will have a shorter wheelbase than the R1S SUV but have similar ground clearance for off-road capability.
Rivian has developed a “skateboard” chassis that includes the cars' structure, its battery pack, motors, and power electronics.
READ THIS: Rivian R1S electric SUV goes family style with 7 seats, 410-mile range
Scaringe says the company plans on selling the skateboard architecture to other automakers as long as their products don't compete directly with Rivian's. One rumored potential customer could be Pininfarina, which is launching its own line of cars, starting with a $3 million supercar. Its second model is slated to be a luxury SUV, which could use Rivian's skateboard chassis.
Rivian will buy battery cells, but will assemble its own packs at its factory in Illinois when its cars go into production, Scaringe told Green Car Reports. These battery packs would likely be part of the chassis architecture that Rivian could sell to other automakers.
CHECK OUT: Mitsubishi Evo rally sedan morphs into electric crossover concept
The Autocar report is the first indication that the company also plans to build a third model of its own off the architecture and that it has considerable flexibility in at least the wheelbase of the machine. The R1T pickup has a wheelbase almost 15 inches longer than that on the R1S SUV. Such a rally-cross car would likely have a significantly shorter wheelbase.
The Rivian rally car (the R1R?), would be similar in concept to the Mitsubishi e-Evolution concept, another electric off-road rally car shown at the LA show.
The R1T and R1S are scheduled to go on sale in 2020 and 2021, so the new rally car would appear sometime later.
Renault-Nissan spins its wheels while Carlos Ghosn sits in jail
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Soul-searching is in order for Nissan’s board after Ghosn allegations, governance experts say
Takashi Aoyama | Getty Images News | Getty Images
A general view of Nissan Crossing showroom in the Ginza district on November 21, 2018 in Tokyo, Japan.
Turmoil at Japan's Nissan Motor surrounding allegations of impropriety by ousted chairman Carlos Ghosn raises questions about the oversight role of the company's board of directors, corporate governance experts said this week.
Ghosn, long seen as a superstar of the global auto industry, was arrested last month after allegedly under reporting compensation and misusing assets.
He gained renown for reviving Nissan after French automaker Renault took a large stake in the company nearly two decades ago. He later went on to oversee an alliance involving Renault, Nissan and Mitsubishi Motors.
But Ghosn was dumped by the boards of Nissan and Mitsubishi after his arrest on Nov. 19, though is still chairman and CEO of Renault. He remains in custody in Tokyo and has yet to be charged.
Japanese broadcaster NHK, citing unnamed sources, reported last month that Ghosn has denied under reporting his earnings.
Jamie Allen, secretary general of the Asian Corporate Governance Association, said that a key concern about the allegations against Ghosn is why Nissan's board of directors was seemingly unaware.
“I think there is a clear issue of internal controls in that company that they're not properly addressing,” Allen told reporters in Hong Kong on Wednesday.
“If the board really didn't know about that, and maybe they really didn't know about that, then that doesn't speak … very highly of their internal controls, or their governance,” Allen said. “My point is boards have collective responsibility … so I think the board at Nissan really needs to do some soul-searching.”
Other experts also questioned the role of oversight at Nissan.
“I think it is extremely unlikely that the board did not know about this,” Jesper Koll, head of Japan at WisdomTree Investments, told CNBC on Friday.
“Because the reality is any board, whether it is a purely local Japanese company or whether it is an international, global company, whatever corporation you run, the executive compensation and CEO compensation is an extremely important issue,” Koll said.
John Buchanan, an expert in Japanese corporate governance at the Centre for Business Research at Cambridge Judge Business School, said that a lack of formal charges against Ghosn makes it difficult to assess the board's role, though he added it was unlikely to have been completely in the dark regarding remuneration.
And Nissan's decision to “disgrace the company by calling in public prosecutors” resulted in “effectively advertising the inadequacy of the board and Nissan's internal controls,” Buchanan said in an email.
“This can be seen as a demonstration that Japanese corporate governance is still largely internally focused,” he said.
'Foreign majority shareholders'
Contacted by CNBC for comment, Nick Maxfield, a spokesman for Nissan, which is headquartered in Yokohama, Japan, said by email that the company went to Japanese prosecutors with results of an internal probe spurred by a whistleblower that had “uncovered substantial evidence” of alleged under reporting of compensation and misuse of assets and funds.
Maxfield, who said Nissan could not disclose specifics of the probe, referred to comments made by Nissan CEO Hiroto Saikawa at a press conference the day Ghosn was arrested.
Saikawa had said Nissan would need to “identify the issues of governance (and) really look back on what happened seriously and take immediate and fundamental countermeasures” because the alleged misconduct had been lengthy.
Maxfield also said that Nissan's board on Nov. 22 vowed to create a special committee to receive advice from an independent third party on governance and managing compensation.
A team of Jefferies analysts suggested in a report last month that foreign shareholders — who, by their calculation, hold more than 80 percent of Nissan's stock — also cannot shirk responsibility.
“If Nissan was badly governed, then the blame should rest squarely on the shoulders of its foreign majority shareholders,” the report said.
Renault has the largest single stake in Nissan at more than 40 percent.
The European automaker did not immediately respond to a request by email for comment from CNBC.
Some experts also cautioned against reading too much into Nissan's problems and losing sight of positive changes that have taken place in broader Japanese corporate governance in recent years, such as greater power for whistle-blowers — a key element of the Nissan case — and a new ombudsman clause.
“That actually shows, I think, that corporate governance in terms of the structure that is being put into place is actually looking to improve,” WisdomTree's Koll said.
Ulrike Schaede, professor of Japanese Business at the University of California San Diego, agreed that the overall situation has improved, but stressed that corporate abuses will occur even with the best of safeguards.
“If a CEO wants to do something that benefits him or her more than the company, they will be able to do it no matter what the governance system does,” Schaede said.
“It happens in all systems,” she added. “So in that sense I don't think that this is indicative of a system failure in Japan.”
Electric cars could spell end of front-wheel drive, VW exec says
Volkswagen ID Crozz concept
First it was Tesla, now Volkswagen.
Ever since British designer and engineer Alec Issigonis developed the original Mini Cooper for 1959, front-wheel-drive vehicles have been consolidating their hegemony on the car market.
Volkswagen itself was one of the main champions of front-wheel drive when it switched from the rear-wheel-drive Beetle to the front-wheel-drive Golf as its mainstream car in the 1970s.
DON'T MISS: Volkswagen details the foundation for 10 million electric vehicles
As it begins its transition to electric cars, Volkswagen's head of e-mobility in North America, Matthew Renna, said at a round-table discussion with journalists at the LA auto show last month that electric cars will mark the end of FWD, according to a report in Motor Trend.
Not that a front-wheel-drive electric car is inherently bad. Most electric cars today are FWD, including the VW e-Golf and the Nissan Leaf.
The advantages of FWD for gas cars included better space efficiency, less weight, lower cost, and better foul-weather traction with the weight of the engine over the drive wheels.
READ THIS: VW’s new U.S. CEO: The tipping point on EVs is already here
The relatively small motor in an electric car doesn't bring such a space or cost penalty and is easy to mount in the front or back or both for all-wheel drive. With AWD, electric motors give automakers more direct control of power or brake torque at individual wheels, which can be even more effective for snow or ice traction than focusing weight on one end of the car or the other.
With no compelling reason to put the motor in the front of the car and drive the front wheels, Renna said, “With the improved dynamics of rear-wheel drive, that lends itself to being a bit better for a rear-drive platform. If it's the same efficiency and the same cost, dynamics would prevail.”
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Furthermore, in an electric car with relatively even weight distribution (because it doesn't have a heavy engine hanging off one end or the other), the rear is where you want power to go, because that's where the body weight transfers when the driver accelerates.
The other reality is that in an electric car, batteries are the most expensive component, not motors. Adding a second motor up front to deliver all-wheel drive is likely to make all-wheel-drive cars more affordable than ever before.
Fraud allegations: Procuratorate files charges against Ghosn and Nissan
AFP Carlos Ghosn: The Renault boss is said to have declared for years a much too low income at the stock exchange Nissan Chairman of the Board Carlos Ghosn, who has been in custody for three weeks, and the corporation itself are in Japan Charge for violating stock exchange requirements. That confirmed Nissan on Monday… Continue reading Fraud allegations: Procuratorate files charges against Ghosn and Nissan
Regarding violation of Japan Financial Instruments and Exchange Act involving Nissan
YOKOHAMA, Japan – Today, Nissan Motor Co., Ltd.’s former Representative Director and Chairman Carlos Ghosn and former Representative Director Greg Kelly were indicted for violating the Japan Financial Instruments and Exchange Act, namely making false disclosures in annual securities reports. Nissan, as a legal entity, was also indicted for the same violation. Nissan takes this… Continue reading Regarding violation of Japan Financial Instruments and Exchange Act involving Nissan
Tokyo prosecutors indict Nissan’s ex-chairman Ghosn for financial misconduct
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Nissan tries to bar Carlos Ghosn from Rio property over corruption scandal
Carlos Ghosn Firm fears Brazil-born former chairman may destroy evidence if granted access Carlos Ghosn denies using company money to fund a lavish lifestyle. Photograph: Philippe Wojazer/Reuters Nissan is seeking to block its former chairman Carlos Ghosn’s access to an apartment in Rio de Janeiro, citing a risk that he may remove or destroy evidence… Continue reading Nissan tries to bar Carlos Ghosn from Rio property over corruption scandal