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Crisis-hit Japanese automaker Nissan said Thursday it would cut 12,500 jobs and announced a plunge in quarterly net profit as it struggles with weak sales and the arrest of its former chief. The embattled firm has been buffeted by poor performance in the United States and Europe as well as the scandal of financial misconduct charges against former boss Carlos Ghosn. "We acknowledge the first-quarter results were very tough," chief executive Hiroto Saikawa said. "We knew the pace of sales would be tough, but I think we have to admit that it was slightly below our expectations," he added. "But I believe we can fully recover to our expectation levels in the second and third quarter," Nissan said net profit slumped nearly 95 per cent in the April-June quarter due to falling sales and growing costs.
The automaker's bottom line profit dropped to 6.4 billion yen (USD 59 million) for the three months to June, from 115.8 billion yen last year, on sales went down 12.7 per cent at 2.37 trillion yen. "Profitability was negatively impacted by the decrease in revenues and external factors such as raw material costs, exchange rate fluctuations and investments to meet regulatory standards," Nissan said. Operating profit fell 98.5 per cent, to just 1.6 billion yen, but the firm left its full-year earnings forecast in place, predicting the net profit of 170 billion yen on sales of 11.3 trillion yen for the fiscal year to March 2020. The automaker said it was laying off thousands of employees as it works to cut costs and streamline production. "Nissan will reduce its global production capacity by 10 per cent by the end of the fiscal year 2022. In line with production optimisations, the company will reduce headcount by roughly 12,500," it said in a statement.
Reports citing data available from the company suggests that the Japanese carmaker's India operations will bear 13.68 per cent of the total job cuts adding to over 1,710 jobs. This comes after the company announced to axe close to 4,800 jobs earlier this year having suffered its lowest profits for almost 10 years.
Saikawa said 6,400 job cuts had already been carried out in the 2018 and 2019 fiscal years at eight locations. He declined to identify the six locations at which the firm plans to make another 6,100 cuts between fiscal 2020-2022, saying some factories would close while others would operate with fewer production lines. "Broadly speaking, unprofitable lines, and relatively speaking, more overseas-based lines will be affected," he told reporters at the firm's headquarters in Yokohama outside Tokyo. Analysts say the cuts are necessary as Nissan tackles excess capacity. "Nissan decided not to pursue the volume for volume's sake," said Tatsuo Yoshida, an analyst at Sawakami Asset Management. "The company has no other choice than reducing capacity or trimming the number of people employed in order to survive the difficult period," he told AFP.
But he warned there was "no magic formula to revive Nissan immediately". On top of stagnant sales, the company has also faced tensions with its French partner Renault, which owns 43 per cent of the Japanese manufacturer. The two companies, which with Mitsubishi Motors form a top-selling auto alliance, have seen relations falter in the wake of the Ghosn scandal and over persistent differences in how closely integrated they should be. "Business circumstances remain quite tough for Nissan," Satoru Takada, an auto analyst at Tokyo-based research and consulting firm TIW, told AFP before the widely expected figures were announced.
"The outlook for Nissan is still unclear, as the company is facing a number of obstacles, including ties with Renault," Takata said. Nissan is currently undergoing an overhaul intended to strengthen governance after the Ghosn scandal. Last month, Nissan shareholders voted in favour of various measures including the establishment of three new oversight committees responsible for the appointment of senior officials, pay issues and auditing. They also approved the election of 11 directors as the firm restructures, among them two Renault executives as well as Saikawa.
The reforms are designed to put Nissan on a more stable footing after the shock caused by the arrest of Ghosn, considered one of the auto industry's most powerful executives.
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