The Phnom Penh Post

Crisis-hit Nissan names China unit head Makoto Uchida as new CEO

- Etienne Balmer

CRISIS-HIT Japanese automaker Nissan on Tuesday named Makoto Uchida as its new CEO, elevating the insider currently heading the firm’s China unit as it overhauls its leadership after the Carlos Ghosn scandal.

The board also announced that Indiaborn Ashwani Gupta, currently at Nissan partner Mitsubishi Motors, would be appointed Nissan’s chief operating officer (COO), with Jun Seki, another top Nissan executive, named vice-COO.

The appointmen­ts, to take effect by January 1, come after months of turmoil for the automaker in the wake of the arrest of former chief Ghosn on allegation­s of financial misconduct.

Former CEO Hiroto Saikawa resigned last month after an investigat­ion prompted by the Ghosn scandal revealed he was among Nissan executives who received excess pay by altering the terms of a share price bonus.

It was the latest in a series of blows for the firm, which has seen sales plunge and been forced to slash jobs since Ghosn’s shock arrest.

Nissan executives speaking at a hastily announced late-night press conference said they believed the new leadership could steer the firm back to health.

“The board concluded that Mr Uchida is the right leader to drive the firm forward,” said chairman Yasushi Kimura.

Masakazu Toyoda, who chaired the nomination committee, stressed that all three men “are global citizens”.

“And they attach importance to alliances and they are motivated to do speedy decision-making,” he added.

“We believe this structure is the best way to surmount the difficulti­es the company is facing.”

Unenviable task

Uchida (pictured, Nissan) is a senior vice president at Nissan and has been with the firm since 2003, with reports describing him as having been key to Nissan’s growth strategy.

He has long been involved in joint projects with Renault, a key point given the fraught nature of Nissan’s relationsh­ip with its partner in a three-way alliance with Mitsubishi Motors.

The 53-year-old holds a degree in theology and began his career at trading house Nissho Iwai Corp.

“Since childhood, he has been travelling around the world, living abroad,” Toyoda said.

Uchida will face the unenviable task of returning Nissan to financial health after it reported its worst first-quarter results since the global financial crisis.

The automaker has cited a global slowdown in the auto sector, but it is also suffering from m a lack of innovation on its production ction line and reputation­al damage age from the

Ghosn scandal.

Uchida also inherits rits the harsh cost-cutting measures ures Saikawa proposed as a way y out of the wilderness – including uding reducing dealer incentives ives and promotions but also cutting global production by 10 per er cent to 2023

– a measure that means the loss of 12,500 jobs.

And there is the unresolved business of Nissan’s fractious ractious alliance with Mitsubishi bishi Motors and Renault. lt.

Ghosn, who cre- ated the alliance, wanted greater integratio­n with France’s Renault, and says his push for that prompted angry Nissan executives to plot against him.

The two firms have made a show of holding the marriage together in the wake of Ghosn’s arrest, but tensions have bubbled to the surface.

Renault holds a 43 per cent stake in the Japanese automaker, which in turn controls 15 per cent of the French firm but has no voting rights.

Loose ends

Nissan is a lso current ly undergoing an overhaul intended to strengthen governance after t he Ghosn scandal. In June, its shareholde­rs voted in favour of v a r i o u s measures including t he establishm­ent of three new oversight committees responsibl­e for the appointmen­t of senior officia ls, pay issues and auditing.

They also approved the election of 11 directors as the firm restructur­es, among them two Renault executives.

Part of the reform involved the investigat­ion that uncovered the excessive compensati­on scheme that led to Saikawa’s resignatio­n.

Six other top executives are believed to have been involved, reportedly including Hari Nada, the influentia­l head of legal affairs who is said to have been key to sounding the alarm on Ghosn’s alleged wrongdoing.

Some within the firm want the executives implicated to be dismissed, as well as more details on lower-level officials accused of involvemen­t. Toyota and Kimura declined comment on the issue on Tuesday.

Ghosn meanwhile is out on bail in Tok yo, awaiting a tria l that reports have suggested could sta r t next April on charges of under-reporting millions of dollars in sa lar y and of using company f unds for personal expenses.

He denies any wrongdoing.

 ?? BEHROUZ MEHRI/AFP ?? Nissan Motor’s board of directors’ chair Yasushi Kimura (left) and nomination committee chair Masakazu Toyoda attend a press conference to announce the company’s new CEO at its headquarte­rs in Yokohama on Tuesday.
BEHROUZ MEHRI/AFP Nissan Motor’s board of directors’ chair Yasushi Kimura (left) and nomination committee chair Masakazu Toyoda attend a press conference to announce the company’s new CEO at its headquarte­rs in Yokohama on Tuesday.
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