National Post (National Edition)

Nissan downgraded on profit outlook

- KEVIN BUCKLAND AND MA JIE

TOK YO • Nissan Motor Co. took another hit as the automaker’s debt rating was cut on concerns the next two years will be marked by slowing sales and a preoccupat­ion with cleaning up after the scandal involving Carlos Ghosn.

The company’s rating was lowered for the first time in a decade by S&P Global Ratings to A-minus from A. The outlook on the long-term debt score is stable, the rating firm said. The company’s A2 grade at Moody’s Investors Service also was placed on review for a downgrade.

Nissan reduced its fullyear earnings forecast after third-quarter profit missed analysts’ estimates, adding to the headwinds for a carmaker struggling with the fallout from the arrest of former chair Ghosn. Sales in the U.S. plunged 19 per cent in January amid an industrywi­de slump, intensifyi­ng the pressure on chief executive Hiroto Saikawa as he tries to ease tensions with partner and shareholde­r Renault SA. Nissan is cutting as many as 700 workers at a Mississipp­i factory because of slowing truck and van sales.

“Given severe business circumstan­ces in the automotive business, we believe the company will find it difficult to restore its weakened profitabil­ity over the next one to two years,” S&P said. “It will take time to stabilize its management.”

The company declined to comment.

Before the downgrade, Nissan already was getting the cold shoulder in the bond market, after Ghosn’s incarcerat­ion exposed lapses in corporate governance, according to market participan­ts.

“It’s bad timing because automakers all need financing for investment in new technologi­es,” said Seiji Sugiura, an analyst at Tokai Tokyo Research Centre. “It sends a negative message to shareholde­rs because it increases the chance for them to cut their dividend.”

The last time Nissan tapped the bond market was April 2016, when it raised 125 billion yen (US$1.1 billion) in a sale of five-, seven- and 10-year notes. The spread on the 10-year security’s yield has widened to about 60 basis points above equivalent Japanese government bonds this year, from 40 basis points at the time they were issued.

Nissan and its French partner have spent the last three months coping with a major reputation­al hit from Ghosn’s arrest, indictment­s by Tokyo prosecutor­s over alleged financial impropriet­ies and an unflatteri­ng spotlight on both companies’ corporate governance controls.

Then there’s the sluggish sales in China and the U.S., Britain’s potentiall­y jarring exit from the European Union and huge investment­s in electric and autonomous vehicles hovering over the entire auto industry.

Ghosn remains in a Tokyo jail, accused of aggravated breach of trust and filing false statements to regulators regarding US$80 million in deferred income looms. He was arrested Nov. 19 and faces as many as 10 years in prison if convicted. He denies all charges.

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