The Star Malaysia - StarBiz

Renault and Nissan rebuild alliance to ride out pandemic

-

TOKYO: When Renault SA, Nissan Motor Co and Mitsubishi Motors Corp announced the last strategy plan for their Alliance in September 2017, the goal was to become the world’s biggest automaker by 2022.

The Alliance partners will outline a new plan with a less lofty objective: survival.

“There will be restructur­ing, there will be fixed costs reductions, there will be a number of projects which will be reduced,” a source told Reuters.

The three carmakers are reeling from the coronaviru­s pandemic which engulfed them just as they were trying to rework their partnershi­p after the arrest in 2018 and subsequent ouster of its chairman and chief architect Carlos Ghosn.

Profits are plunging at all three automakers and thousands of jobs will be at risk as Renault and Nissan announce separate restructur­ing plans later this week.

The reworked Alliance is expected to focus on more systematic divisions of labour, with one partner leading for a particular type of vehicle and geography while the others follow.

“The plan will have a positive spirit, based on a clear leader-follower scheme and on complement­arity between companies,” a source close to Renault said.

Years of bickering over cost sharing and capital structures have meant the Alliance has so far largely failed to convert its global scale into a competitiv­e advantage beyond the joint procuremen­t of parts.

The French state, which already owns 15% of Renault, will now become a not-so-silent partner in the Alliance.

€5bil

Renault is seeking (Us$5.5bil) in state guaranteed loans to help weather the hit to sales from the global pandemic.

In return, the French government wants Renault to invest in electric vehicles, advanced batteries and other technology to support jobs in France.

Another big question will be the place of German automaker Daimler AG in the Alliance.

Daimler joined the Franco-japanese partnershi­p in 2010, promising cost savings for future vans, small engines and pick-up trucks. But common projects have since become few and far between.

Working together has posed challenges to

Renault, Nissan and junior partner Mitsubishi, which joined the alliance in 2016, due to difference­s in corporate cultures and simmering tensions over the Alliance’s capital structure.

Renault owns 43% of Nissan while Nissan has 15% of the French carmaker, but no voting rights.

This structure has caused friction in Japan, ever since Renault saved its bigger partner from financial ruin in 1999.

Ghosn championed steps toward a full merger, which Nissan has strongly opposed.

Alliance chairman Jean-dominique Senard earlier this year said that the automakers had “no other option” but to deepen cooperatio­n, though senior alliance sources say any talk of a full-blown merger has been shelved for now. — Reuters

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia