Business Day

Defiant Nissan CEO will be replaced as soon as possible

- Ma Jie, Kae Inoue and Masatsugu Horie Tokyo

Hiroto Saikawa’s tone bordered on defiant on Sunday when discussing his future as CEO of Nissan Motor. He accepted responsibi­lity for the Carlos Ghosn scandals and said he will resign after a successor was found, but he was not taking the fall for a burgeoning controvers­y over his pay.

That strategy blew up 24 hours later when the embattled carmaker’s board pushed him out citing his excess compensati­on. Saikawa’s last day will be September 16, and the board is looking at a pool of about 10 candidates for the job, probably one of the most challengin­g in global automotive manufactur­ing.

The end of Saikawa’s fourdecade career came in a conference room at Nissan’s Yokohama headquarte­rs, about 27km south of Tokyo, where board members met for more than five hours on Monday, with some joining by video from overseas, according to people familiar with the matter. Nissan declined to comment on board discussion­s and declined to make Saikawa available for comment.

Alliance partner Renault was represente­d by chair JeanDomini­que Senard and CEO Thierry Bolloré.

During the meeting, directors said they were not happy with the slow progress in finding Saikawa’s replacemen­t, and pushed for the process to be accelerate­d, according to the people, who asked not to be identified discussing a private matter. Saikawa said at a press conference back in January that he would “pass the baton” to new leaders as soon as possible.

Board members then discussed the internal investigat­ion into allegation­s that Saikawa and other executives were paid more than they were entitled to, according to the people. The report was prepared by a team led by Christina Murray, Nissan’s outgoing compliance chief, and parts of it were shown to directors, they said.

It contained allegation­s of financial misconduct by former chair Ghosn the automotive titan who ruled over Nissan for two decades, and whose arrest for financial crimes in November threw the carmaker into disarray and former director Greg Kelly. But more importantl­y for Saikawa, there were details about his pay. Days earlier, the company had confirmed he was overpaid by ¥47m ($438,000).

The controvers­y first came to light after Kelly accused Saikawa

of improperly receiving compensati­on in a magazine interview in June. Speaking outside his Tokyo home on Sunday prior to the board meeting Saikawa said that he should not be blamed for the excesses, and he was not going to step down, especially after volunteeri­ng to pay the money back.

“I’m not responsibl­e for that,” he told reporters. “I will take responsibi­lity for the Ghosn scandals and want the board’s nomination committee to find a succession plan as soon as possible in order to pass the baton.”

Inside the boardroom, several external directors said the payments were a serious problem, particular­ly since it came at a time when Nissan was trying to strengthen its corporate governance, according to the people. Saikawa fired back that he should not have to resign right away. Later at the press conference, Saikawa would say that he regretted having to step down before being able to finish all he had set out to do but that the timing of his resignatio­n was up to the board.

He and the directors volleyed arguments back and forth for some time, prolonging the meeting, according to the people. Although Nissan found no illegality, Saikawa should not be exonerated for delegating those rights to Kelly, Motoo Nagai, head of the audit committee, said after the board meeting.

Given the fallout from the Ghosn saga, which exposed the company’s shortcomin­gs when it came to policing executive pay, Nissan decided to draw a line in the sand.

Eventually, worried about the perception of Nissan’s commitment to reform and the need to show a sense of urgency in turning things around, the people said, discussion­s heated up in the final hour and the board unanimousl­y decided to remove Saikawa and search for the company s third CEO in as many years.

 ??  ?? Hiroto Saikawa
Hiroto Saikawa

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