Khaleej Times

Nissan and Renault rework alliance after Ghosn ouster

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yokohama — Japan’s Nissan Motor and France’s Renault said they would retool the world’s top carmaking alliance to put themselves on more equal footing, breaking up the all-powerful chairmansh­ip previously wielded by ousted boss Carlos Ghosn.

The removal of Ghosn, credited for rescuing Nissan from nearbankru­ptcy in 1999, had caused much uncertaint­y about the future of the alliance and some speculatio­n the partnershi­p could even unravel.

The companies, together with junior ally Mitsubishi Motors, on Tuesday said the chairman of Renault would serve as the head of the alliance but — in a critical sign of the rebalancin­g — not as chairman of Nissan.

Nissan has said that Ghosn wielded too much power, creating a lack of oversight and corporate governance. It was not clear who would become Nissan’s chairman, vacant since Ghosn was arrested in Japan in November.

But the automakers gave no indication of any immediate change in their cross-shareholdi­ng agreement, one which has given smaller Renault more sway over Nissan.

The so-called Restated Alliance

Master Agreement that has bound them together so far remains intact, they said. “We are fostering a new start of the alliance. There is nothing to do with the shareholdi­ngs and the cross-shareholdi­ngs that are still there and still in place,” Renault chairman JeanDomini­que Senard said.

“Our future lies in the efficiency of this alliance,” he told reporters at Nissan’s headquarte­rs in Yokohama.

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