Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Nissan Motor restructur­es

- Jérémie Papin North Americas Chairperso­n Nissan Motor Co.

Two years ago, struggling Nissan Motor Co. announced a restructur­ing plan to cut costs and revamp its aging model lineup in an effort to rebuild sales as the coronaviru­s pandemic eased.

Jérémie Papin, the company’s chairman for the Americas, says the turnaround is happening. In May, Nissan reported its first fiscal-year profit in three years, and Papin says North America is a big contributo­r.

U.S. sales, however, have struggled as a global shortage of computer chips has hampered automakers’ production.

He talked about Nissan’s future, the chip shortage, and the need for U.S. electric vehicle factory capacity.

First-quarter U.S. sales were down almost 30%. Is that because of the chip shortage and supply chain issues?

Any performanc­e on a quarterly basis is going to be a function of the chips that are available. The performanc­e is in no way reflective of the interest and the level of customer demand that we are having. The company is delivering its outperform­ance because of all the work that’s been done on efficiency, getting the customer to buy value.

Leadership in Japan has said you’re going to need a new U.S. factory to meet electric vehicle demand. What’s the status of that?

We see customer demand for Nissan products to be 40% EV in 2030. I would expect other investment­s in Canton (Mississipp­i assembly plant). I would expect other investment­s in Smyrna (Tennessee assembly plant). I would expect other investment­s in Decherd (Tennessee powertrain plant). As we are successful, that’s the condition where there may be a need for a third assembly plant by 2030.

What about battery plants?

The batteries that are for the products that are built in the USA will be built in the USA. The announceme­nt for who would be the supplier in Canton, we will be doing in the next few weeks, months. We want a U.S. battery supplier. We’re working on finalizing that.

It used to be that there were a lot of Nissan vehicles on rental car company lots. Those sales aren’t as profitable as retail sales to individual­s. Are you cutting rental business?

I would say today we’re a third of what we used to be. We increased the profitabil­ity per unit. We are a smaller company, but we are a much healthier and more profitable business that can invest in its future.

Have you seen any change in consumer buying habits with the recent inflation, interest rates, or gas price increases?

There will be an impact from increasing monthly payments because most of the cars are financed. Clearly there will be an impact on customers’ ability to pay. It’s going to be a balance between the affordabil­ity of the monthly payment and then the pent-up demand.

Interviewe­d by Tom Krisher. Edited for clarity and length.

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