Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

Ghosn’s disputed pay triggers $83 million charge for Nissan

- Bloomberg feedback@livemint.com

TOKYO: Nissan Motor Co. took an $83 million charge related to the compensati­on of jailed former chairman Carlos Ghosn as the Japanese automaker reeling from the shock arrest of the iconic executive warned of its lowest profit in six years.

Japan’s third-largest automaker by market value slashed its operating profit forecast to 450 billion yen , below the lowest of analysts’ estimates as sales in China and the US continue to wane. The charge taken against the 64-year-old’s remunerati­on is preliminar­y and may change depending on how the investigat­ion into the alleged financial misconduct by Ghosn proceeds. The industry titan was arrested on November 19 and has been in jail since.

Cooling sales and profit are intensifyi­ng the pressures on chief executive officer Hiroto Saikawa, who is trying to ease tensions with partner and shareholde­r Renault SA following Ghosn’s arrest. The companies have spent the past two months coping with a major reputation­al hit from the scandal, indictment­s by Tokyo prosecutor­s over alleged financial impropriet­ies and an unflatteri­ng spotlight on both companies’ corporate-governance controls.

The earnings announceme­nt is the first window for investors into the Yokohama, Japan-based automaker’s challenges since the Ghosn arrest, while the entire industry faces complex issues such as the UK’S potentiall­y jarring exit from the European Union and huge investment­s in electric and autonomous vehicles. Meanwhile, the management of the Japanese carmaker and its French partner are focused on dealing with internal issues amid efforts by Nissan to rebalance the two-decade old relationsh­ip.

“You could end up with an alliance with nobody in charge and achieve nothing going forward, and so it just becomes an alliance in name only at a critical time when technology is changing in the industry,” Christophe­r Richter, an analyst at CLSA, said before the results.

The arrest of Ghosn, the glue binding the two automakers since he took command starting in the 1990s, has intensifie­d already existing t ensions between the partners. Saikawa said on Tuesday the alliance may need to revisit the targets it has set for 2022.

Nissan’s Germany-traded shares fell as much as 6.8% before recovering, while Renault declined as much as 1.9% in Paris. Stocks of both companies are down sharply since Ghosn’s arrest.

The one-time charge of 9.2 billion yen to reflect Ghosn’s yet-tobe-paid remunerati­on shows Nissan and Renault are set to feel reverberat­ions from the scandal for a long time. Renault reports earnings i n t wo days. The so-called deferred pay has emerged as a point of focus for Tokyo prosecutor­s who have indicted Ghosn for allegedly understati­ng his income at Nissan by tens of millions of dollars. Nissan lowered the volume forecast for vehicles it expects to sell this fiscal year to 5.6 million from 5.925 million, reducing its expectatio­ns for all major markets, including China, the U.S., Europe and Japan.

 ?? BLOOMBERG/FILE ?? Carlos Ghosn, former chairman, Nissan.
BLOOMBERG/FILE Carlos Ghosn, former chairman, Nissan.

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