Business World

Record Renault earnings strengthen Ghosn’s hand

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BOULOGNE- BILLANCOUR­T, FRANCE — French car maker Renault posted record sales and profit for 2017, bolstering Chief Executive Carlos Ghosn’s position in the face of government demands for a clearer succession plan and deeper integratio­n with alliance partner Nissan.

Renault’s shares rose on Friday after it unveiled a 17% surge in operating profit to € 3.854 billion ($4.84 billion) or 6.6% of revenue — which rose 14.7% to €58.77 billion on buoyant European demand.

The record earnings and margin beat analysts’ expectatio­ns of € 3.65 billion in operating profit, based on the median of 14 estimates in an Inquiry Financial poll for Reuters. Revenue came in below their €59.25-billion consensus.

“We were positively surprised by the quality of the beat,” Evercore analyst Arndt Ellinghors­t said, citing production cost savings that more than tripled to €663 million.

Renault shares were up 3% at € 88.59 at 0905 GrcentMT. Operating profit at the core automotive division, excluding the recently consolidat­ed AvtoVAZ business in Russia, rose 15.2% to €363 million.

The company raised its proposed dividend by 12.7% to € 3.55 per share and pledged to maintain its operating margin above 6% in 2018, despite worsening currency effects that wiped € 303 million from its full-year profit.

GOVERNMENT INFLUENCE

The strong financial performanc­e may help Ghosn resist pressure from the French government, Renault’s biggest shareholde­r, for a closer tie-up with Nissan that also serves national interests. The state commands a 15% stake in Renault and two board seats.

But Brazilian- born Ghosn made clear that Renault and Nissan are in no rush to merge — especially on French terms — and reiterated his view that a full tie-up was impossible while France retained a significan­t Renault stake.

“I don’t see how the Japanese side is going to accept further steps with the French state as a major shareholde­r,” he told analysts.

President Emmanuel Macron said on Tuesday he was seeking a “clear road map safeguardi­ng the interests of the company, the alliance and all of the French industrial sites.”

The car maker’s board said on Thursday it would ask shareholde­rs in June to back Ghosn for another four-year term, during which he would “take decisive steps to make the alliance irreversib­le” and “strengthen the succession plan.”

Renault owns 43.4% of its Japanese partner, which in turn controls Mitsubishi Motors via a 34% stake.

Ghosn had been expected to hand over the reins to a new CEO and move to a non- executive chairman role overseeing the Renault-Nissan-Mitsubishi alliance. But the plan foundered on difference­s with the French state over the alliance’s future shape and direction, sources have said.

Instead, Ghosn promoted deputy Thierry Bollore to the new role of chief operating officer. Some independen­t directors raised concerns about the hiring process and its failure to identify external candidates, sources have said.

“This is a nomination by the CEO, it’s not a nomination by the board,” Ghosn said. “But I wanted the board to be involved in it, to make sure they feel involved in this decision.”

PAY CUT

Ghosn also agreed to cut his salary by about 30 percent, Renault confirmed, securing government support for his payout.

Shareholde­rs led by the French state voted against his compensati­on in 2016 but narrowly approved it last year. The package to be submitted in June includes € 2.46 million in fixed and variable pay, plus up to 80,000 long- term performanc­e shares currently worth another €8.6 million.

Net income rose 49.6% to € 5.114 billion, helped by a € 2.791- billion contributi­on from Nissan.

Renault’s 2017 global vehicle deliveries rose 8.5%, the company disclosed last month, with about one- third of the growth coming from Europe — helped by its new Koleos mid- sized SUV and recently revamped Megane family of compact cars. —

 ??  ?? CARLOS GHOSN, chairman and CEO of Renault, speaks during the French car maker Renault’s 2017 annual results presentati­on at their headquarte­rs in Boulogne-Billancour­t, near Paris, France on Feb. 16.
CARLOS GHOSN, chairman and CEO of Renault, speaks during the French car maker Renault’s 2017 annual results presentati­on at their headquarte­rs in Boulogne-Billancour­t, near Paris, France on Feb. 16.

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