Gulf News

Arrest casts doubt on future of alliance

Ghosn is set to be ousted later this week from his spot as Nissan chairman

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For years, France’s Renault and Japan’s Nissan struggled to make money in the global auto business.

Then came Carlos Ghosn, a Renault executive who helped to orchestrat­e an unpreceden­ted transconti­nental alliance, combining parts of both companies to share engineerin­g and technology costs. Now Ghosn’s arrest in Japan for alleged financial impropriet­ies at Nissan could put the nearly 20-yearold alliance in jeopardy.

Ghosn, 64, is set to be ousted later this week from his spot as Nissan chairman. He could also lose his roles as CEO and chairman of Renault, threatenin­g the alliance formed in 1999 that’s now selling more than 10 million automobile­s a year. He’s been “the glue that holds Renault and Nissan together”, Bernstein analyst Max Warburton wrote in a note to investors. “It is hard not to conclude that there may be a gulf opening up between Renault and Nissan.”

Nissan has said it will dismiss Ghosn after he was arrested in Japan on Monday for allegedly abusing company funds and misreporti­ng his income. That opens up a leadership void at the entire alliance, for which Ghosn officially still serves as CEO and chairman.

Ghosn added Mitsubishi to the alliance two years ago after the automaker was caught in a gas-mileage cheating scandal. He had even floated the idea of a full merger between the three companies. “Today’s events throw any prospect of that up in the air,” Michael Hewson, chief market analyst at CMC Markets in London, wrote in a note to investors. Nissan CEO Hiroto Saikawa has publicly resisted the idea of an outright merger. So with Ghosn out at Nissan and probably Renault as well, the companies are unlikely to get any closer. The companies now share technology and they save money by jointly purchasing components.

Two are intertwine­d

While there could be some scrutiny of the relationsh­ips between the companies, they’re so intertwine­d now that cutting them apart would be difficult, said Kelley Blue Book analyst Michelle Krebs. “I would not predict its demise,” Krebs said of the alliance. She said she sees further consolidat­ion in an industry that faces unpreceden­ted research costs for autonomous and electric vehicles, while at the same time continuing to develop cars and trucks powered by internal combustion engines.

“The last thing one of the world’s biggest automakers needs is the disruption caused by an investigat­ion into the behaviour of a man who has towered over the global auto sector,” said Michael Hewson, chief market analyst at CMC Markets in London.

Nissan’s board is to meet tomorrow to consider Ghosn’s fate. Renault, where Ghosn is also CEO, said its board will hold an emergency meeting soon.

The brash Ghosn was once viewed as a saviour in the auto business with the ability to turn around the two big struggling companies. In 2006, he even proposed an alliance with global giant General Motors. Bernstein’s Warburton wrote that Ghosn’s once-mighty reputation has been declining for years, while Krebs said Nissan never could meet Ghosn’s goal of 10 per cent United States market share.

 ?? AP ?? Nissan Motor Co president and CEO Hiroto after a press conference at the company’s global Headquarte­rs near Tokyo on Monday.
AP Nissan Motor Co president and CEO Hiroto after a press conference at the company’s global Headquarte­rs near Tokyo on Monday.

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