Los Angeles Times

GHOSN TO STEP ASIDE AS CEO OF NISSAN

Instead, he will focus on the automaker’s alliance with Renault and Mitsubishi.

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Carlos Ghosn, who leads the Nissan-Renault-Mitsubishi alliance, is handing over the helm at Nissan Motor Co. to Hiroto Saikawa, a veteran Japanese executive at Nissan, but Ghosn is staying on as the automaker’s chairman.

Saikawa will become chief executive at Nissan — based in Yokohama, Japan — effective April 1, and will be up for shareholde­rs’ approval in June, the company said Thursday.

The move does not signal a smaller role for Ghosn. Besides leading the Nissan-Renault alliance, Ghosn is also chairman at scandal-ridden Japanese automaker Mitsubishi Motors Corp., in which Nissan took a controllin­g stake last year. And Ghosn said he needs to focus on the expanded three-automaker alliance.

Ghosn, sent in by Renault of France in 1999, led near-bankrupt Nissan to a turnaround. He has said for years that he hoped to hand over the running of Nissan.

“I will continue to supervise and guide the company, both independen­tly and within the Renault-Nissan-Mitsubishi alliance. This planned change will also allow me to devote more time and energy to managing the strategic and operationa­l evolution and expansion of the alliance,” said Ghosn, who turns 63 next month.

Saikawa was groomed for the role, serving as co-chief executive with Ghosn since late last year. A graduate of the prestigiou­s University of Tokyo, he has overseen various operations at Nissan, which makes the March subcompact, Leaf electric car and Infiniti luxury models.

“I am confident that the management team I have developed at Nissan over the past 18 years has the talent and experience to meet the company’s operationa­l and strategic goals,” Ghosn said.

Rebecca Lindland, executive analyst for Kelley Blue Book, said Ghosn remains very much in command.

“After years of playing maestro to a multicultu­ral, multi-branded behemoth, Mr. Ghosn is focusing solely on orchestrat­ing the strategic and operation success of his latest alliance, the symphony of Renault-Nissan-Mitsubishi,” she said.

“He’s leaving the day-today tasks of Nissan to Saikawa-san, and there’s no indication Mr. Ghosn is contemplat­ing hanging up his baton,” she added, using the honorific “san” for Japanese names.

It is still unclear what Ghosn specifical­ly has in mind for Mitsubishi under the alliance. But the brand, although tarnished over scandals that go back decades, is believed to have potential in Southeast Asia.

Nissan stepped in after Mitsubishi was found inflating fuel economy figures for its minicar models, also sold under the Nissan brand. Buyers were compensate­d with cash rebates.

Combining global vehicles sales for the three brands, Ghosn’s alliance is among the biggest groups in the industry, although it still trails German automaker Volkswagen, Japanese rival Toyota Motor Corp. and Detroit-based General Motors Co.

 ?? Kimimasa Mayama EPA ?? CARLOS GHOSN guided a near-bankrupt Nissan to a turnaround.
Kimimasa Mayama EPA CARLOS GHOSN guided a near-bankrupt Nissan to a turnaround.

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