The Denver Post

Nissan starts sparring at Renault, leaving their alliance on shaky ground

- By Ma Jie and Ania Nussbaum

The decades-old alliance of Renault SA and Nissan Motor Co. descended into open enmity as the two sides sparred over governance changes at the Japanese automaker, an apparent tit-for-tat following Nissan’s refusal to endorse a deal with Fiat Chrysler Automobile­s NV.

Nissan Chief Executive Officer Hiroto Saikawa said it was “most regrettabl­e” that Renault planned to stymie board reforms, after receiving a letter from the French company’s chairman, Jean-Dominique Senard. Renault’s salvo contrasts with more reassuring remarks from French Finance Minister Bruno Le Maire.

The hostilitie­s imperil what has proven one of the most successful automaking alliances, a partnershi­p the companies estimate lopped as much as $6.4 billion from their manufactur­ing, purchasing and engineerin­g costs in the 2017 financial year.

The tensions mark a new low in a relationsh­ip already strained by the arrest in Tokyo last November of Carlos Ghosn, the industry titan who oversaw the carmakers and their alliance.

The implosion of Renault’s merger plans with Fiat brought the conflict into the open, with Nissan’s reluctance to endorse the deal said to be partially responsibl­e for its failure.

In the aftermath, Senard sent the letter threatenin­g to block Nissan’s plans to overhaul its governance structure, changes hashed out in the wake of the Ghosn scandal.

Renault holds a 43 percent stake in the Yokohama-based company.

In an unusual public statement, Nissan confirmed that it had received the letter, and upbraided Renault for its position. The corporate-governance reform “was discussed thoroughly by Nissan’s board and approved by all board members, including Renault’s own nominees,” Saikawa said in a statement. “Such a stance runs counter to the company’s efforts to improve its corporate governance.”

Nissan also seized on comments made by the finance minister of France, Renault’s biggest shareholde­r, that his government is willing to reduce its stake to strengthen the alliance. Nissan, which has long chafed against French influence, would prefer a full exit by the government, people familiar with Nissan’s thinking said, asking not to be identified because the informatio­n isn’t public.

“Overall it is a mess, and just makes a tricky situation worse,” said Janet Lewis, an analyst at Macquarie Capital in Tokyo. “Senard’s threat to abstain on the corporate governance reform is very negative for the alliance.

He is fast losing any trust Nissan management may have had for a collaborat­ive relationsh­ip.

Playing hardball doesn’t typically work in Japan, so he will find it very hard to achieve anything going forward.”

Senard, who was brought in by the French government to smooth the relationsh­ip with Nissan, has instead pressed Nissan for a merger it didn’t want, then pursued the mega-deal with Fiat Chrysler.

In the letter to Nissan, Senard said the French automaker is seeking better representa­tion within Nissan’s plan to set up three committees on nomination­s, remunerati­on and auditing, said a person familiar with the matter, who cautioned that Renault hasn’t made a final decision on its vote and was still in negotiatio­ns.

While Renault understand­s Nissan’s desire to improve its governance, the so-called three board level committees system “should not serve as a tool directed or used against Nissan’s largest shareholde­r,” the letter said. Nissan shareholde­rs meet on June 25 to vote on the structure.

The latest crisis erupted a week ago, when Renault’s merger talks with Fiat fell apart. Nissan’s two representa­tives to Renault’s board had planned to abstain on the plan, prompting the French state to pause discussion­s — causing Fiat to pull out.

Even so, chairmen of both Fiat and Renault have since met, and the automakers are looking for ways to revive the merger plan and gain Nissan Motor’s approval, Reuters reported Monday.

Le Maire, in Japan to attend G-20 meetings, sought to patch up tensions but ended up reminding the Japanese company of his government’s outsized influence over the automakers with a 15 percent stake in Renault.

Nissan has long been uneasy over the arrangemen­t. Amid the instabilit­y, Renault has been pushing for closer ties, while Nissan has sought more autonomy. The two need each other more than ever, given the massive investment­s needed for electric vehicles and self-driving technology.

Renault and Nissan produced a combined 10.6 million vehicles last year. A separation could result in years of disarray because Renault and Nissan cooperate on engineerin­g, manufactur­ing, supply chain management, purchasing and human resources.

“It’s a difficult relationsh­ip, Nissan and Renault,” said Koji Endo, an analyst at SBI Securities Co. “They may want to divorce.”

Le Maire said Sunday that the government’s responsibi­lity was to secure jobs as well as industrial and research sites. He repeated Monday that France views a Renault-Fiat merger as a good idea, as long as the government’s conditions are met — including Nissan’s backing for the idea. The Japanese government has also played its part — including by intervenin­g to defend Nissan’s independen­ce from Renault last year.

Le Maire met Japanese Finance Minister Taro Aso and Economy Minister Hiroshige Seko on Monday. Le Maire and Seko both urged Renault and Nissan to strengthen the alliance.

“Nationalis­m is rising, and the globalists are losing,” said Max Warburton, an analyst at Sanford C. Bernstein & Co.

“Perhaps this deal was doomed from the start. We live in an era of de-globalizat­ion and heightened anxieties about national and regional identities. This applies to corporatio­ns as well as politician­s and individual­s.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States