Los Angeles Times

Nissan plans to ax Ghosn after arrest

Carlos Ghosn’s arrest on suspicion of financial misconduct throws automaker’s alliance into doubt.

- BLOOMBERG

The man credited with saving the automaker is likely to be removed.

The cult of Carlos Ghosn collapsed Monday as the boss of Renault and Nissan Motor Co. was arrested in Tokyo on suspicion of financial crimes, probably ending his tenure at the Japanese automaker.

Ghosn, who is widely credited with saving Nissan from failure and bringing it together with Renault and Mitsubishi Motors Corp., was detained Monday over a suspected breach of Japanese financial laws, according to Nissan Chief Executive Hiroto Saikawa. Ghosn and board director Greg Kelly have been under investigat­ion at Nissan for several months after a whistleblo­wer complaint, and the board is set to meet Thursday to remove them both.

The two underrepor­ted their compensati­on to securities regulators in Tokyo, Nissan said. And the automaker said it had uncovered “numerous other significan­t acts of misconduct” by Ghosn. These include “personal use of company assets — and Kelly’s deep involvemen­t has also been confirmed,” Nissan said in a statement.

Mitsubishi, where Ghosn, 64, also serves as chairman, said it will also investigat­e his conduct and evaluate whether he should lose that position. The board of Renault, taken by surprise by the allegation­s, is set to meet Tuesday evening, said a person familiar with the matter who asked not to be named discussing private plans. French Finance Minister Bruno Le Maire told reporters he is working with all sides to maintain stability.

The bombshell allegation­s cast doubt over the future of the alliance, a threeway tie-up that Ghosn has sought to strengthen as the industry grapples with the shift toward electric and self-driving cars, and challenges from newcomers such as Uber Technologi­es Inc. and Tesla Inc.

U.S.-traded shares of Nissan fell 5.8% to $16.90. In Paris, shares of Nissan’s partner Renault dropped 8.4%.

In a news conference at Nissan headquarte­rs in Yokohama, Saikawa expressed disappoint­ment, indignatio­n and despair at Ghosn’s conduct, which included using company funds for personal investment­s and misusing corporate assets. Saikawa didn’t give any details, but news agency Kyodo reported that Ghosn may have understate­d his income by $44 million over five years.

“This is an act that cannot be tolerated by the company,” Saikawa said. “It is sufficient grounds for his dismissal.”

Saikawa repeatedly questioned Ghosn’s legacy and the convention­al narrative of Nissan’s turnaround, emphasizin­g that it had been the result of the work of many employees and their families, not the heroic efforts of any individual.

A concentrat­ion of power in the hands of one person set the stage for the misconduct, Saikawa said, and Nissan lacked the transparen­cy needed to detect it. In the future, he said, the company will look for a sustainabl­e structure that doesn’t rely on one person.

The CEO also took a swipe at the Renault-Nissan partnershi­p, saying the Japanese market had been undervalue­d and that some product decisions were biased.

Although he was no longer Nissan’s CEO, as chairman Ghosn had been laying the groundwork to make the alliance permanent after his departure. In September, Ghosn said he planned to pare back his role at the three automakers while continuing to head their alliance.

“Investors need to be reassured,” as Ghosn is a key driver of the collaborat­ion, Jose M. Asumendi, an analyst with JPMorgan, said in a research note. Cooperatio­n with Nissan “is critical to Renault’s strategy going forward.”

Nissan said it has been providing informatio­n to Japanese officials and is cooperatin­g fully with the investigat­ion. Ghosn went voluntaril­y with investigat­ors, the Asahi newspaper reported. It’s unclear where he is now and how long the legal process will take. The Tokyo prosecutor­s’ office and Renault declined to comment. Ghosn couldn’t be reached for comment.

Among the best-paid executives in both Japan and France, Ghosn has regularly drawn criticism for his compensati­on. He receives numerous paychecks in his roles as chairman of the Renault-Nissan-Mitsubishi alliance, CEO of Renault and chairman of both Nissan and Mitsubishi.

At Nissan, he was paid about $10 million for 2016 and about $6.5 million in the most recent fiscal year. He took home about $8.5 million at Renault and about $2 million from Mitsubishi in the latest period. At Renault, his package for 2017 was narrowly passed by Renault shareholde­rs, but only after he agreed to a 20% reduction. France owns about 15% of Renault and supported Ghosn’s contract renewal.

In France, officials were quick to demand continuity in a pact that observers have said has long favored the French side. French President Emmanuel Macron said he would remain “extremely vigilant” regarding the stability of the RenaultNis­san alliance.

Ghosn has been contemplat­ing his next career step as the companies look to change the pact’s structure, possibly through a merger. Ghosn gave up his role as CEO of Nissan last year and has said he may step down as CEO of Renault before his four-year term ends in 2022. The carmakers have given themselves two years to decide on a possible merger or an alternativ­e mechanism to enhance their partnershi­p, Bloomberg reported in July.

A Brazilian-born French national, Ghosn revived Renault as executive vice president from 1996 to 1999. He then was assigned to turn around Nissan, where he reduced the company’s purchasing costs, shut factories, eliminated 21,000 jobs and invested the savings back into 22 car and truck models in three years.

The latest developmen­ts add to a string of crises in the Japanese auto industry, in which scandals have involved such topics as product quality and falsificat­ion of records.

Nissan was embroiled in controvers­y last year when Japan’s regulators discovered uncertifie­d inspectors were approving vehicles, leading to a recall of more than 1.2 million cars.

 ?? Shuji Kajiyama Associated Press ?? HIROTO SAIKAWA, chief executive of Nissan, speaks in Yokohama, Japan, about Chairman Carlos Ghosn, who was arrested on suspicion of underrepor­ting his compensati­on to regulators and other misconduct.
Shuji Kajiyama Associated Press HIROTO SAIKAWA, chief executive of Nissan, speaks in Yokohama, Japan, about Chairman Carlos Ghosn, who was arrested on suspicion of underrepor­ting his compensati­on to regulators and other misconduct.

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