Honda
executives to take pay cut after fifth Fit hybrid recall
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[October 23, 2014]
By Chang-Ran Kim
TOKYO (Reuters) - Honda Motor Co said on
Thursday its president and 12 other executives would take an
unprecedented, quality-related pay cut after the Japanese automaker
announced the fifth recall in a year of its new Fit hybrid model.
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The recall, which covers 425,825 Fit hybrid vehicles and other
models in Japan, comes as Honda is facing lawsuits due to accidents
involving airbags supplied by Takata Corp. The airbags have been
linked to four deaths - all on Hondas - and have triggered a
multi-million vehicle recall by many automakers worldwide.
"We have inconvenienced many customers, and we're deeply sorry,"
Honda spokeswoman Akemi Ando told reporters after announcing the
latest Fit recall. Shares in Honda ended down 1.4 percent on
Thursday, underperforming the benchmark Nikkei average <.N225>.
No injury or death has been reported from the defects, as with the
previous four recalls, Honda added.
The recall will cost about 5.7 billion yen ($53 million), and the
impact on earnings is minimal, Honda said. The overall cost of the
five recalls involving the Fit hybrid now stands at 16.5 billion
yen, it added.
Because the recall highlighted quality concerns, the company said
that over the next three months, Chief Executive Takanobu Ito will
take a 20 percent pay cut while other senior executives including
Chairman Fumihiko Ike and Executive Vice President Tetsuo Iwamura
will give up 10 percent of their pay.
Honda also said it had appointed Senior Managing Officer Koichi
Fukuo to oversee quality improvements across the organization, the
first time it has created such a role.
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Honda said the latest recall was over two noise-related defects in
the Fit and Vezel hybrids as well as some gasoline-engine Fit and N-WGN
models. The automaker will also recall 183 cars overseas for the
same glitch.
Honda first recalled the Fit hybrid in October 2013 - just one month
after launch - for defective controls on its newly developed
seven-speed twin-clutch transmission system. Two recalls followed
for the same issue.
(Editing by Chris Gallagher and Miral Fahmy)
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