The agreement, offering Nissan <7201.T> guarantees against future
interference by parent Renault <RENA.PA> or its own biggest
shareholder, the French state, came as a relief to Renault staff
while disappointing some investors who had hoped for bigger changes
to the 16-year-old carmaking alliance.
Tension had been building since April, when Economy Minister
Emmanuel Macron temporarily raised France's Renault stake to secure
a permanent increase in its voting rights - and enough clout to veto
strategic decisions or tie-ups that might one day endanger domestic
jobs or other national interests.
That move raised hackles at Nissan, 43.4 percent-owned by Renault,
and infuriated alliance Chief Executive Carlos Ghosn, who has headed
both carmakers for the last decade.
Renault shares fell on Friday after its board approved two new
contracts to cap the French state's increased weight in
non-strategic shareholder votes and effectively abandon Renault's
right to control Nissan strategy.
"We've certainly lost a bit, but Nissan has accepted that France has
increased voting rights on important strategic questions," one
Renault manager said.
Nissan said it was "very pleased" with the agreement, having earlier
threatened to exit the carmakers' 2002 alliance agreement unless a
deal was reached by Friday, a move that would immediately free it to
raise its 15 percent Renault stake. An increase to 25 percent would
cancel Renault's voting rights in Nissan under Japanese law,
effectively ending French control.
Instead, the deal allows Nissan to lift its Renault holding to 25
percent - or beyond - only in the event of interference by Renault
or by Paris that breaches the new undertakings.
The small shift in the balance of power reflects economic realities
on the ground. Since its 1999 rescue by Renault, Nissan has outgrown
its French parent and now leads the way in engineering and other key
areas, within an alliance now ranked as the world's fourth-largest
carmaker by combined sales.
But the changes disappointed investors who had hoped that Ghosn, 61,
might use the crisis to carry out deeper alliance reforms or even a
full merger - unlocking some of the $20 billion market value of
Renault's large Nissan stake.
"It seems a very ugly solution and I can't imagine the market will
like it," said a London-based special situations investor at a $40
billion fund that had bet on bigger moves before trimming its
position as the weaker compromise loomed.
"They're really just kicking the can down the road," he said.
Renault shares sagged after an initial Reuters report on the draft
compromise, eventually closing 5.3 percent lower after the deal was
announced.
The conflict burst into public view after Macron deployed 1.2
billion euros ($1.3 billion) of public money to raise France's
Renault stake to 19.7 percent and block Ghosn's proposal to opt out
of a new law giving long-term shareholders double voting rights.
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Even after its holding is pared back to 15 percent, France will
command 28 percent of votes when the Florange law takes effect at
the end of March, enough to veto strategic decisions.
Ghosn sparred with Martin Vial, Macron's top official in charge of
state holdings, for much of Friday's five-hour board session,
sources said afterwards.
Agreement to cap the government's voting rights at their previous
17.9 percent level - for ordinary, non-strategic resolutions - came
only after Ghosn called a break to speak to the minister by phone.
Under a face-saving formula yet to be finalised, the limit will rise
to 20 percent at unusually well-attended shareholder meetings. It
would be lifted entirely if Renault or Nissan were to violate the
pact with France or modify their own alliance agreement without
government approval.
Nissan, which had called for drastic changes to the alliance's
crossed shareholdings in a confidential September proposal revealed
by Reuters, gave up many of those demands in the compromise deal.
Instead, for the first time, it received written assurances that
Renault will never attempt to control the Nissan board or propose
resolutions to its shareholder meeting without its approval - a
substantial concession depriving its main shareholder of some
fundamental prerogatives.
"I believe the alliance emerges stronger from this debate," Ghosn
told reporters on a conference call afterwards. But analysts weren't
so sure.
Dominic O'Brien of Exane BNP Paribas called the outcome a "missed
opportunity" for Ghosn to lay the groundwork for a full
Renault-Nissan merger - the widely expected end result of the
companies' ever-closer operational cooperation.
"It's a big disappointment," O'Brien said. "This was a chance to set
things up so that if the industrial merger goes according to plan,
the financial one becomes a no-brainer."
(Additional reporting by Naomi Tajitsu in Tokyo and Simon Jessop in
London; Editing by Mark Potter and Elaine Hardcastle)
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