Nissan
sees profit gains on vehicle sales growth, cost cuts
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[May 13, 2015]
By Chang-Ran Kim
YOKOHAMA, Japan (Reuters) - Nissan Motor
Co, Japan's second-biggest automaker, said it expects operating profit
to climb 15 percent this financial year, forecasting vehicle sales
growth in most regions and promising large cost cuts.
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That follows robust earnings in the year just ended thanks to big
currency gains and the popularity of its Rogue crossover SUV and
other models in the United States.
It predicted currencies will work against it this year but plans to
beat expected flat industry-wide vehicles sales with growth of
around 5-6 percent in China, the United States and Europe. Cost cuts
are set to add a hefty 110 billion yen ($920 million) to profit.
Nissan, 43.4 percent owned by France's Renault SA <RENA.PA>,
forecast operating profit of 675 billion yen - 2 percent less than a
market consensus estimate, due in part to the automaker's
conservative exchange rate assumptions.
Chief Executive Carlos Ghosn noted that sales were slumping in
Brazil and Russia, while in China demand would be driven
increasingly by price cuts.
Worries have grown about price competition in China as a slowing
economy continues to weigh on demand for vehicles in the world's
largest single auto market. In a sign of the pressure, General
Motors Co <GM.N>, No. 2 by market share in China, recently cut
prices on 40 models there.
Ghosn noted Nissan had outperformed the industry with 20 percent
sales growth in China through April, but said it would be watching
pricing closely as rivals add incentives.
"The market is getting more competitive, but I don't think it's
going to be brutally more competitive than anything else we have
seen," he said in an interview with Reuters. "It's normalizing as an
emerged market in which car makers are going to have to be smart,
going to have to be quick and they're going to have to be
competitive."
Ghosn would not be drawn into much further comment on the French
government's move to raise its holding in Renault to gain a bigger
say in its management, which he has said threatens the balance of
the Nissan-Renault alliance.
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Legislation introduced under France's socialist government doubles
the voting rights of longer-term shareholders in companies that do
not explicitly opt out by a two-thirds majority vote. An opt-out
resolution proposed by Ghosn, who also leads Renault, failed to gain
the necessary votes last month after France raised its stake to 19.7
percent from 15 percent.
Sources have said that Nissan representatives on the Renault board
have warned the Japanese automaker could be forced to take steps to
increase its influence.
"There is nothing more to add," Ghosn said. "In a certain way, this
is, for the moment, much more a Renault issue and Nissan is
supporting Renault in this situation."
Operating profit in the year just ended jumped 18 percent, but in
the final quarter it fell 13 percent to 171.6 billion yen - short of
analysts' estimates - as the company adjusted for accounting
changes.
(Reporting by Chang-Ran Kim and Thomas Wilson,; Editing by Edwina
Gibbs and Elaine Hardcastle)
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