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						Mazda taps Americas head as CEO to raise game in its 
						biggest market
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		 [May 11, 2018] 
		 By Naomi Tajitsu 
 TOKYO (Reuters) - Mazda Motor Corp has 
		named the head of its Americas operations as its next president and CEO 
		after its current chief steps down in June, as Japan's fifth-largest 
		automaker seeks to boost profitability in North America, its biggest 
		market.
 
 The company said on Friday that Masamichi Kogai will step down and be 
		replaced by current vice president Akira Marumoto who now oversees 
		operations in the Americas. The changes are effective June 26 after 
		Mazda's annual shareholders' meeting.
 
 Mazda, which has global annual sales of around 1.6 million vehicles, has 
		enjoyed a run of rising vehicle sales, expanding in markets particularly 
		in North America, its biggest market which accounts for nearly 30 
		percent of total sales.
 
		
		 
		But as one of Japan's smaller automakers and a tiny player globally, it 
		faces growing competition in the United States, where market growth has 
		slowed, and where the company's profitability has sagged due to higher 
		discounting and slowing demand for sedans.
 The maker of the MX-5 Miata roadster and the reputed Skyactiv gasoline 
		engines also faces higher costs to stay competitive in an industry which 
		is being disrupted by new technologies, including self-driving cars and 
		electric vehicles.
 
 Marumoto, a 38-year company veteran with a background in engineering who 
		described himself as having a "strict" work ethic and admitted to being 
		"short-tempered" at times, previously led Mazda's corporate planning and 
		product strategy divisions before heading its Americas operations.
 
 He said that growing sales and improving profitability in the North 
		American market would be his biggest priority, along with expanding the 
		company's brand image as an innovative car maker.
 
		
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			Mazda Motor Corp. outgoing President Masamichi Kogai and next 
			president Akira Marumoto attend a news conference in Tokyo, Japan 
			May 11, 2018. REUTERS/Kim Kyung-Hoon 
             
"Given the rapid changes occurring in the auto industry at the moment it's often 
asked whether a small company like us will be OK," Marumoto, 60, told reporters 
at a briefing in Tokyo.
 "But before we even consider this we need to show our strengths, and what makes 
us different if we want to grow our brand."
 
Kogai, who became Mazda's president and CEO in 2013, will be following the 
footsteps of his two immediate predecessors who also held the top job for five 
years each. He will still be with the automaker and become its chairman, the 
company said.
 Earlier this year, Mazda announced that it would invest in a new, $1.6 billion 
plant in the U.S. state of Alabama as a joint venture with Toyota Motor Corp 
<7203.T>.
 
 Mazda and Toyota are jointly developing affordable electric vehicles, pooling 
resources to better compete in the race for new car technologies. As part of 
this partnership announced last year, Toyota has taken a 5 percent stake in its 
smaller rival.
 
 
Last month, Mazda forecast a 28 percent drop in full-year operating profit, hurt 
by a stronger yen as well as higher spending.
 (Reporting by Naomi Tajitsu; Editing by Edwina Gibbs and Muralikumar 
Anantharaman)
 
				 
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