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						Renault to propose joint holding company with Nissan: 
						source
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		 [April 27, 2019]   
		By Maki Shiraki 
 TOKYO (Reuters) - Renault will propose a 
		plan to create a joint holding company that would give the French 
		carmaker and Japanese partner Nissan equal footing, a person with 
		knowledge of the issue told Reuters.
 
 Under the proposal, both firms would nominate an equal number of 
		directors to the new company, which would be headed by Renault Chairman 
		Jean-Dominique Senard, according to the person, who spoke on condition 
		of anonymity as the plan is not public.
 
 The proposal would aim for further integration between the two 
		automakers, the source said.
 
 The proposal was first reported on Friday by the Nikkei business daily, 
		which said that Renault expects to soon put a plan to Nissan under which 
		ordinary shares in both automakers would be transferred to the new 
		company on a balanced basis.
 
 That would effectively dilute the French government's Renault stake to 
		about 7-8 percent from 15 percent.
 
 The newly-created company would be headquartered in a third country, 
		such as Singapore, the Nikkei and other Japanese media reported, without 
		citing sources.
 
		
		 
		The proposal comes after the French automaker had approached Nissan with 
		a merger idea ahead of an alliance operational meeting earlier this 
		month, but Nissan CEO Hiroto Saikawa declined to discuss the issue with 
		Senard, according to the Reuters source.
 He added that the proposal could be modified before it was presented to 
		Nissan.
 
 The Financial Times newspaper reported that Nissan and the Japanese 
		government refused to engage in merger talks with Renault and that 
		Saikawa had refused to meet SMBC Nikko bankers appointed by the French 
		carmaker to work on a deal.
 
 "I have nothing to say about this. We're not in a position to be 
		discussing (merger issues)," Saikawa told reporters late on Friday.
 
 "Improving our financial performance is our top priority."
 
 The outlook for the Renault-Nissan alliance - one of the world's leading 
		automaking partnerships - has clouded since the arrest in November of 
		its main architect, Carlos Ghosn, for suspected financial misconduct.
 
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			The logos of car manufacturers Renault and Nissan are seen in front 
			of a common dealership of the companies in Saint-Avold, France, Jan. 
			15, 2019. REUTERS/Christian Hartmann 
            
			 
A weakening financial performance at Nissan has also sparked concerns that the 
pursuit of overly ambitious sales targets under Ghosn, particularly in the 
United States, may have done lasting damage to the carmaker's brand and 
profitability.
 FORECAST SLASHED
 
 This week, the Japanese company cut its profit forecast for the year just ended 
to its lowest in nearly a decade, citing weakness in U.S. operations.
 
 Renault has long been vying for a closer merger with Nissan, which it rescued 
from the brink of bankruptcy two decades ago. Ghosn had been working to achieve 
deeper integration before his arrest in November.
 
 While the automakers have been consolidating many of their operations over the 
past decade, including procurement and production, many Nissan executives have 
opposed an all-out merger.
 
 Instead, Nissan has argued for a more equal footing with Renault, which holds a 
43 percent stake in its bigger partner. Nissan holds a 15 percent stake in 
Renault.
 
 It was unclear whether Renault would hold the casting vote in major decisions at 
the new company, as it did in Renault-Nissan B.V. (RNBV), a strategic management 
company jointly held by both companies and which oversaw operations for the 
partnership.
 
 That company was mothballed last month after an internal investigation by Nissan 
following Ghosn's arrest indicated that RNBV may have been involved with 
financial misconduct by the former chairman.
 
 Nissan's partnership with Mitsubishi Motors, in which it holds a 34 percent 
stake, would remain unchanged under the new proposal, the Nikkei said.
 
 (Reporting by Ran Kim and Naomi Tajitsu; Editing by Christopher Cushing, David 
Goodman and Joseph Radford)
 
				 
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