Renault rift with Nissan widens over governance, casts
shadow on alliance
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[June 10, 2019]
By Naomi Tajitsu and Laurence Frost
TOKYO/PARIS (Reuters) - The two-decade-old
partnership of Renault SA and Nissan Motor Co was plunged into fresh
crisis on Monday, as the French automaker's demand for a greater say in
Nissan's new governance system drew rare public censure by the Japanese
firm.
Renault, which owns 43.4% of the Japanese firm, signaled it would block
Nissan from formally adopting an overhauled governance structure at a
June 25 shareholder meeting - unless Renault received representation on
new Nissan committees.
The demand, conveyed in a letter from Renault Chairman Jean-Dominique
Senard just weeks before the meeting, could scuttle the new structure,
created after months of deliberation by an outside committee and
previously supported by Senard. Nissan responded in some of its frankest
language yet against its top shareholder, calling the demand "most
regrettable".
"Nissan has received a letter from Renault indicating intention to
abstain from voting," Nissan said in a statement.
"Nissan finds Renault's new stance on this matter most regrettable, as
such a stance runs counter to the company’s efforts to improve its
corporate governance."
The rift lays bare the deep strain between the two automakers, whose
alliance has been under pressure since the arrest of former Chairman
Carlos Ghosn in November. What's at stake now may be even bigger than
their vast alliance, which includes Mitsubishi Motors.
Renault and Fiat Chrysler Automobiles (FCA) are looking for ways to
resuscitate their collapsed merger plan and secure Nissan's approval for
that deal, Reuters reported on Monday. Nissan is, therefore, poised to
urge Renault to significantly cut the 43.4% stake, two people told
Reuters.
By abstaining from the governance vote, Renault would effectively block
the new governance system - which includes three committees - as
adoption requires two-thirds approval. Nissan recently said it would
abstain from voting on the FCA-Renault merger, although both FCA and
Renault later blamed the failure of that deal squarely on the French
government.
"Renault's rights as 43.4% shareholder of Nissan need to be fully
recognized and, at a minimum, one or two directors proposed by Renault
should be members of each of the three committees," Renault said in its
letter, a copy of which was viewed by Reuters.
"As currently proposed, this does not seem to be the case."
CONFLICT OF INTEREST?
A Renault source said Senard's letter was motivated by concern about
Renault's under-representation on the new Nissan board committees being
introduced following the arrest of Ghosn, who is now awaiting trial and
denies the financial misconduct charges against him.
[to top of second column] |
Renault Chairman Jean-Dominique Senard attends a Renault, Nissan and
Mitsubishi chiefs' joint news conference in Yokohama, Japan, March
12, 2019. REUTERS/Kim Kyung-Hoon/File Photo
"It's not a final abstention, and Renault's position can still change," the
source said. "As things stand, Renault has not been assured of appropriate
committee representation as Nissan's main shareholder."
Renault had yet to receive specific details on the proposed composition of each
of the committees, another source with knowledge of the issue told Reuters.
A Nissan source said Renault CEO Thierry Bollore had expressed a desire to sit
on new Nissan committees to oversee executive nominations and compensation, and
a planned corporate governance auditing committee.
But such a move would raise concerns about a possible conflict of interest, as
it would give Renault a say in Nissan salaries and corporate governance, the
Nissan source said.
"It's shocking behavior from a shareholder that has been saying for months that
it supports us in strengthening our corporate governance," the Nissan source
said.
The source added that even if Renault blocked the committees, Nissan would still
try and go ahead and set up similar governance structures, and try to make them
as binding as possible.
DIFFERENCES OF OPINION
French Finance Minister Bruno Le Maire, in Tokyo after a G20 meeting at the
weekend, told reporters it was up to the management of both companies to solve
their problems. The French government owns 15 percent in Renault.
The rift could put further pressure on Nissan Chief Executive Hiroto Saikawa,
who looks increasingly at odds with Renault.
Japan's Jiji news agency earlier quoted Saikawa as saying: "We are preparing for
the shareholder meeting and will discuss necessary issues at the appropriate
time. If there are differences of opinion (with Renault), then I'd like for
those to be discussed".
In March a Nissan-appointed outside team recommended the formation of the three
committees to improve its corporate governance. Under the proposal, Renault
directors would be free to serve on the nominations committee, but would be
barred from the compensation and audit committees.
The two companies have struggled to repair their relationship after Ghosn's
arrest exposed simmering tensions, including Nissan's long-held concerns about
the alliance's capital structure.
Nissan also appears to have been largely left in the dark on the merger
discussions between Renault and Fiat Chrysler, which had attempted to join
forces to create the world's third-largest automaker before talks fell apart
last week.
(Reporting by Kanishka Singh in Bengaluru, Laurence Frost in Paris, David Dolan
and Naomi Tajitsu in Tokyo; Norihiko Shirouzu in Beijing; Writing by David
Dolan; Editing by Christopher Cushing and Muralikumar Anantharaman)
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