Nissan considers giving Renault some seats on oversight committees -
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[June 15, 2019] By
Maki Shiraki and Linda Sieg
TOKYO (Reuters) - Nissan Motor Co is
considering giving its alliance partner Renault SA some seats on planned
oversight committees after the French automaker expressed discontent
with the envisioned governance reform, a source said.
The two-decade-old partnership of Nissan and Renault was plunged into a
crisis earlier this week, 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.
Nissan is now considering having Renault executives as members of the
nomination, audit and compensation committees, a person with direct
knowledge said.
"Nissan will have to make concessions for our governance reform," this
person said. "Whether two or three seats, we still don't know how many
committees we will be giving to Renault, but we are in talks with
Renault to give some seats to someone recommended by Renault."
Jean-Dominique Senard, Renault's chairman, said earlier in the week that
he was confident of reaching an agreement with Nissan on the composition
of the Japanese company's main board committees. He said he would
support Nissan's governance reform if the Japanese firm allowed
Renault's two representatives on Nissan's board to be part of its
powerful committees.
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The Nissan logo is seen at Nissan Motor Co.'s global headquarters
building in Yokohama, Japan, December 17, 2018. REUTERS/Kim Kyung-Hoon/File
Photo
Nissan had offered to let only Senard to sit on the committees but Renault is
insisting its chief executive Thierry Bollore also have a role.
A second source familiar with Nissan's thinking said that there is no agreement
yet on Renault's recommendations and the two companies are still negotiating.
"There is still a gap ... both sides need to make concessions. The question is
whether they can narrow (the gap)," this person said.
In a related development, the source with direct knowledge said that Nissan has
recommended Yasushi Kimura, adviser to leading fuel distributor JXTG Holdings
Inc, to become the chairman of Nissan's board of directors.
Kimura will have to be approved to become an external director at the
shareholder meeting slated for June 25. His official appointment as chairman of
the board will be decided at the board meeting after the shareholder meeting.
(Writing by Ayai Tomisawa; editing by Christian Schmollinger)
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