Nissan to cut 12,500 jobs globally, 1,710 of them in India

Japanese automaker will cut jobs and trim model range, while investing in autonomous and electrified technology; 13.5 percent of job cuts to be in India operations.

Autocar Pro News Desk By Autocar Pro News Desk calendar 26 Jul 2019 Views icon12047 Views Share - Share to Facebook Share to Twitter Share to LinkedIn Share to Whatsapp
Of the 12,500 jobs to be slashed worldwide between now and 2022, India's share will be over 1,710 or 13.68 percent.

Of the 12,500 jobs to be slashed worldwide between now and 2022, India's share will be over 1,710 or 13.68 percent.

Nissan has confirmed plans to reduce its production capacity and model range, and axe around 12,500 jobs worldwide, in a bid to turn its fortunes around.

The Japanese carmaker's India operations will bear 13.68 percent of the total job cuts – over 1,710 people – as per data available from the company. These job redundancies in India and six other markets will happen in 2019 albeit there is no information at which levels the job redundancies will take place.

A total of 13 markets are to bear the brunt of the job losses globally. USA (1,420+), Mexico (1,000+), UK (90+), Spain (470+), Indonesia (830+), Japan (880), India (1,710+) between FY2019 and FY2020, and 6,100 more in six other global markets (from FY2020 to FY2022). 

This news comes even as India Auto Inc reels under an unprecedented sales slowdown for nine months in a row, which is impacting OEM and supplier growth and leading to job losses. It was only yesterday that apex component body ACMA warned of job losses

Under the Renault Nissan Alliance, Nissan Motor India has a joint manufacturing plant at Oragadam in Chennai with an installed capacity of 480,000 units per annum. Nissan is having a tough time in the Indian market. In Q1 FY2020 (April-June 2019), the company sold a total of 5,353 units, down 49.40 percent year on year. The same period also saw its passenger vehicle market share come down from 1.21 percent in Q1 2019 to 0.75 percent in Q1 FY2020.

Nissan Motor Co had announced 4,800 job cuts earlier this year, having suffered its lowest profits for almost 10 years. The 12,500 job losses – around 9% of the firm's global workforce – include 6,400 the firm has already made. They come as a result of moves by Nissan to reduce its global production capacity by around 10%. The major restructure was confirmed by the company during the publication of its first quarter results for the 2019 financial year yesterday. In the three-month period running from April to June Nissan's net income is down 94.5% year-on-year, with sales down in several key markets.

Global production capacity to be cut by 10% by end-FY2022
To improve its overall utilisation rate, Nissan will reduce its global production capacity by 10% by the end of fiscal year 2022. In line with production optimisations, the company will reduce headcount by roughly 12,500. Furthermore, the company will reduce the size of its product line-up by at least 10% by the end of fiscal year 2022 in order to improve product competitiveness by focusing investment on global core models and strategic regional models.

While some of these initiatives are already underway, the company expects that substantial improvements in its performance will take time.

Nissan also says it will reduce the size of its product line-up by around 10% by the end of 2022, and will "focus investment on global core models and strategic regional models."

According to Nissan boss Hiroto Saikawa, the models affected are likely to include compact cars and those from its Datsun sub-brand.

As with many car firms, Nissan will spend heavily on future technologies, and says it will invest heavily in its ProPilot driver assistance system. It is also plotting further investment in electirifed vehicles, including battery electric models. It will also investigate new business models, including ride-sharing mobility services.

Multiple reasons have been cited as reasons for Nissan’s profits slump,including global sales stagnation in the US and Europe, falls in Asia, political uncertainty, tariffs, the need to invest in electrification and autonomy, and a part-ageing product line-up, including its successful Qashqai and Juke SUVs. Greater competition from rival manufacturers in the SUV segment is also a factor.

In May this year Nissan reported net profits annual profits of 319bn yen (£2.37bn), down 5% on the previous year. This was the lowest figures since 2009/10, in the wake of the global financial crisis. The company has also warned that the current year could be worse.

Autocar Pro News Desk
& Jim Holder (Autocar UK)

Data chart from Nissan-Global.com 

 

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