Struggling Nissan says CEO Uchida steps down

Struggling Japanese automaker Nissan on Tuesday announced the departure of its chief executive Makoto Uchida following the failure of merger talks with rival Honda.

“The Board of Directors decided on 11 March 2025 to select Ivan Espinosa as the representative executive officer in place of Makoto Uchida,” the firm said in a statement.

The automaker said the leadership changes were made to “achieve the company’s short- and mid-term objectives while positioning it for long-term growth”, without elaborating.

They will hold an online briefing later in the day.

Nissan announced thousands of job cuts last year after reporting a 93 percent plunge in first-half net profit, and now expects an annual loss of more than $500 million.

Last month, Nissan and Honda announced the scrapping of merger talks that would have created the world’s third-biggest auto company by unit sales behind Toyota and Volkswagen.

The discussions — seen as a way to boost their electric vehicle business that are lagging US titan Tesla and Chinese firms — are believed to have unravelled after Honda proposed making Nissan a subsidiary instead of an initial plan to integrate under a new holding company.

But according to later media reports, Honda might be willing to reopen talks with a different Nissan executive.

Toshihiro Mibe, the president of Honda, stated that the automakers would still look for “synergy” through a strategic partnership that was announced in August and also involves Nissan’s junior partner Mitsubishi Motors, despite the canceled negotiations.

Espinosa joined Nissan in Mexico in 2003 and had posts in Southeast Asia before becoming a director for Mexico and Latin America in 2010.

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