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Nissan loses A.1 billion, will cut another 11,000 jobs, close seven factories

Nissan loses A$7.1 billion, will cut another 11,000 jobs, close seven factories

Posted on May 14, 2025 By rehan.rafique No Comments on Nissan loses A$7.1 billion, will cut another 11,000 jobs, close seven factories

Nissan has posted a net loss of ¥670.9 billion (A$7.1 billion) for the financial year that finished in March 2025, and has launched another series of cuts aimed at turning the troubled carmaker around.

The Japanese carmaker has also paused development on products due after March 2027.

In a press conference new Nissan CEO Ivan Espinosa called the awful numbers a “wake up call”, and the global environment “volatile and unpredictacble “, which makes “planning and investment increasingly challenging”.

In an earlier statement he said the carmaker “must prioritise self-improvement with greater urgency and speed, aiming for profitability that relies less on volume”.

As it will be producing and selling fewer vehicles, Nissan will reduce its factory count from 17 to 10 by March 2028. It didn’t announce which factories will be getting the chop, but earlier reports indicate at least one will be in China.

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It will also reduce its workforce by 20,000 people – around 15 per cent of its current 133,500 employees – by March 2028, which includes the 9000 job losses, mainly in manufacturing, Nissan announced six months ago.

In addition to permanent and contract factory staff, there will headcount reductions in both research and development (R&D), and selling, general and administrative (SG&A).

Some R&D sites will be closed as Nissan tries to reduce the department’s average cost per hour by 20 per cent, while also reducing development time for new models to between 30 and 37 months. Longer term the carmaker will reduce its number of platforms from 13 to 7, and cut parts complexity by 70 per cent by March 2036.

In addition to all this, the company has setup a cost-cutting “transformation office” with an initial staff of 300 experts who have been “empowered to make cost decisions”.