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Nissan to cut 11,000 more jobs and shut seven factories | Nissan to cut 11,000 more jobs and shut seven factories |
(32 minutes later) | |
Japanese carmaker Nissan has said it will cut another 11,000 jobs globally and shut seven factories as it shakes up the business in the face of weak sales. | |
Falling sales in China and heavy discounting in the US, its two biggest markets, have taken a heavy toll on earnings, while a proposed merger with Honda and Mitsubishi collapsed in February. | |
The latest cutbacks brings the total number of layoffs announced by the company in the past year to about 20,000, or 15% of its workforce. | |
It was not immediately clear where the job cuts will be made, or whether Nissan's plant in Sunderland will be affected. | |
Nissan employs about 133,500 people globally, with about 6,000 workers in Sunderland. | |
The latest layoffs come on top of 9,000 job cuts Nissan announced in November as part of a cost saving effort that it said would reduce its global production by a fifth. | |
In February, talks between Nissan and its larger rival Honda collapsed after the firms failed to agree on a multi-billion-dollar tie-up. | In February, talks between Nissan and its larger rival Honda collapsed after the firms failed to agree on a multi-billion-dollar tie-up. |
The plan had been to combine their businesses to fight back against competition from rival firms, especially in China. | |
The merger would have created a $60bn (£46bn) motor industry giant, the fourth largest in the world by vehicle sales after Toyota, Volkswagen and Hyundai. | The merger would have created a $60bn (£46bn) motor industry giant, the fourth largest in the world by vehicle sales after Toyota, Volkswagen and Hyundai. |
After the failure of the negotiations, then-chief executive Makoto Uchida was replaced by Ivan Espinosa, who was the company's chief planning officer and head of its motorsports division. | |
Nissan also reported an annual loss of 670 billion yen ($4.5bn; £3.4bn), with US President Donald Trump's tariffs putting further pressure on the struggling firm. | |
Mr Espinosa said that the previous financial year had been "challenging", with rising costs and an "uncertain environment", adding that the results were a "wake-up call". |