Nissan Plans to Shutter Mexican Factories in Cost-Cutting Move
Nissan may say adiós to two Mexican facilities, says report
According to a new report from Automotive News, Japanese automotive powerhouse Nissan is planning to reduce its manufacturing capacity in Mexico next year by shuttering two of its plants, including one that was opened as a joint venture with German luxury automaker Mercedes-Benz.
Per two sources, Nissan is expected to shut down the Civac plant in Jiutepec, Mexico, no later than March 2027, at the end of its 2026-2027 fiscal year. Like other Japanese automakers, Nissan follows a traditional fiscal year pattern known as nendo (年度), which runs from April 1 to March 31 the following year.
In addition, Nissan is reportedly set to end its joint venture with Mercedes on crossover production at the 2.37 million-square-foot COMPAS factory in Aguascalientes, Mexico. According to AutoForecast Solutions, Nissan will end production of two Infiniti crossovers at the plant later this year, while Mercedes will halt GLB production during the first quarter of 2026.
Nissan's first overseas factory may be on the chopping block
Like the soon-to-be-shuttered Oppama plant in Japan, the 4.4-million-square-foot CIVAC factory has some historical provenance with Nissan. The Jiutepec, Mexico, facility has been making cars in Mexico since 1966, just five years after it arrived in the market. In 1972, Nissan started exporting vehicles from Civac, and in the decades since, it has built more than 6 million vehicles and created thousands of jobs in the region.
Currently, Nissan produces the Navara and Latin America-market Frontier pickup trucks at the plant. However, data from AutoForecast Solutions shows that the plant is running at less than a third of its capacity, as it made just 80,000 pickups there last year. In 2025, Nissan plans to build 57,000, only a fraction of the 294,000 units it pumped out in 2016.
Though the CIVAC plant was its first manufacturing plant outside Japan, according to one of the sources who spoke with Automotive News, the nearly 60-year-old plant is outdated and no longer cost-effective to operate. Another source told AutoNews that the automaker will consolidate production at the plant to two company-owned factories in Aguascalientes.
The news of another potential shuttered historical Nissan plant comes on the heels of the announcement of the fate of the historic Oppama plant in Japan, which has been officially declared closed as part of the Re:Nissan restructuring and corporate austerity plan. The plant outside Tokyo has operated since 1961 as Nissan's central facility in Japan and employs about 2,400 employees. However, in a statement dated July 15, the Japanese carmaker said it will cease production by March 2028, at the end of the fiscal year 2027.
As part of the Re:Nissan plan, the automaker is expected to shut down seven of its factories and reduce its bloated manufacturing capacity by nearly 30 percent to 2.5 million vehicles by the 2027 fiscal year. Plants in Japan, India, Argentina, Thailand, and South Africa are also expected to close. In a statement to AutoNews, Nissan spokesperson Brian Brockman said the moves aren't final just yet.
'However, this process has not yet been concluded,' Brockman said. 'If any decisions are made, we will provide information at the appropriate time.'
Final thoughts
Over the years, the CIVAC plant has produced many significant Nissan models, including the Datsun Bluebird, the Versa, the Sentra, the B13 Sentra-based Tsuru, and even the Nissan NV200 Taxi, which was made for a New York City pilot project.
While this move comes as the Re:Nissan plan seeks to eliminate its unprofitable corners, it comes at the same time as the Trump administration lays down its tariffs on imported cars. As I mentioned previously, Nissan must overcome more than low sales and a bloated production capacity to save itself; it still has to play ball in its largest market, the United States.
The Trump administration has currently imposed a 25% tariff on cars made in Mexico and has threatened to raise tariffs to 30% starting August 1. In response to these tariffs, Nissan has paused production of less profitable trims of the Sentra and Kicks for the U.S. market and plans to discontinue U.S. sales of the Versa next year.
Nissan Plans to Shutter Mexican Factories in Cost-Cutting Move first appeared on Autoblog on Jul 21, 2025
This story was originally reported by Autoblog on Jul 21, 2025, where it first appeared.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
13 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Japan is facing slowing exports and trade deficit amid threat from Trump's tariffs
Japan sank into a trade deficit of 2.2 trillion yen (€13 billion) for the first six months of this year, according to government data released Thursday, as exports were hit by President Donald Trump's tariffs. In June, Japan's exports slipped 0.5% from a year earlier, following a 1.7% drop in May. Japan's exports to the US declined by 11% in June, with auto exports plunging 26.7%. (The US slapped car imports with a 25% tariff in April.) Shipments to China decreased by nearly 5%. Exports to Mexico, a major auto assembly hub for North America for Japanese automakers, fell nearly 20%. Trump has postponed implementing that higher import duty until 1 August, to allow time for negotiations, but so far no deal has been reached. Japan exports in June totalled nearly 9.2 trillion yen (€53 billion), in the second straight month of declines. As imports rose slightly by 0.2%, the trade surplus came in at 153 billion yen (just over €890 million), following a trade deficit in May amounting to 637.6 billion yen, or €3.7bn. Related Spain overtakes Japan in GDP per capita - what is behind the numbers? Nissan is closing flagship Oppama plant in Japan to cut costs In the first half of the year, Japan's exports totalled 53.4 trillion yen (€310bn), up 3.6%, while imports rose 1.3% to 55.6 trillion yen (€320bn). Japan and the US have been holding trade talks, with Japanese officials stressing that Japan is a key US ally. Customs data shows that, based on value, nearly one-fifth of all exports were heading to the US in 2024, making a trade deal crucial for the country's economy. Trump has focused on rice, a sector traditionally protected from foreign competition for the sake of Japan's food security. Japan imports more than 300,000 tons of rice a year from the US, according to various data, although some of that is used for animal feed. Japan will hold an election for the Upper House of Parliament on Sunday. Given falling public support for Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba's administration, the conservative and pro-business ruling Liberal Democratic Party could lose its majority unless it gains another coalition partner. Japan's economy contracted in the first quarter of this year compared to the previous quarter, partly due to slowing exports. Following the latest export figures, concerns are mounting that the export-dependent Japanese economy is going to contract again in the second quarter, and the country will land in a recession. Sign in to access your portfolio
Yahoo
28 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Asian markets rise, Toyota up by 14% after US tariff deal
The world's biggest economy, the US, and the fourth-largest, Japan, have agreed on a trade deal causing Asian shares to surge, with carmakers leading the way on the prospects of lower tariffs. The US and Japan agreed to put a 15% import duty on goods imported from Japan, apart from certain products such as steel and aluminium that are subject to much higher tariffs. That's down from the 25% that Trump had said would take effect on 1 August if a deal was not reached. This boosted investors' sentiment, resulting in Tokyo's Nikkei stock index rising by nearly 3.9% in the morning in Europe, the Asia Dow increasing by 2.7%, and Hong Kong's Hang Seng jumping 1.3%, while the Shanghai Composite index gained 0.4%. The real trade booster came from the car sector, media reports suggested that Japanese car exports to the US could be subject to a lower tariff than their global competitors. However, key details of the deal remain unclear; Japanese broadcaster NHK reported that the overall tariff rate on autos would be 15%. This could replace the current 25% tariff combined with the 2.5% duty, which is currently imposed on all imported cars in the US. The news fuelled investors' hopes for the future of the biggest Japanese carmakers, pushing Toyota's shares up by more than 14.3%, Honda's shares soared by 11.1%, and Nissan gained nearly 8.3% by the close of Asian trading. There was a chorus of no comments from the Japanese automakers, despite the latest announcement, including Toyota Motor Corp, Honda Motor Co and Nissan Motor Corp. Japanese companies tend to be cautious about their public reactions, and some business officials have privately remarked in off-record comments that they hesitate to say anything because Trump keeps changing his mind. Related Japan is facing slowing exports and trade deficit amid threat from Trump's tariffs Trump announces trade deal with Japan that lowers threatened tariff to 15% Trump: The US is looking at 'hundreds of thousands of jobs' "This Deal will create Hundreds of Thousands of Jobs — There has never been anything like it," Trump posted on Truth Social, noting that Japan was also investing "at my direction" $550 billion (€468.7bn) into the US. He said Japan would "open" its economy to American autos and rice. Japan's Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba welcomed the agreement as beneficial to both sides. So far, the US economy appears to be powering through the 'tariff uncertainty' as many of Trump's proposed taxes on imports are currently on hold, and the next major deadline is 1 August. Talks are underway on possible trade deals with other countries that could lower the stringent proposals before they take effect. "President Trump has signed two trade deals this week with the Philippines and Japan which is likely to keep market sentiment propped up despite deals with the likes of the EU and South Korea remaining elusive, for now at least," Tim Waterer, chief market analyst at Kohle Capital Markets, said in a report. What happened in the US markets overnight? On Tuesday, the US stock market inched closer to another record following some mixed profit reports, as General Motors and other big US companies provided updates on how much Trump's tariffs are hurting or helping them. The S&P 500 added 0.1% to the all-time high it had set the day before. The Dow Jones Industrial Average rose 0.4%, but the Nasdaq composite slipped 0.4% from its own record. In the bond market, US Treasury yields sank as traders continue to expect the Federal Reserve to wait until September at the earliest to resume cutting interest rates. The yield on the 10-year Treasury eased to 4.34% from 4.38% late Monday. In other dealings early Wednesday, US benchmark crude oil WTI was down nearly 1.5% at $65.22 a barrel. Brent crude, the international standard, was also slightly down by 0.07% at $68.54 a barrel in the morning in Europe. In currency trading, the US dollar inched up to 146.92 Japanese yen from 146.64 yen. The euro cost $1.1737, down from $1.1754. Error in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data
Yahoo
39 minutes ago
- Yahoo
TE Connectivity projects robust fourth quarter, reports upbeat quarterly results
By Anshuman Tripathy (Reuters) -TE Connectivity issued an upbeat forecast for the fourth quarter on Wednesday, following better-than-expected third-quarter profit and revenue results driven by strong demand for its industrial products. The company's industrial solutions segment makes electrical connector systems and components used in factory automation and other industrial equipment. Third-quarter sales in the industrial solutions segment surged about 30% year-on-year, bolstered by increased demand for artificial intelligence applications and modern data centers. CEO Terrence Curtin told Reuters in an interview that the impact of tariffs on overall sales during the third quarter was reduced by half due to price increases and supply chain adjustments. "When we gave our guidance last quarter, we told our investors that we thought it would be about a 3% impact of sales. It was only 1.5%, so it was about half," Curtin said. U.S. President Donald Trump's tariffs have weighed on automotive and manufacturing industries, prompting companies to implement mitigation strategies related to pricing and supply chain management. TE Connectivity expects a 1.5% sales impact from tariffs in the fourth quarter, with its industrial segment expected to bear a greater share of the burden compared to its transportation segment. The company expects fourth-quarter revenue of about $4.55 billion, exceeding analysts' average estimate of $4.41 billion, according to data compiled by LSEG Adjusted profit per share for the quarter is projected at $2.27, compared with analysts' expectations of $2.13 per share. For the third quarter ended June 27, TE Connectivity reported adjusted profit of $2.27 per share, beating analysts' estimates of $2.07. Revenue for the quarter rose 14% to $4.53 billion, compared with estimates of $4.32 billion. Sign in to access your portfolio