
Major car firm ‘discontinuing cheapest model & halting pay rises' – weeks after axing 20,000 jobs and £4bn losses
The struggling car maker had announced plans to
due to soaring production costs and disappointing sales.
2
The Japanese automaker has been struggling financially recently
Credit: Getty
2
Cost-cutting measures will already see thousands of job losses with multiple factory closures
Credit: AFP
Cash-strapped
Nissan
, Japan's third-largest carmaker, is already facing billions in losses - its worst annual loss in a quarter century.
Nissan is
Now, the company has started offering buyouts to US workers and has suspended merit-based wage increases worldwide, reports Reuters.
As part of the cuts, Nissan has offered separation packages to workers at its Canton plant in Mississippi.
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Salaried workers in human resources, planning, information technology and finance have also been offered similar packages.
Merit-based pay increases have also been suspended worldwide by Nissan for the current business year, in a separate email seen by Reuters.
Christian Meunier, Nissan America's chairman, said the buyouts are 'crucial for Nissan's comeback' in the US, its most important market.
'While substantial efforts have been made in the US to help right-size Nissan, we need to take additional, limited, strategic action here at a local level,' Meunier said in an email.
Most read in Motors
And Nissan has also discontinued its cheapest model, the manual-equipped Versa, according to reports.
The Japanese automaker halted making the Versa with the five-speed manual at its Aguascalientes, Mexico, factory, according to
The publication stated that a "person with knowledge of the matter" revealed that the most affordable new car on the market would see "production cease".
It is understood that the rest of the Versa lineup will continue as usual but this is yet another huge blow to the carmaker.
Japanese giant unveils its new bargain EV with quirky 'bug eye' headlights
It comes after reports the manufacturer is planning to cut its number of factories from 17 down to 10.
This has prompted fears that the brand's Sunderland factory could be under threat.
While Nissan has not confirmed the fate of its only UK factory, its CEO Ivan Espinosa has insisted that
It is hoped that the £1billion loan from
The huge cash injection is just a fifth of the 1Trillion Yen needed by the company to survive.
It will also look to issue as much as 630billion yen in convertible securities and bonds, including high-yield and euro notes.
Reportedly, the firm is looking to
Finally, the struggling car manufacturer is eyeing a sale of its stakes in Renault and battery maker AESC Group.
The aggressive
fundraising
plans underscore Nissan's rapidly deteriorating financial and operational position, despite efforts by newly appointed chief executive Ivan Espinosa to turn the company around.
Development on other
Work on all 'advanced and post-FY26 product activities' has been paused, though Nissan has not confirmed which particular vehicles will face suspension.

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