
Nissan gets ‘wake-up call' with $4.5 billion annual net loss
Nissan posted a massive annual loss as it failed to innovate, compete and restructure and found itself with a tired lineup and lagging in the ongoing technological revolution in the automobile industry.
In an announcement Tuesday, the Yokohama-based company reported a net loss of ¥670 billion ($4.5 billion) in fiscal 2024. The period ended March 31, just days before new 25% tariffs on automobiles were effective in the United States.
It is the third biggest annual loss in Nissan's history.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Kyodo News
3 hours ago
- Kyodo News
Japan calls for tariff rethink in talks with U.S. commerce chief
KYODO NEWS - 10 hours ago - 12:34 | All, World, Japan Japan's chief tariff negotiator Ryosei Akazawa reiterated during a meeting with U.S. Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick on Thursday that higher import duties imposed by Washington should be reconsidered, as the countries continue negotiations toward a win-win deal. Akazawa is visiting the U.S. capital for the third straight week for another round of tariff talks at the ministerial level, hoping to smooth the way for a meeting of the countries' leaders in mid-June. Before his planned talks with U.S. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent on Friday, Akazawa sat down with Lutnick for nearly two hours to "strongly" urge the United States to reconsider the wave of tariff measures announced by President Donald Trump, according to the Japanese government. Akazawa and Lutnick discussed cooperation on trade, nontariff barriers and economic security, the Japanese side said. While continuing to demand the elimination of the higher tariffs, Japan is also weighing whether to accept a cut in the rates, with the United States resisting a full removal of the duties. Japanese Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba and Trump plan to hold a meeting around the time of the three-day Group of Seven summit in Canada starting June 15. After meeting with Bessent and Lutnick last week, Akazawa said they had agreed their talks were "making progress." Akazawa, who is scheduled to leave Washington on Saturday, has declined to provide details, including in which areas progress has been made. Under Trump's so-called reciprocal tariff regime, announced April 2, almost all countries in the world have been hit by a baseline duty of 10 percent, with Japan facing an additional country-specific tariff of 14 percent for a total rate of 24 percent. Along with other countries, Japan has also been affected by the Trump administration's additional 25 percent tariff on automobiles and other sector-based levies implemented on national security grounds. Related coverage: Trump's steel tariff hike not raised in Japan-U.S. talks: negotiator Japan, U.S. agree tariff talks making progress toward deal Japan PM says mutual understanding "deepened" with Trump over tariffs


NHK
4 hours ago
- NHK
US added 139,000 jobs in May
The US Labor Department says job gains in May slightly exceeded market expectations, pointing to continued steady improvement in the employment market. The Labor Department said on Friday that nonfarm payrolls grew by 139,000 jobs from April. Market analysts had forecast a figure of around 126,000. The unemployment rate was 4.2 percent, the same as the previous month. The focus is now shifting to the possible impact of President Donald Trump's tariff measures. Amid swirling uncertainty, concerns are rising that Trump's trade levies and other policies may dent the job market and slow the US economy.

Japan Times
5 hours ago
- Japan Times
Bank of Japan considering smaller reductions in bond buying
Bank of Japan officials are likely to discuss slowing their pullback from buying government bonds at a policy meeting later this month, according to people familiar with the matter. The officials will probably discuss making smaller reductions to the central bank's bond buying from the current paring pace of ¥400 billion ($2.8 billion) per quarter, according to the people. The internal debate is centered on whether to slow the pace of reductions to ¥200 billion per quarter from April next year or maintain the current pace, the people said. An amount between ¥200 billion and ¥400 billion is also possible, they said. The new plan will cover about one year, the people added. Gov. Kazuo Ueda's board is scheduled to conduct a review of the existing bond-buying program through March next year and map out a plan for purchases beyond that period at its two-day policy gathering ending June 17. The meeting will take place after Ueda clearly indicated that the bank will continue to pare back its purchases, prompting market players to focus on the scale of reductions and the duration of the new plan. Under the existing plan, the BOJ will roughly halve its monthly purchases to about ¥3 trillion early next year after embarking on quantitative tightening last summer. The BOJ is likely to state its readiness to step into the market in exceptional cases as a sign of flexibility, the people said.