Nissan reports 42.8% drop in first quarter profit
TOKYO —
Nissan Motor Co said Friday its net profit for the April-June quarter dropped 42.8%, hit by a rising yen and accounting provisions for the declining value of leased vehicles. Japan’s third-largest automaker said net profit fell to 52.8 billion yen for the quarter, while sales fell 4.1% from a year earlier to 2.3 trillion yen.
“In the face of the severe operating environment, Nissan remains resilient but cautious on the outlook for our industry,” said Chief Executive Carlos Ghosn in a statement.
“We have identified the major risks and taken actions to address them, particularly in the U.S. market,” he said.
Despite a slump in demand in the U.S. and Japanese markets and soaring material costs, Nissan kept its earnings forecasts for the current fiscal year through March 2009 with a net profit of 340 billion yen. Sales are likely to stay at 10.4 trillion yen.
Nissan’s global sales for the April-June quarter rose 6.9% from a year earlier to 936,000 vehicles.
But its sales in the U.S. market fell 1.5% to 253,000 units, Nissan said. It said the American auto market shrank by 12% during the quarter. Sales in Japan fell 2.2% to 148,000 units, while those in Europe were flat at 156,000 units.
Nissan was hit hard by a stronger yen in the quarter compared with the same period last year. A strong yen makes Japanese goods less competitive abroad and eats into exporters’ profits when repatriated.
Nissan said foreign exchange losses amounted to 54.7 billion yen in the quarter. Accounting provisions booked for the declining value of leased vehicles in the United States and Canada totaled 42 billion yen.
Nissan also said it was in talks with “a number of governments around the world” for deals on electric vehicles.
“We are in discussion with several different countries, states, cities and individual companies around the world for future EV (electric vehicles) partnerships,” Nissan’s corporate vice president Simon Sproule told reporters.
The Nissan-Renault auto alliance, recently formed a partnership with the Portuguese government that includes plans to sell electric vehicles in Portugal in 2011. Renault SA of France owns 44% of Nissan.
The move was the latest in Nissan’s aggressive forging of deals with cities and governments on electric vehicles as soaring gas prices and worries about global warming make the green technology more appealing.
Wire reports









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rajakumar
Motor industries like nissan and others, all affected by high inflation woes(cost of living increase) from high energy prices.
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