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Nissan Axes 11,000 More Jobs As Automotive Industry Remains Stuck In Reverse

The company unveiled plans to cut 11,000 more jobs and shut seven plants, saying that sales volume was expected to drop 3% in the current fiscal year.

Allwork.Space News TeambyAllwork.Space News Team
May 15, 2025
in News
Reading Time: 3 mins read
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Nissan Axes 11,000 More Jobs As Automotive Industry Remains Stuck In Reverse

The Nissan logo is displayed at the 46th Bangkok International Motor Show in Bangkok, Thailand, March 24, 2025. REUTERS/Chalinee Thirasupa/File Photo

Nissan’s new chief executive Ivan Espinosa faces an uphill task turning around the troubled Japanese automaker with no guarantee it can reverse sliding top-line sales, analysts said, even as he moves to slash costs.

With a lack of fresh models, new tariffs in its biggest market, and sharp competition from local and Chinese rivals, Nissan will be hard-pressed to shore up sales, which have plunged 42% since the 2017 business year.

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Espinosa unveiled plans on Tuesday to cut 11,000 more jobs and shut seven plants and flagged that sales volume was expected to drop 3% in the current fiscal year, as performance in its key markets continues to come under pressure.

It expected sales in China to plunge 18%, while sales in North America and Japan are projected to stay nearly flat.

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“They don’t have a hybrid lineup. Their BEVs are not particularly successful,” said Julie Boote, an analyst at research firm Pelham Smithers Associates, referring to battery-powered electric vehicles and Nissan’s offerings in the U.S.

“They will have to work on new model launches, but that takes time, and there’s no guarantee that they will be more successful than before.”

Espinosa has promised to dramatically shorten vehicle development times and centre its strategy in the U.S., its most important market, around crossovers and sport utility vehicles.

“We understand that a sustainable recovery cannot rely solely on cost reductions. It must also be supported by strong product offerings,” he said.

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As part of the strategy, Nissan will start offering a plug-in hybrid version of the Rogue SUV, its top-selling U.S. vehicle, in North America this fiscal year by jointly developing it with its partner Mitsubishi Motors.

Another hybrid version of the vehicle will be launched in the next fiscal year and will be equipped with Nissan’s e-Power hybrid technology.

Boote said she was not convinced of the strategy’s success, cautioning plug-in hybrids do not generate the same level of demand as pure hybrid models.

“They will need to introduce attractive products to achieve this goal,” said Masahiro Akita, a senior analyst at Bernstein, referring to expanding its top line growth.

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Tariff And Margin Challenges

New U.S. tariffs on imported cars and car parts complicate Nissan’s plan to keep its sales decline at just 3% to 3.25 million vehicles in the current business year and its need to turn around shrinking margins.

Not only do the tariffs mean it may have to hike selling prices in the U.S., but they also raise input costs for its manufacturing plants there.

Sales in the U.S. rebounded to about 938,000 vehicles in the last business year, but the gain was largely driven by lower-priced, smaller vehicles such as the Mexico-imported Sentra and Versa.

Nissan’s operating profit margin for the North America region worsened to negative 0.5% in the business year just ended from 4.6% in the previous period, even as it sold more cars there.

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The company, which imports less than 45% of its total U.S. sales from Mexico and Japan, expects U.S. President Donald Trump’s tariffs could cost it 450 billion yen ($3.1 billion) in the current business year.

Margins are also under pressure as Nissan boosts incentives to reduce inventories of ageing vehicle lineups.

At the same time it faces growing competition from not just nimble Chinese EV makers such as BYD but also from domestic rivals, analysts said.

Its smaller rival Suzuki, for example, outsold Nissan in the first three months of 2025, on course to replace it as Japan’s third-biggest automaker behind Toyota and Honda this year.

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Getting Smaller

Reflecting its worsening fortunes, Nissan is the worst performing stock among Japanese major automakers, down 29% so far this year lagging a 5.5% drop in the broader market.

There is no buy or strong buy recommendation on Nissan shares among 18 analysts covering the automaker, and half of them recommend sell or strong sell, according to LSEG data. Three months ago, there was one buy recommendation.

Espinosa took over the helm of Nissan last month from his predecessor Makoto Uchida following failed merger talks with bigger rival Honda earlier this year that would have created the world’s fourth-largest automaker.

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Source: Reuters
Tags: BusinessNorth AmericaWorkforce
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Allwork.Space News Team

Allwork.Space News Team

The Allwork.Space News Team is a collective of experienced journalists, editors, and industry analysts dedicated to covering the ever-evolving world of work. We’re committed to delivering trusted, independent reporting on the topics that matter most to professionals navigating today’s changing workplace — including remote work, flexible offices, coworking, workplace wellness, sustainability, commercial real estate, technology, and more.

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