Carlos Ghosn was planning Nissan-Renault merger before arrest

Japanese carmaker’s board opposed proposed deal and was looking for ways to block it

Carlos Ghosn, chairman and CEO of the Renault-Nissan-Mitsubishi Alliance,  at the Paris Auto Show, last month. Photograph: Regis Duvignau/Reuters
Carlos Ghosn, chairman and CEO of the Renault-Nissan-Mitsubishi Alliance, at the Paris Auto Show, last month. Photograph: Regis Duvignau/Reuters

Carlos Ghosn had been planning a merger between Renault and Nissan before his arrest in Tokyo this week, a deal that the Japanese carmaker's board opposed and was looking for ways to block.

Several Nissan board members expected a bid to materialise in the coming months, according to one person close to the board. Another source said that a merger was likely to happen “within months”, and a third said it was under active consideration.

Renault and Nissan own shares in each other, in a structure designed almost 20 years ago. But Mr Ghosn, as head of the automakers’ alliance and chairman of Nissan, had been planning a merger to render the partnership “irreversible”.

On Monday, Nissan said it would oust Mr Ghosn after accusing him of misleading investors on the amount of his remuneration, using company assets for personal gain and falsification of financial statements.

READ SOME MORE

Nissan said the move followed several months of internal investigation following allegations from a whistleblower. Renault, where Mr Ghosn was chairman and chief executive, was expected to replace him on an interim basis on Tuesday night.

Fierce resistance

Mr Ghosn was the driving force behind the merger plans, which met with fierce resistance from Nissan’s board, according to people familiar with the deliberations. Renault’s 43 per cent stake in Nissan gives it unusual levels of control, with the ability to appoint senior executives.

Nissan’s 15 per cent stake in Renault comes with no voting rights and gives the business no control over its French counterpart.

“The board [of Nissan] always said they would fight very hard against any reorganisation that entrenched that second-tier status,” said one person close to the board.

Nissan also regarded Renault as the weaker business, the person added, and feared giving the French company access to its cash, which sat at 1.2 trillion yen in its half-year results.

Full merger

As Nissan braced itself for a full merger proposal, tensions grew between Mr Ghosn and Hiroto Saikawa, the chief executive of Nissan, according to people close to them, in the souring of a relationship that had been warm when Mr Saikawa took over as chief executive from Mr Ghosn last year.

Tokyo prosecutors are investigating property that was purchased by Nissan for Mr Ghosn, including residences in Lebanon and Brazil, according to Japanese media.

Mr Ghosn appeared to have been caught off guard late Monday afternoon when he landed at Haneda airport, where Tokyo prosecutors and reporters of Asahi newspaper were waiting.

People who have seen him recently said he appeared unaware of any investigation, and had flown to Japan for a meeting with the governor of Tokyo on Wednesday. – Copyright The Financial Times Limited 2018