Carlos Ghosn Can’t Wait to Sell Renault Shares After Nissan Exit
Carlos Ghosn wants to correct the record in his own memoir
being re-released this week: He’s no longer a Nissan Motor Co. shareholder and
is eager to exit Renault SA.
The executive-turned-international fugitive has grown even
more pessimistic about the automakers’ prospects in the 11 months since his
book was first published in French. In a chapter devoted to defending his
compensation, Ghosn says he demonstrated loyalty and faith in the companies by
hanging onto their stock after his November 2018 arrest.
“I am not anymore a shareholder of Nissan, thank god,” Ghosn
said Wednesday in a video interview from Beirut. He’s lived there since fleeing
Japan in late 2019 to avoid trial over various charges of financial
impropriety.
The Renault-Nissan alliance — forged when Ghosn was
dispatched in 1999 to save the then-nearly bankrupt Japanese carmaker — is
“doomed” due to lingering power struggles, its former chairman said. He still
has claim to a stake in Renault via shares the French government seized as part
of an ongoing tax-residency investigation.
“It’s not because I trust management — I do not,” Ghosn
said. “It’s because I have no choice.”
Representatives for Nissan and Renault declined to comment.
The two companies combined have lost almost $30 billion in market value since
his arrest.
Nissan posted two consecutive years of losses after Ghosn
was arrested on charges of financial misconduct. Last year, the company
unveiled a turnaround plan that calls for shuttering production lines and
sacrificing market share for profitability. Along with automotive rivals the
world over, it’s been sideswiped by the pandemic and crippling shortage of
semiconductors.
Renault also has taken drastic steps since Ghosn’s exit,
slashing thousands of jobs and paring back manufacturing capacity after a
record annual loss. While the automaker swung to a profit in the first half of
this year, its bounce-back from the early days of the pandemic has been muted
by over-reliance on Europe, where car sales are recovering more slowly than in
China or the U.S.
Ghosn, 67, has denied charges leveled against him and said
he’s already working on a sequel to his tome initially published in November of
last year. The effort reflects a desire to defend his legacy as the
globe-trotting CEO who managed three automakers at once before a dramatic
downfall.
He acknowledged that the trial of Greg Kelly, his former
deputy at Nissan who was indicted in Japan for allegedly helping Ghosn
under-report income, will serve as a proxy for how he is ultimately judged.
Kelly’s lawyers are set to deliver their closing arguments next month, with a
verdict scheduled for February.
While Ghosn remains holed up in Beirut after jumping bail
with the help of a former U.S. Green Beret and his son — who are both serving
jail time in Japan for their role in the escape — he’s continuing legal battles
with France and the Netherlands.
Last month, he appealed a Dutch court’s ruling that he
should pay almost 5 million euros ($5.8 million) to a local unit of Nissan.
“I’m personally reasonably optimistic about the appeal,” he
said in the interview. “If there is no bad faith from my part, how can I
reimburse money which is owed to me?”
Ghosn has also been accused by France of siphoning Renault
funds to pay for a yacht and Versailles Palace birthday party for his wife.
Authorities are investigating his interactions with a car distributor in Oman
as well as payments a Dutch subsidiary of Renault and Nissan made to
consultants.
Ghosn believes Japan’s legal system is incapable of
rendering justice appropriately and that the French probe is being heavily
influenced by Japanese prosecutors. But he’s still hopeful he can salvage his
reputation.
“As long as you are not cleared in Japan, there will always
be a doubt on you,” Ghosn said. “But I accept a second-best position. This
first position is impossible. The second-best position is to be cleared by
another court somewhere else.”
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