Dropped From Mitsubishi and Nissan, Ghosn Faces New Allegations

Steph Willems
by Steph Willems

Mitsubishi Motors, which joined the Renault-Nissan Alliance in 2016, voted unanimously to drop Carlos Ghosn as its chairman Monday, just a week after the executive’s arrest on suspicion of financial misdealings.

According to CEO Osamu Masuko, who now dons the title of interim chairman, it was an “agonizing decision.” For Ghosn, the agony has just begun. Currently housed in a Tokyo jail awaiting formal charges, the industry titan ended last week by seeing the company he ran for 15 years, Nissan, oust him as chairman. Renault hasn’t made a decision as to the fate of its CEO.

While Ghosn is accused of underreporting his income in the early part of the decade, a Japanese newspaper has shed light on another alleged misdeed.

From Reuters, citing Asahi Shimbun:

Citing multiple unnamed sources, the paper said that when Ghosn’s bank had called for more collateral from the executive, he instead handed the rights over the derivatives trade to Nissan, which effectively shouldered 1.7 billion yen ($15 million) in losses.

Japan’s Securities and Exchange Surveillance Commission (SESC) discovered this incident during that year’s routine inspection, the Asahi said.

Neither Nissan nor the SESC was willing to comment on the newspaper’s report. Ghosn is accused of conspiring with Nissan board member Greg Kelly to underreport the then-CEO’s income by up to $44 million in filings to the Tokyo Stock Exchange. The filings took place between 2010 and 2014. Kelley is also being held. Under Japanese law, authorities have until December 12th to file charges against the two men.

As for Mitsubishi, the automaker didn’t wait to see the legal process through before making its decision — a course of action some Renault members are angling for. As reported by CNN, CEO Masuko said following the vote, “The priority was what to do to protect the company, what to do to protect our employees and their families. It was an unavoidable decision.”

[Image: Nissan]

Steph Willems
Steph Willems

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  • Ol Shel Ol Shel on Nov 27, 2018

    The deep-state conspiracy theories are fading, I see. That's good.

  • JoDa JoDa on Nov 28, 2018

    This seams like a political hit of Ghosn by Macron. France government feeds off of Nissan profits.

  • TMA1 I guess they're not expecting big things from a 5,800 lb sports car.
  • Lichtronamo The current Accord and forthcoming Camry are heavlily revised models, not all new. GM could have probably done the same with Malibu just to stay in the space. GM (and Ford's) retreat from cars seems like a path to nowhere but shrinking marketshare that just feeds into Toyota's continual growth. It seems shocking that GM and Ford have become so small in the US (notwithstanding full-size trucks) and other markets around world.
  • Scott Read through and everyone seems to have missed the main question:Is Tim Healy an old geezer now?"Or is it just a crossover world and I'm now an old guy* tilting at windmills and yelling at clouds?"
  • ToolGuy My latest vehicle acquisition is slightly older than this one, same parent company, but has a full frame, rear-wheel drive and a longitudinally-mounted pushrod V8 gasoline engine. Almost like it was engineered and manufactured by a completely different group of people. Hmmm...
  • EBFlex Smart people
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