Makoto Uchida, Director, Representative Executive Officer, President and CEO of Nissan Motor Corporation holds a joint press conference on their merger talks, in Tokyo, Japan, December 23, 2024.
11:53 JST, January 30, 2025
TOKYO (Reuters) – Japan’s Nissan Motor is offering buyouts to workers and cutting back shifts at three U.S. factories, a company spokesperson said on Thursday, as the automaker pushes to slash $2.6 billion in costs globally.
Nissan will offer the separation packages to workers at its vehicle assembly plants in Smyrna, Tennessee, and Canton, Mississippi, and an engine plant in Decherd, Tennessee.
Japan’s third-biggest automaker by volume will slash one of two shifts at the production line for its Rogue sports utility vehicle in Smyrna starting in April, and for the Altima sedan in Canton from September.
In addition to Smyrna, Nissan also produces Rogues at its Kyushu factory in southwest Japan, its top plant in its home market. Reuters previously reported Nissan was cutting output by a third in August 2024 at that plant amid weak U.S. demand for some of its aging line-up, including the Rogue.
Nissan’s spokesperson declined to say how many U.S. workers it hopes will take the voluntary buyout offer. The company could potentially cut up to around 1,500 jobs with the move, the Nikkei newspaper reported earlier on Thursday.
Nissan does not plan to conduct involuntary layoffs, the spokesperson said, adding that the company employed more than 11,700 workers at the three U.S. plants as of end-2024.
In November, the company announced a plan to cut 9,000 jobs worldwide and reduce the maximum capacity of its 25 vehicle production lines as it suffers from a sales slump in China and North America.
Less than two months after the company unveiled that plan, Nissan and Honda Motor said they would start talks on a merger that could potentially create the world’s third-largest auto group with annual output of 7.4 million vehicles.
"News Services" POPULAR ARTICLE
-
American Playwright Jeremy O. Harris Arrested in Japan on Alleged Drug Smuggling
-
Japan’s Nikkei Stock Average as JGB Yields, Yen Rise on Rate-Hike Bets
-
Japan’s Nikkei Stock Average Licks Wounds after Selloff Sparked by BOJ Hike Bets (UPDATE 1)
-
Japanese Bond Yields Zoom, Stocks Slide as Rate Hike Looms
-
Japan’s Nikkei Stock Average Buoyed by Stable Yen; SoftBank’s Slide Caps Gains (UPDATE 1)
JN ACCESS RANKING
-
Keidanren Chairman Yoshinobu Tsutsui Visits Kashiwazaki-Kariwa Nuclear Power Plant; Inspects New Emergency Safety System
-
Imports of Rare Earths from China Facing Delays, May Be Caused by Deterioration of Japan-China Relations
-
Japan Pulls out of Vietnam Nuclear Project, Complicating Hanoi’s Power Plans
-
University of Tokyo Professor Discusses Japanese Economic Security in Interview Ahead of Forum
-
Govt Aims to Expand NISA Program Lineup, Abolish Age Restriction

