Latest News

Nissan expects to earn more than $1 billion in profit this fiscal year despite the modest Iran War hit

Nissan predicted more than $1 billion in profit for its fiscal years on Wednesday. It predicted a relatively small hit from the?Iran war, and an increased?impact of cost-cutting.

Nissan stated that the conflict would likely affect the operating profit forecast for this year of 200 billion yen (1,27 billion dollars) by less 15 billion yen. The estimate, however, only covered the first six months of the current year.

Ivan Espinosa, Nissan's CEO, told reporters the Japanese automaker could ship "a good amount" to the Middle East despite the bottlenecks caused by the war.

Espinosa stated that "we found routes to delivery product", adding that Nissan anticipated a sales reduction of 19,000 vehicles during the first half year of its business due to the conflict.

Toyota, the largest automaker in the world, said last week that the Iran War would cost them $4.3 billion this year.

Nissan anticipates that purchasing-related measures to cut costs and manufacturing steps will provide a 'boost' to the profit this year, while raw material prices are expected to be a drag.

Julie Boote is an auto analyst with Pelham Smithers. She said that the greater risk for Nissan, Toyota, and other Japanese carmakers comes from the impact the conflict could have on global economies, especially in the key Asian markets.

She said that no Japanese automakers had included this in their forecast. "They still seem quite optimistic about the level demand from Asia," she said.

Nissan announced a profit for the fiscal year ending in March of 58.0 billion Japanese yen, which is slightly higher than a revised profit forecast of 50 billion yen released last month.

The company booked a profit on improved cost performance and a one-time boost related to U.S. emission regulations, which offset the hit from Washington's Tariffs.

According to a LSEG poll, analysts expected Nissan to report a loss for the fiscal year of 60 billion yen. The previous year, the company had posted a profit in the amount of 69.8 bn yen.

Nissan, like other automakers, is under pressure from U.S. Tariffs and fierce competition in Europe from Chinese electric vehicle makers.

The company said that U.S. tariffs had a negative impact on the profit of?286 billion Japanese yen for the last financial year.

Espinosa wants to bring Nissan back to growth after years in turmoil. He is doing this by cutting the number of vehicles, the number of manufacturing sites, and jobs.

(source: Reuters)