Core Viewpoint - Nissan plans to sell its headquarters building in Yokohama to Minth Group for 97 billion yen (approximately 4.5 billion RMB) as part of its Re:Nissan plan to improve financial conditions [3]. Financial Performance - For Q2 of FY2025, Nissan reported a sales revenue of 2.87 trillion yen, slightly above the forecast of 2.86 trillion yen, but incurred a net loss of 1.0616 trillion yen, better than the expected loss of 1.1398 trillion yen [3]. - Global sales volume decreased from 809,000 units to 773,000 units, representing a year-on-year decline of 4.5% [3]. - Sales in China fell to 158,000 units, down 8.1% year-on-year; Japan saw a 20.8% drop to 98,000 units; North America increased to 319,000 units, up 6.7%; Europe declined to 72,000 units, down 10.6%; other regions saw a 6.3% decrease [3]. Sales Forecast - Nissan forecasts total vehicle sales for FY2025 to be 3.25 million units, with expected declines in various regions: China down 7.4% to 645,000 units, Japan down 3.4% to 445,000 units, North America slightly down 0.2% to 1.3 million units, and Europe down 3.1% to 340,000 units [4]. Strategic Measures - Nissan identifies North America and China as regions with positive sales momentum, particularly driven by the N7 model in China [5]. - The company anticipates an operating loss of 275 billion yen for the year but believes it can achieve breakeven without tariff impacts [5]. - Key strategies include cost reduction to achieve breakeven, redefining product and market strategies, and strengthening partnerships, targeting a total cost saving of approximately 500 billion yen [5]. - Specific cost-cutting measures involve reducing global production facilities from 17 to 10 by FY2027, lowering capacity to 2.5 million units, and planning to lay off 20,000 employees, primarily from manufacturing [5].
日产警告:所有地区销量都将下滑