Nissan: Full-Year Profit Forecast Cuts and Management Overhauls

According to Bloomberg, Nissan Motor Co. (7201), Japan’s second-biggest carmaker, lowered its full-year profit forecast by 15 percent after demand in emerging markets slowed and recall costs mounted.

The company expects to post net income of 355 billion yen ($3.6 billion) in the year ending March 31, it said today. That’s below the Yokohama, Japan-based carmaker’s previous forecast of 420 billion yen and the 440.3 billion yen average of 18 analyst estimates compiled by Bloomberg. Profit is still projected to rise from the previous year as the weaker yen helps bolster earnings.

Chief Executive Officer Carlos Ghosn also announced an overhaul of Nissan’s management as he pursues an operating profit margin target of 8 percent by the year ending March 2017. The changes and earnings shortfall come amid slowing sales in some emerging markets and a recall of 910,000 vehicles that Goldman Sachs Group Inc. estimates will cost the company about 15 billion yen.

“The outlook in Thailand will remain quite weak this year mainly due to the lack of pent-up demand,” said Ashvin Chotai, managing director of Intelligence Automotive Asia in London. “It’s also certainly hard to be optimistic about Indonesia — it’s a market which is always going to be volatile.”

Nissan also lowered its forecasts for operating profit and revenue.

Under the management changes, Chief Operating Officer Toshiyuki Shiga will become vice chairman and remain on the board, though the COO position will be abolished.

Nissan CEO Carlos Ghosn (Bloomberg)

New Lieutenants

Three new positions will be created — reporting directly to Ghosn — to fill Shiga’s void, according to the company.

Among Ghosn’s new lieutenants will be Executive Vice President Hiroto Saikawa, who will be chief competitive officer overseeing the supply chain, research and development, as well purchasing and manufacturing, Nissan said. Executive Vice Presidents Andy Palmer and Trevor Mann will also take on positions as chief planning officer and chief performance officer, respectively, the company said.

Colin Dodge, currently executive vice president, will take on a new role managing special projects and report directly to Ghosn. Kimiyasu Nakamura, president of Chinese joint venture Dongfeng Motor Co., will assume companywide responsibility for customer satisfaction, reporting to Saikawa.

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Asia Private Equity Weekly News, July 29, 2013

Asia Private Equity Weekly News, July 29, 2013

MALAYSIA’S STATE pension fund will invest half a billion euros ($660 million) in industrial property in Germany and office space in France, according to sources familiar with the deals, signalling growing appetite for high-yielding property assets as Europe’s main economies show signs of recovery.

MEIJI YASUDA Life Insurance Co said it has agreed to buy a 15 percent stake in Thai Life Insurance Co as Japanese insurers step up their presence in Southeast Asia.

CHINA’S $500 billion sovereign wealth fund, China Investment Corp, returned to profit growth in 2012, citing growing traction in the global recovery at the end of the year and a steady improvement in risk asset prices.

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Social enterprise in Asia and Europe – learning from each other

Social enterprise in Asia and Europe – learning from each other

Earlier this month, over two days in Berlin, more than 30 social entrepreneurs from more than 20 countries in Asia and Europe met to discuss how to develop a better policy context for social enterprises in the two continents. The gathering was organised by the British Counciland the Asia Europe Foundation, and sponsored by the government of Japan.

The two days comprised a visit to Berlin social enterprises – Ruby Cupand Fairnopoly – and discussion with their founders about how they operate and are funded; briefings from leading social entrepreneurs such as Penny Newman from the UK and Muhammad Ali of BRAC; and a series of seminars and workshops, aimed at finding a consensus between participants about how policy can support social enterprise in both Asia and Europe.

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Toyota President Delivers Highest Returns for Lowest Pay

 

Toyota President Delivers Highest Returns for Lowest Pay

Toyota Motor Corp. (7203) made its name on the value and efficiency of its cars. Its chief executive is earning a similar reputation for his compensation.

While the company generated the highest return last year among the world’s five biggest automakers by sales, President Akio Toyoda, 57, is the lowest-paid chief of the group, earning less than one-tenth as much as his best-compensated counterpart.

Toyoda has led a profit revival since taking control in June 2009, just after the global recession and the surging yen helped spur the automaker’s first annual loss in 59 years. Toyoda, the founder’s grandson, helped the company recover from Japan’s earthquake and tsunami and a recall of millions of cars.

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China builds world’s fastest supercomputer

China builds world’s fastest supercomputer

Chinese scientists announced Monday that China has once again built the world’s fastest supercomputer, capable of performing 33.86 quadrillion operations per second, surpassing the US Titan supercomputer.
The Tianhe-2, or Milkyway-2, has a peak performance speed of 54.9 quadrillion operations per second, according to the National University of Defense Technology, which built the computer.

This is the second time China has made it to the first place in the Top 500 list of the world’s most powerful supercomputers. Tianhe-2’s predecessor, Tianhe-1A, was the world’s fastest supercomputer from November 2010 to June 2011, when it was surpassed by Japan’s K computer.

Matching home-grown Feiteng-1500 CPUs as well as Intel Xeon and Xeon Phi processors, Tianhe-2 was almost twice as fast as the second computer, Titan, which is capable of running at 17.6 quadrillion operations per second.

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REITS in Hong Kong, Singapore Lose Their Allure

REITS in Hong Kong, Singapore Lose Their Allure

Hong Kong and Singapore have seen a spate of initial public offerings by trusts playing on investors’ desire for two elements in recent months: yield and hard assets.
But a recent selloff in real-estate investment trusts in both cities hints at the fading allure of dividend-paying stocks, as concerns that the U.S. Federal Reserve may soon scale back its stimulus moves have driven up Treasury yields and rattled investors around the world. The drop in REITs also comes as investors fear that property prices could decline in Hong Kong and Singapore.
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The Rule of Law and its Role in Achieving the Chinese Dream: To Be Discussed at China Leaders Forum 2013 on October 1st

The Rule of Law and its Role in Achieving the Chinese Dream: To Be Discussed at China Leaders Forum 2013 on October 1st

The Role of the New Generation of China Amidst China’s Expanding Global Influence

 

China has made an extraordinary journey along the road back to greatness. Hundreds of millions have been lifted out of poverty, hundreds of millions more have joined the new middle class. It is on the verge of reclaiming what it sees as its rightful position in the world. China’s global influence is expanding and within a decade its economy is expected to overtake America’s. The new head of the country, Xi Jinping, has evoked that rise promoting the “Chinese dream” evoking its American equivalent. Mr Xi’s priority will be to keep the economy growing and that means opening up China even more. What will be the role of the Chinese new generation? Will nationalism interfere with the rhetoric of the resurgent nation? Will corruption and official excess be curbed? Will the constitution become more powerful than the party?

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Is Chinese Real Estate Headed Towards a Bubble?: To Be Debated at China Leaders Forum 2013 on October 1st

Is Chinese Real Estate Headed Towards a Bubble?: To Be Debated at China Leaders Forum 2013 on October 1st

The Future of Real Estate Investing Amidst Rising Prices

 

China’s own brand of a housing bubble has Beijing chasing its tail and struggling to catch it. Recently, rising prices led the government to introduce market-cooling measures and tighten its grip on the real estate sector, raising taxes by as much as 20% for transactions. The tax was first introduced in Beijing. But in a lot of smaller cities those measures were never as strict as in Beijing because local authorities wanted to protect the property market to ensure fiscal revenues.

Investors are watching the real estate market closely; if prices continue to rise it will put pressure on the economy as the government would be required to put restrictions on lending. Is this the beginning of a wave of distressed real estate investing? What types of developments will be the next big opportunities?

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Hon Hai Courting New Customers as Apple Competition Swells

Hon Hai (Foxconn) took a hit during the first quarter of this year when sales of Apple’s iPhone dropped off a bit compared to the first and fourth quarters of last year. At the time, it appeared that Hon Hai, a firm that manufacturers Apple’s products, was relying too much on the company. It turns out that’s actually the case and the company recently went on the record stating that it’s trying to court new customers in order to increase its profit margins, especially during slow quarters when Apple isn’t ramping up production of new products.

Hon Hai Courting New Customers as Apple Competition Swells

Todd Haselton from TechnoBuffalo reports that Hon Hai (Foxconn) took a hit during the first quarter of this year when sales of Apple’s iPhone dropped off a bit compared to the first and fourth quarters of last year. At the time, it appeared that Hon Hai, a firm that manufacturers Apple’s products, was relying too much on the company. It turns out that’s actually the case and the company recently went on the record stating that it’s trying to court new customers in order to increase its profit margins, especially during slow quarters when Apple isn’t ramping up production of new products.

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China’s Factories Run at Lowest Rate in 39 Months

China’s factories ran at their slowest rate for 39 months in August while a double-digit rise in fixed asset investment showed that infrastructure spending remained key to economic growth.

Industrial output growth slowed to 8.9 percent year on year, the weakest since May 2009 and below market forecasts of a 9.1 percent rise, data from China’s National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) showed on Sunday.

Fixed asset investment, which accounted for half of China’s net economic growth in the first-half of 2012, grew 20.2 percent between January and August compared to the year earlier period, a touch below expectations for a 20.4 percent expansion.

Retail sales rose 13.2 percent last month from a year ago, in line with forecasts in a Reuters poll, though the trend of spending so far in 2012 has been tracking slightly lower.

The data is likely to reinforce market expectations that China will further adjust policies soon to lift an economy mired in its softest period of growth in three years.

 

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