Japan's second largest automaker says it is "realistic" to expect the
company to cut its forecasts for the full year when it reports earnings
next week, its chief executive Carlos Ghosn told CNBC.
"It's true, we have seen already some announcements made by competitors, revising their forecast down, which would be very realistic," Ghosn said, a day after rival Honda cut its full-year net profit by a fifth as an islands dispute between Japan and China hit sales in China. Nissan is scheduled to announce its results for the fiscal first half on November 6.
Read more: http://www.cnbc.com/id/49604298
"It's true, we have seen already some announcements made by competitors, revising their forecast down, which would be very realistic," Ghosn said, a day after rival Honda cut its full-year net profit by a fifth as an islands dispute between Japan and China hit sales in China. Nissan is scheduled to announce its results for the fiscal first half on November 6.
Anti-Japan protests after
Japan nationalized the Senkaku Islands pushed Nissan's sales down 35
percent in September, while it had to trim production by 20 percent as
showroom traffic came to a halt. While Ghosn said that customers were
gradually starting to return to Nissan's stores, he said demand will not
normalize before the end of the year.
"This
recovery is going to take many months before we come back to some
normal level," Ghosn said. "I think it's going to take way into next
year before we come back to normal production."
Nissan
makes up a quarter of global profits in China, which means the downturn
undermines its performance more heavily than its Japanese rivals.
Nissan currently forecasts sales to increase 9.5 percent in fiscal 2012
to 10.3 trillion yen. Meanwhile, analysts also expect industry leader
Toyota to lower forecasts when it reports next Monday.
Read more: http://www.cnbc.com/id/49604298
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