The company is due to announce first-quarter earnings on Thursday and a Nissan spokesman said there would be no comment on the reports before then. "We have not decided yet what we will announce (at the Thursday earnings press conference), and we do not comment on (media) speculation," Nissan spokesman Koji Okuda told AFP.
The company has been hit by a fall in sales in the US and Europe and is still reeling after the shock arrest of former boss Carlos Ghosn on financial misconduct charges. It has also been facing tensions with its French partner Renault, which owns 43 per cent of the Japanese manufacturer, and is undergoing an overhaul intended to strengthen governance after the Ghosn scandal. The cuts are likely to hit some factories in South America and other regions where Nissan has low profitability, Kyodo news agency said.
In May, Nissan reported net profits for the fiscal year to March 2019 of 319 billion yen (USD 2.9 billion) -- the lowest amount since 2009-10 when the company was struggling in the wake of the global financial crisis. It was a decline of 57 per cent compared to the previous fiscal year and the profit outlook for the current fiscal year was forecast to be even worse -- at 170 billion yen.
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