Curiously absent from the joint press releases are Renault and Mitsubishi. Both companies formed a strategic partnership with Nissan way back in 1999, and Renault is presently Nissan's main shareholder. In a very brief announcement, Renault Group acknowledged the new MOU and stated it would "consider all options based on the best interest of the Group and its stakeholders."
Mitsubishi is considerably more involved. The company announced it had also signed a MOU with Nissan and Honda, but only to "explore the possibility of Mitsubishi Motors' participation, involvement, and synergy sharing" in this new holding company. A decision should come by late January 2025. In November, Nissan announced it was selling one-third of its stake in Mitsubishi.
I think they'd be ingenious enough to able to make room for both brands.Been thinking about what this might mean for Infiniti and Acura, and I'm not sure I have a clear answer yet but an Acura version of the QX80 sure would be enough to shut down the necessity of the entire Infiniti brand since it's their only compelling product. Beef up Acura, scrap Infiniti?
Apparently, Mitsubishi isn't joining this merger, scared that this merger might cause them to lose management control over their own company.![]()
Mitsubishi Motors not to join Honda-Nissan merger: source
Mitsubishi Motors Corp. is considering not joining the planned merger between Nissan Motor Co. and Honda Motor Co., instead focusing on strengthening cooperation with the two larger firms, according to a source close to the matter.english.kyodonews.net
I wonder how much longer can Mitsubishi scrape by when their attention is mainly focused on the Southeast Asian market. Sure, the population in this region is a decent size, but the purchasing power has never been that strong to begin with and in recent years it has become even weaker.
Really feels like they have accepted that they are just a zombie brand and have give up on any sort of ambition.
Yeah, the Camry actually looks really good.I saw a new Camry and a new Accord next to each other the other day and I fully understand why Toyota is destroying them in sales.
And Honda...made the Accord look like a Malibu & Impala (or both IDK)...good to get one on a fire sale. Though the Civic is still doing pretty darn well.Yeah, the Camry actually looks really good.
Apparently, Honda and Nissan's merger talks are starting to fall apart. Originally, the plan is to merger together to form a holding company, but then it turned into Honda wanting to turn Nissan into their subsidiary, and unsurprisingly Nissan is not ok this.
These other companies' failings make Toyota's live even easier lol.
Honestly feels like watching a clown show IMOYup.. Foxconn now back in the Nissan talk….
As much as I like Toyota, other companies falling flat on their face tends to get Toyota complacent. Look at Lexus for example...Apparently, Honda and Nissan's merger talks are starting to fall apart. Originally, the plan is to merger together to form a holding company, but then it turned into Honda wanting to turn Nissan into their subsidiary, and unsurprisingly Nissan is not ok this.
These other companies' failings make Toyota's live even easier lol.
There already is no competition in Japan as two of the biggest sellers are now part of Toyota Group.As much as I like Toyota, other companies falling flat on their face tends to get Toyota complacent. Look at Lexus for example...
Competition is good.
I assume you mean Suzuki and Mazda?There already is no competition in Japan as two of the biggest sellers are now part of Toyota Group.
You're definitely right here, it's just that Japan would fare better if they had more OEMs that are strong instead of one.Toyota knows their biggest threats are Chinese companies and they are only concerned about these. Honda and Nissan are just afterthought.
Neither Suzuki nor Mazda are part of the Toyota Group. The only three automakers in the Group are Toyota, Daihatsu and Hino. Not even Subaru is part of the Group.I assume you mean Suzuki and Mazda?
You're definitely right here, it's just that Japan would fare better if they had more OEMs that are strong instead of one.