KEY TAKEAWAYS
- Honda Motor’s U.S.-listed shares are rising around 6% in premarket trading following reports that the Japanese automaker’s plans to merge with ailing domestic rival Nissan are in jeopardy.
- According to the Financial Times, which cited people familiar with the matter, Honda unexpectedly came in with a new structure that would have made Nissan a fully owned subsidiary.
- A deal would have helped cut costs and help the automaker compete globally at a time when Chinese rivals are expanding their market share for electric vehicles.
Honda Motor’s (HMC) U.S.-listed shares are rising about 6% in premarket trading following reports that the Japanese automaker’s plans to merge with ailing domestic rival Nissan are in jeopardy.
According to the Financial Times, which cited three people familiar with the matter, Honda unexpectedly came in with a new structure that would have made Nissan a fully owned subsidiary, a departure from the original “merger of equals” idea the two had initially planned.
A Nissan spokesperson told Investopedia that the FT article “is not based on information announced by Nissan. We aim to finalize our direction by mid-February and will announce it at that time.”
Honda could not be reached for comment Wednesday morning.
The two Japanese automakers announced plans to combine in December in a tie-up that would have created the world’s third-largest automaker, if Mitsubishi Motors is included, according to The Wall Street Journal. Nissan is the largest shareholder in Mitsubishi, the report said.
A deal would have helped cut costs and help the automaker compete globally at a time when Chinese rivals are expanding their market share for electric vehicles.
Nissan, Honda, and Mitsubishi have a history of collaborating. Honda and Nissan first said early last year that they would work together in parts of the EV business, and noted in August that Mitsubishi was joining the effort.
Honda shares are down almost 18% in the past year through Tuesday.