Nissan reports financial results for fiscal year 2025
Posted by redMahura@reddit | cars | View on Reddit | 29 comments
For the full year, Nissan delivered positive operating profit of 58.0 billion yen, with a margin of 0.5% driven by disciplined execution and cost control.
Global sales totaled 3.15 million units, and consolidated revenue reached 12.0 trillion yen. Net income remained negative at 533.1 billion yen.
In a challenging global operating environment marked by inflationary pressure, tariffs, and uneven market performance, Nissan made steady progress under the Re:Nissan plan, strengthening its business foundation and improving operating performance.
So, operating profit back in the black while net income still red. It's definitely improving and there are a few things going in their favour
Does_Not_Use_Clothes@reddit
The world is better when Nissan is good.
kers2000@reddit
If you want good value for money and you can't buy Chinese, then Nissan feels like the only option.
V8-Turbo-Hybrid@reddit
I thought that option was Hyundai.
Lower_Kick268@reddit
No it's always been Nissan, id trust a Nissan over a Hyundai any day
SizeableFowl@reddit
That’s kinda silly. Nissan is pretty far removed from the decent products they built 20 years ago, meanwhile Hyundai is in the middle of an engineering renaissance.
jse000@reddit
Where do the Theta II and ICCU issues factor into this Renaissance
gamersEmpire@reddit
Honda begs to differ
Lower_Duck5266@reddit
Can't speak to where you live, but my neck of the woods, those are not cheap, then they take you to the woodshed in financing rates too. I can go to any Nissan dealer and get below msrp and 0%.
Such_Tea4707@reddit
Curious to see how the Xterra does 🙌🏻
socketz67@reddit
Body on frame, NA V-6 engine (from the Frontier?), TC transmission, hybrid option, proper off road aftermarket support, starting around 40K MSRP. Sounds like a good formula to take on the Toyota tax.
RiftHunter4@reddit
The bar for an appealing Off-roader is pretty low. Most of that market comes from Toyota, Ford, and Jeep. GM hasn't bothered with a real Off-roader for some reason but it's clear that there's a lot of demand.
WTFAnimations@reddit
Nissan is profitable and Honda is bleeding billions. If you told me this would happen two yars ago, I would call you a madman.
Lower_Kick268@reddit
I told people Nissan would be back with time, looks like they're back.
_OUCHMYPENIS_@reddit
They really only needed to change their transmission which they had done already.
Honda lost money because of the EV stuff. They'll be back soon enough. They need to figure a few things out but Honda isn't going anywhere where anytime soon. The US and Japan will make sure of that.
RousingRabble@reddit
They should've rebranded jatco a long time ago (do they own jatco? if not, they should have paid them to rebrand).
socketz67@reddit
Jatco is Nissan's in-house transmission manufacture. They use both original designs and licensed ones, such as the Mercedes 9G-Tronic in the new Nissan Z.
Jatco significantly redesigned the CVT in 2017-18 and I believe the 2019 and beyond receive this version. Earlier problematic CVTs were addressed with extended warranties and recalls, but the lack of messaging really hurt their brand.
_OUCHMYPENIS_@reddit
Are they using Jatco autos now? Or did Jatco fix the cvt?
I don't think people care about the brand, people just heard Nissan has transmission issues and thought it was all of them when it was just the cvt that had issues.
Lots of transmission companies have gone through some bad phases. It was just a perfect storm for Nissan to have Jatco have issues while also moving down market and getting a bad rep for multiple reasons.
Despite the transmission issues and the ugly ass interiors from the 00s, I don't think they had too many other complaints. I've always heard they have some of the comfiest seats.
1988rx7T2@reddit
No, when you include write downs Nissan is also unprofitable.
Wolf24h@reddit
The ol switcheroo
kfthebest97@reddit
It's a good thing Honda didn't buy Nissan
UnlimitedBoxSpace@reddit
Get rid of variable compression, keep cvt to compact models only, invest in hybrids. Get that reputation out of the dumpster for the love of God.
HazelnutPeso@reddit
No one wants to buy compact models. If they followed your plan they would bankrupt even sooner. And the profit margins for small vehicles is the worst
Beni_Stingray@reddit
The rest of the world outside the US would disargee with you.
IsTheShibaInU@reddit
He didn't say they should build compact models only. He said they should only use the CVT in whatever compact models they build.
Learn to read.
diethyl2o@reddit
The Pathfinder, with its naturally aspirated V6 and traditional automatic is the best deal on the US car market right now. And with current gas prices, should be able to negotiate an even better out of the door price than usual.
Twin_Turbo@reddit
nissan doing it right, good interiors and keeping it simple. frontier is the best mid size truck for the price by far, everyone on youtube comparisons lists their msrp when comparing to toyota and says they are good deal, when you can get them a few thousand under msrp easy.
wildfire98@reddit
Nissan and Stellantis are best when they are on the ropes.
ScienceMechEng_Lover@reddit
Nissan will pull off the comeback of all comebacks with the might of the VQ engine 💪. Nissan's comeback will be so legendary it'll make the 2016 NBA finals look like child's play.
redMahura@reddit (OP)
Preach 🙏