
Nissan Faces $5B in Debt, Illegal Tariffs?, GM #1 EV Seller in Canada
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Episode #1057: Nissan eyes a fire sale to survive, Trump’s tariff plan hits legal trouble, and GM claims Canada’s EV crown from Tesla—at least for now.
Show Notes with links:
- As CEO Ivan Espinosa wraps up his first quarter in charge, Nissan’s financial stability hangs in the balance, with a massive debt wall looming and rumors of a fire sale to raise cash.
- Nissan has $5.12 billion in debt due in 2026 and plans to refinance up to $4.15 billion of that.
- Espinosa’s turnaround strategy involves slashing 20,000 jobs, closing seven global factories, and cutting $3.46 billion in costs by 2028.
- To free up capital, Nissan may liquidate high-value assets—including its stake in Renault, prime real estate in Japan, and even its iconic Yokohama headquarters, which could be sold and leased back.
- With nearly half of its U.S. sales coming from imports, Nissan Americas Chairman Christian Meunier is leading a $2B cost-cutting push focused on boosting retail sales, margins, and managing tariff risk.
- “We are not yet at the stage where we have to do something desperate,” said a board source.
- A federal court ruled Trump’s use of emergency powers to impose sweeping tariffs was illegal—but for now, those tariffs remain while the legal battle unfolds.
- The U.S. Court of International Trade said Trump exceeded authority under the IEEPA, targeting tariffs not tied to a valid national emergency.
- IEEPA-based tariffs targeted a wide range of imported consumer goods not tied to national security—covering electronics, clothing, and some vehicle accessories.
- The ruling gave the government 10 days to unwind the tariffs, but an appeals court temporarily paused that order.
- Tariffs under Section 232—covering cars, parts, steel, and aluminum—remain, keeping vehicle prices elevated.
- Retailers like Walmart warn prices may rise further, though Trump has publicly told them to “eat the tariffs.”
- GM claimed the top EV spot in Canada after more than doubling its electric vehicle sales in Q1, driven by fresh model launches and Tesla’s sharp drop.
- GM sold 5,750 EVs in Q1, led by the Chevy Equinox EV and new Cadillac OPTIQ, outpacing Tesla’s volume.
- Silverado EV and Hummer EV variants also contributed, with Hummer Pickup sales up 232%.
- Tesla’s registrations in Quebec plunged 87%, impacted by paused EV rebates at both federal and provincial levels.
- Despite year-over-year gains, GM’s Q1 total is well off the 15,000 units sold in Q4 2024.
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