Executive's flight to PSA highlights Renault-Nissan alliance tensions

Business

PARIS (Reuters) - A senior Renault-Nissan executive has quit the troubled carmaking alliance to join Peugeot maker PSA Group (PEUP.PA), blaming Renault boss Thierry Bollore for forcing his exit.

Former alliance director Arnaud Deboeuf will become PSA’s industrial strategy director under Chief Executive Carlos Tavares, himself a former Renault (RENA.PA) second-in-command, the rival French carmaker confirmed on Tuesday.

Deboeuf’s exit underscores deep tensions threatening to subsume the Renault-Nissan alliance in the wake of the November 2018 arrest of former Chairman Carlos Ghosn, now awaiting trial in Japan on financial misconduct charges he denies.

Those tensions have been exacerbated by failed attempts under Bollore and new Renault Chairman Jean-Dominique Senard to secure a full Renault-Nissan merger and to combine Renault with Fiat Chrysler, a move thwarted by the French state.

Deboeuf was well regarded at Nissan and even offered a senior executive role at the Japanese carmaker, as his relations with Bollore soured following Ghosn’s ouster, three sources told Reuters. But Bollore, a former Ghosn protégé who succeeded his absent boss as CEO in January, blocked the move.

“Thierry Bollore told me no one wanted to work with me ... and that I could not go to work at Nissan either,” Deboeuf said in a farewell email to colleagues seen by Reuters.

Renault declined to comment on Deboeuf’s departure. Deboeuf did not respond to requests for comment.

His move adds to a steady Renault brain-drain to PSA since 2013, when Tavares was hired to rescue the carmaker from near-bankruptcy. Other switchers from Renault include Yann Vincent, PSA’s executive vice president for manufacturing, and powertrain engineering chief Alain Raposo.

Tavares, who preceded Bollore as Ghosn’s No.2 at Renault, was pushed out after publicly voicing CEO ambitions. Under its Portuguese-born leader, PSA has set new profitability records while making swift headway on the integration of Opel, acquired from General Motors (GM.N) in 2017.

Reporting by Gilles Guillaume and Laurence Frost, Editing by Richard Lough and Mark Potter

Our Standards:The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

Source Link

Articles You May Like

Hong Kong’s Chief Executive Is Disheartened, but No Successor Is in Sight
Many minorities avoid seeking credit due to generations of discrimination. Why that keeps them back
Executive's flight to PSA highlights Renault-Nissan alliance tensions
KKR buyout at Axel Springer clears minimum acceptance threshold
China’s Currency Weakens in a Potential Challenge to Trump