On the Dash:
- Nissan faces its worst financial crisis in 25 years and is banking on faster model development and new product launches to drive a turnaround.
- CEO Ivan Espinosa is pushing to cut vehicle development timelines from over 50 months to 37 months, as competition from Tesla and Chinese automakers like BYD continues to intensify.
- The automaker is raising funds through debt and asset sales—including potentially selling its Yokohama headquarters—as it contends with more than $5 billion in debt coming due next year.
Nissan is fast-tracking new vehicle launches and restructuring its operations as it battles its deepest financial crisis in a quarter century, Chief Executive Officer Ivan Espinosa said in an interview at the company’s Yokohama headquarters.
Espinosa, who took over in March, said the Japanese automaker is cutting new model development times from more than 50 months to 37 months in an effort to respond more quickly to changing consumer trends and intensifying competition. Nissan plans to roll out several new models, including updated versions of the Elgrand minivan and Kicks crossover, a redesigned U.S. Sentra sedan later this year, and a plug-in hybrid version of its top-selling Rogue compact SUV in early 2026.
The company has already refreshed its Leaf electric vehicle and a popular kei mini-car, part of a broader push to reinvigorate a lineup that analysts say has lagged behind global rivals. Once an industry leader with the world’s first mass-market EV, Nissan has seen its position eroded by Tesla and Chinese automakers like BYD, which can bring new models to market in as little as two years.
Nissan’s financial struggles have compounded the urgency of its turnaround. The automaker faces more than $5 billion in debt obligations due next year and has forecast a $1.2 billion operating loss for the April–September period. To shore up its balance sheet, Nissan has raised 850 billion yen ($5.8 billion) through debt and asset sales, with a target of more than 1 trillion yen. Bloomberg has reported that KKR & Co. is the leading bidder to acquire Nissan’s Yokohama headquarters for about 90 billion yen.
The restructuring comes after Nissan announced in May that it would cut 20,000 jobs and shut seven factories. Production at its Oppama plant, once considered the crown jewel of its domestic operations, is scheduled to end by March 2028.
Globally, the automaker is seeing mixed results. Sales in China jumped 22% in July on demand for the fully electric N7 sedan, while U.S. sales have declined even as overall American auto demand has remained steady despite President Donald Trump’s tariffs on cars and parts.


