Mercedes-Benz offloads Nissan stake for $325 million, source says

 The NISSAN logo is seen outside a building during the launch event of the Infiniti QX80 Autograph in Mexico City, Mexico, August 21, 2025. REUTERS

 

A Mercedes-Benz vehicle sits parked, on the day U.S. President Donald Trump is set to announce new tariffs, at a dealership in Copiague, New York

 A Mercedes-Benz vehicle sits parked, on the day U.S. President Donald Trump is set to announce new tariffs, at a dealership in Copiague, New York, U.S., April 2, 2025. REUTERS

 

TOKYO, Aug 26 (Reuters) – The pension trust of German automaker Mercedes-Benz (MBGn.DE),  has sold its stake in Japan’s Nissan Motor (7201.T),  for 47.83 billion yen ($324.65 million), a source with direct knowledge of the matter said on Tuesday.
Shares of the Japanese automaker held on to their losses of about 6% from earlier in the session, following Mercedes-Benz’s announcement on Monday that it would sell its 3.8% stake. The stock was headed for its worst day since July.
The slide in Nissan shares since the news highlights investor scepticism over the company’s turnaround prospects as it battles tariffs and falling sales in its key markets, the United States and China. The automaker booked a $535 million loss for the three months ended June.
Mercedes-Benz sold its Nissan shares at 341.3 yen apiece, a 5.98% discount to Nissan’s Monday close of 363 yen, according to the source. The shares were offered at a price range of 337.5 yen to 341 yen, a term sheet seen by Reuters showed.
Demand outstripped the number of shares placed for sale, the source said on condition of anonymity as the information was confidential. The top ten investors in the deal were allocated about 70% of the shares sold, the source added.
Nissan declined to comment and Mercedes-Benz said it had no immediate comment beyond its prior statement.
On Monday, a spokesperson for the German automaker had said the Nissan stake, which was transferred to its pension assets in 2016, was not of strategic importance and described the sale as cleaning out its portfolio.
Nissan CEO Ivan Espinosa, who took over in April, has unveiled a turnaround plan to restore profitability, which includes measures such as cutting global production capacity to 2.5 million vehicles from 3.5 million and manufacturing sites to 10 from 17 by fiscal 2027.
Late last month, Espinosa said Nissan was still in the early stages of recovery but that it was making progress on cost cuts.
Nissan shares were trading at 342.5 yen at 0600 GMT, down 5.7%, while the broader Nikkei (.N225), was down 0.9%.

Reporting by Miho Uranaka, Anton Bridge and Daniel Leussink; Editing by Himani Sarkar

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