
Nissan shares fall after annual loss, withholding profit outlook
The stock dropped as much as 3.2% in Tokyo on Wednesday, underperforming the broader Topix index. Its pledge to close seven factories and slash 20,000 jobs to cut costs by ¥500 billion failed to allay concerns about the uncertainties over tariff impact.
'We give Nissan high marks for releasing additional restructuring measures early,' Morgan Stanley MUFG Securities Co. analysts including Hiroto Segawa wrote in a note. 'However, the business environment remains highly opaque.'
The ailing Japanese automaker has struggled to turn around its business as its aging lineup failed to win over consumers in the US and China. US tariffs also threaten to derail its restructuring efforts, with Nissan expecting to see a ¥450 billion impact from policies. Its shares have tumbled more than 25% this year, compared with a 7% decline in the Topix index's subgauge of auto companies. –BLOOMBERG
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Malaysian Reserve
23 minutes ago
- Malaysian Reserve
Napino Tech Ventures and Teksun Launch Rapidise with $4M Seed Funding to Accelerate AIoT Product Innovation and Electronics Manufacturing
SAN FRANCISCO and NEW DELHI, July 28, 2025 /PRNewswire/ — Napino Tech Ventures Pvt. Ltd. (NTV) and Teksun Microsys Pvt. Ltd. have launched Rapidise Technology Pvt. Ltd. (RTPL) with $4 million in seed funding, aimed at transforming how AI-enabled connected devices are designed, engineered, and manufactured at scale. Rapidise serves as a one-stop Original Design Manufacturer (ODM) for startups, SMBs, and enterprises developing next-generation, AI-powered products. As an ODM, Rapidise not only manufactures but also designs, prototypes, certifies, and manages the full product lifecycle, enabling customers to focus on branding and market strategy while Rapidise delivers turnkey innovation. 'Rapidise unites best-in-class product engineering with scalable manufacturing to accelerate AIoT innovation,' said Vaibhav Raheja, Board of Director at Rapidise and at Napino Auto. Strategic Vertical Integration for Scale Rapidise integrates product design and engineering expertise from Teksun with Napino group's advanced electronics manufacturing infrastructure in India. This vertical integration supports rapid innovation and high-volume production for sectors such as automotive, healthcare, industrial, and consumer electronics. The company has already delivered over one million smart IoT devices and holds $81M+ in booked orders across North America, Europe, the Middle East, and APAC. 'Our vision is to be a world-leading ODM player, recognized for innovation, agility, and commitment to empowering intelligent, high-performance solutions,' said Brijesh Kamani, Founder and CEO of Rapidise. 'By combining engineering and manufacturing under one roof, we're ready to power the next generation of AI-enabled IoT products.' Global Manufacturing Excellence Headquartered in India, Rapidise operates fully automated, Japanese SMT lines (Class 7 Clean Room), Camera Module Manufacturing (Class 6 Clean Room), AI-powered PCB assembly lines, mechanical tooling, and full box-build assembly infrastructure. This enables the production of complex electronics, including: IoT modules and gateways Camera modules, dash cameras, and body-worn cameras 5G-enabled surveillance systems and automotive edge AI devices Infotainment devices, smart TVs, and mobile phones Smart Devices for Agri-tech, Fin-tech, Utilities and Industry 4.0 Applications Faster Go-To-Market with ODM Marketplace With 300+ R&D engineers and modular, production-ready platforms (RISE IoT Modules), Rapidise accelerates custom IoT, AI, and connected solution development. This reduces engineering risk and shortens time-to-market. 'We're transforming how products are built — from concept to mass production,' said Ashish Chinthal, Chief Business Officer at Rapidise. 'Our self-service platform delivers instant quotes for engineering and manufacturing, enabling on-demand ODM services that are faster, more accessible, and fully transparent.' Strategic Semi-Conductor Ecosystem Partnerships Driving AI Innovation Rapidise collaborates with leading semiconductor and connectivity companies to integrate advanced AI, connectivity, and edge processing into its platforms. These partnerships accelerate innovation at the intelligent edge, enabling customers to launch connected products faster and at scale. 'The collaboration showcases how ecosystem partnerships can accelerate scalable AI innovation. It's a strong example of India-led co-innovation powering intelligent edge solutions globally,' said Manmeet Singh, Senior Director & India Business Head of Automotive, Connectivity, Broadband & IoT, Qualcomm India. Rapidise Snapshot HQ in India with global presence (US, EU, APAC) 300+ engineers in electronics hardware, embedded software, cloud, AI, and manufacturing Strategic partnerships with Qualcomm to co-develop AI-ready connected solutions Turnkey delivery: Design → Prototype → Certification → Manufacturing → Support For more information, visit or contact info@ Photo:

Barnama
an hour ago
- Barnama
Pet Food Supply In Malaysia Stable Despite Thai-Cambodia Tensions
BUSINESS By Rosemarie Khoo Mohd Sani KUALA LUMPUR, July 28 (Bernama) -- The ongoing tension between Thailand and Cambodia is unlikely to disrupt the supply of tuna-based pet food in Malaysia for now, although some industry players have raised concerns over rising costs and potential logistical challenges if the situation escalates. Stanley Saw, managing director of ABCO Asia Sdn Bhd, a pet food importer and distributor of tuna products from Thailand and Japan, said the current skirmishes between the two neighbouring countries are unlikely to affect tuna supply chains, as the main fishing and farming activities are centred in the South China Sea. "This is an isolated case, and this crisis will not help either side. Thailand has stronger control over its domain, and we do not foresee any immediate disruption," he told Bernama. The latest border dispute escalation between Thailand and Cambodia has raised concerns about a shortage of global canned tuna, given Thailand's dominant position in this market. However, Saw acknowledged that global conflicts are creating an environment of uncertainty. "Inflation and price increases are unavoidable, and businesses must adapt. "We need to work with reliable partners and not just hope for things to get better,' he said, adding that maintaining consumer trust through quality and branding is essential in turbulent times. Japanese pet food brand Ciao, Inaba Foods (Malaysia) Sdn Bhd's national sales manager Chun Wei Keong said the company's Thai factory in Saraburi is not affected by the Thailand-Cambodia conflict, as it is located over 100km from Bangkok, and about 500km from the border near the disputed Preah Vihear Temple area.


The Star
5 hours ago
- The Star
Ringgit strengthens broadly on cautious trade sentiment
KUALA LUMPUR: The ringgit opened marginally higher against the US dollar in early trade on Monday amid cautious sentiment, as traders awaited clarity on a possible extension of the trade truce between the United States (US) and China, said an analyst. At 8 am, the local note stood at 4.2110/2310 versus the greenback, compared with Friday's close of 4.2195/2245. Bank Muamalat Malaysia Bhd chief economist Dr Mohd Afzanizam Abdul Rashid said that earlier, the US and the European Union (EU) had agreed to a 15 per cent tariff on most EU imports, while most US imports would face zero tariff under the deal. He said markets are also closely watching the upcoming US Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) meeting scheduled for July 29 and 30, with consensus expecting no change to the Federal Funds Rate, currently at 4.25 per cent to 4.50 per cent. "Based on recent developments, most countries appear accommodative in offering favourable terms to the US. It remains to be seen whether this will effectively narrow the trade balance in the near term. "However, the cost of doing business in the US is likely to rise, and it also appears the US may be relying on a weaker dollar to boost export competitiveness. "Against this backdrop, we expect the ringgit to remain within a narrow range of RM4.22 to RM4.23 versus the US dollar,' Mohd Afzanizam told Bernama. At opening here, the ringgit traded mostly higher against a basket of major currencies. It rose against the Japanese yen to 2.8499/2863 from 2.8529/8565 at Friday's close, and strengthened versus the British pound to 5.6600/6869 from 5.6786/6853. However, it eased slightly against the euro to 4.9521/9757 from 4.9507/9566. Against regional peers, the ringgit was also firmer. It advanced against the Indonesian rupiah to 258.0/259.3 from 258.5/258.9 on Friday, and gained versus the Singapore dollar at 3.2878/3039 from 3.2937/2978. The local note also strengthened against the Thai baht to 12.9809/13.0546 from 13.0268/0478, and edged up against the Philippine peso to 7.37/7.41 from 7.38/7.40 previously. - Bernama