PARIS: Automakers Renault, Nissan and Mitsubishi reaffirmed their committment to their alliance on Thursday as company leaders held their first meeting since the shock arrest of boss Carlos Ghosn.
“We remain fully committed to the Alliance,” the three firms said in a joint statement as Ghosn remains in custody in Japan on allegations of financial misconduct.
The talismanic Ghosn was seen as the glue binding together a complex three-way structure which counts as the world’s top-selling auto company, with some 10.6 million vehicles rolling off the production lines last year.
His arrest revealed brewing resentment and unrest within the Franco-Japanese partnership.
Nissan chief executive Nissan Hiroto Saikawa, Renault’s interim boss Thierry Bollore and Mitsuibishi’s Osamu Masuko conversed via video, sources and the Nikkei daily reported.
Issues of governance were not meant to be raised in the meeting and no vote was planned, the sources told AFP.
In their joint statement on Thursday, the three firms said their “alliance has achieved unparalleled success in the past two decades.”
The leaders of the three companies also sent an internal message that reassures employees that the alliance remains on track.
“We owe you this expression of cohesion and commitment to the Alliance today more than ever” said the statement, according to a copy consulted by AFP.
“We are in close touch with each other and with our key stakeholders. All have expressed strong support and a shared desire to maintain our winning combination,” it added.
Renault is the dominant member of the alliance, holding 43 percent of the shares in Nissan, but the Japanese firm now outsells its French counterpart — sparking frustration in Tokyo.
French Finance minister Bruno Le Maire on Tuesday warned that there was no question of a change in the balance of power between Renault, which is 15 percent owned by the French state, and its Japanese partners.
“There is a partnership which seems good to me, there is a good balance. There are cross-shareholdings between Renault and Nissan which should not change,” Le Maire said on France’s LCI news channel.
The rules of the alliance, based in the Netherlands, state that Renault and Nissan appoint five board members each but it is the French company which names the CEO while Nissan chooses the deputy.
The CEO holds a decisive vote in the case of a tie in board decisions.
While Ghosn has been ousted from Mitsubishi and Nissan, he remains CEO and chairman of Renault, albeit “incapacitated” for the moment, according to the French manufacturer.
Le Maire insisted Renault should retain the top position in the alliance: “This rule should not change.”
The partnership uses shared factories and joint purchasing power to keep down costs.
These arrangements are not under threat, according to statements from both the Japanese and French sides.
Ghosn and close aide Greg Kelly were arrested last week for allegedly conspiring to under-report Ghosn’s income by around $44 million — about half of what should have been reported — over five fiscal years until March 2015.
The 64-year-old tycoon denies the allegations but has not been able to defend himself publicly while he is in a Tokyo detention center.
Renault shares were up 0.9 percent in late morning trading in Paris, slightly outpacing the CAC 40 index. The stock tumbled nearly 10 percent in the wake of Ghosn’s arrest but has since recovered half of that drop.
Nissan gained 1.4 percent in Tokyo Thursday. Nissan’s shares have also recovered much of the ground lost following Ghosn’s arrest.
dga/rl/bmm
Renault, Nissan, Mitsubishi reaffirm commitment to alliance
Renault, Nissan, Mitsubishi reaffirm commitment to alliance
- The talismanic Ghosn was seen as the glue binding together a complex three-way structure
- In their joint statement on Thursday, the three firms said their “alliance has achieved unparalleled success in the past two decades”
Emerging markets driving global growth despite rising risks: Saudi finance minister
RIYADH: Emerging markets now account for a growing share of global output and are driving the bulk of world economic expansion, Saudi Arabia’s finance minister said, even as those economies grapple with rising debt and mounting geopolitical risks.
Speaking at the opening of the annual AlUla Conference for Emerging Market Economies on Feb. 8, Mohammed Al-Jadaan said the role of emerging and developing nations in the global economy has more than doubled since 2000, underscoring a structural shift in growth away from advanced economies.
The meeting comes as policymakers in developing markets try to keep growth on track while controlling inflation, managing capital flows and repairing public finances after years of heavy borrowing. Saudi Arabia has positioned the forum as a platform to coordinate policy responses and strengthen the voice of emerging economies in global financial discussions.
“This conference takes place at a moment of profound transition in the global economy. Emerging markets and developing economies now account for nearly 60 percent of the global gross domestic product in purchasing power terms and 70 percent of global growth,” Al-Jadaan said.
He added: “Today, the 10 emerging economies and the G20 alone account for more than half of the world’s growth. Yet, emerging markets face a more complex and fragmented environment, elevated debt levels, slower trade growth and increasing exposure to geopolitical shocks.”
According to Al-Jadaan, more than half of low-income nations face the risk of debt distress, while global trade growth has slowed to around half its pre-pandemic pace.
Launched in 2025, the conference this year brings together economic decision-makers, finance ministers, central bank governors, leaders of international financial institutions, and a select group of experts and specialists from around the world.
Al-Jadaan said credible fiscal frameworks and disciplined debt management are essential for long-term growth, pointing to Saudi Arabia’s own reform experience.
“Macroeconomic stability is not the enemy of growth; it is actually the foundation. Credible fiscal framework, clear medium-term anchors, and disciplined debt management create the space for investment and reform, especially in volatile global conditions,” he said.
The minister stressed that policy credibility depends on execution rather than plans, adding that structural reforms succeed only when institutions are able to deliver.
The importance of multilateral cooperation is rising as the global system becomes more divided, he said, calling for stronger international financial safety nets for developing economies.
“International cooperation matters more, not less, in a fragmented world. Strong multilateral institutions, effective surveillance and adequate global financial safety nets are essential, particularly for emerging and developing economies,” Al-Jadaan said.
Kristalina Georgieva, managing director of the International Monetary Fund, said emerging markets are growing faster than advanced economies but remain vulnerable to future shocks.
“Growth still lags pre-pandemic levels, and this is doubly concerning as we will surely experience more shocks, but face them with depleted fiscal buffers in many places, with high spending pressures practically everywhere, and rising debt levels in many countries,” she said.
Georgieva outlined two policy priorities emerging economies should embrace to sustain growth.
“First priority, unleash private sector-led growth by cutting red tape, deepening financial markets, strengthening institutions and improving governance,” she said.
Georgieva added: “Second priority is stepping up integration. In a world of shifting alliances and trade partners, there are new opportunities for cooperation at the regional and cross-regional levels.”
Lan Fo’an, China’s finance minister, said the world has entered a period of turbulence marked by unilateralism and geopolitical conflict.
“A cold wave of deglobalization is sweeping across the globe, and the world once again stands at a crucial crossroads,” he said, adding that the global economy expanded 3.3 percent in 2025, below the pre-pandemic average of 3.7 percent.
He called for reforms to global economic governance and greater attention to the needs of developing countries.
“We should improve the global economic governance system through reforms. We should add dialogue over confrontation. We should practice multilateralism to ensure that our countries, regardless of their size or wealth, can participate, make decisions and benefit on an equal footing.”
According to Fo’an, China has joined hands with the Global South to advance cooperation in food security, development financing and climate change.









