The Daily - The Rise and Fall of Carlos Ghosn

Episode Date: April 16, 2019

Carlos Ghosn, the former head of Nissan, was the rare foreign executive to reach rock-star status in Japan by breaking the rules of its culture. Now, he’s accused of financial wrongdoing at the comp...any he helped save. Guest: Motoko Rich, the Tokyo bureau chief for The New York Times. For more information on today’s episode, visit nytimes.com/thedaily.Background reading:Mr. Ghosn has been arrested on charges of financial misconduct at Nissan. He said in a video statement that the accusations were part of a plot by company executives to engineer his downfall.Mr. Ghosn wasn’t expected to succeed in Japan, a nation known for its distrust of outsiders. But he also wasn’t expected to fail like this.

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Starting point is 00:00:00 From The New York Times, I'm Michael Barbaro. This is The Daily. Today. He was the rare foreign executive to reach rock star status in Japan by breaking the rules of its culture. Then he went too far. The rise and fall of Carlos Ghosn. It's Tuesday, April 16th.
Starting point is 00:00:37 So on April 9th, this mysterious video appeared. Carlos Ghosn, the longtime chief executive and chairman of Nissan, which is a Japanese auto company, is sitting in this room. It's almost like a hostage video. He's sitting at this table in a very bare conference room. He's got a black suit jacket on and a white button down, but no tie.
Starting point is 00:01:00 And he's looking basically straight on into the camera. And the first thing he says is, If you are listening to me through this video today, it means that I was not able to make the press conference that I planned for April the 11th. He can't be there because he's in jail. He had called a press conference on Twitter. He was planning to explain previous charges, so he'd been arrested before, and he wanted to go out in public and explain why he was innocent of those charges. But before he could do that, he was arrested again. Motoko Rich is the Tokyo bureau chief for The Times. So what exactly is going on here?
Starting point is 00:01:44 Why is the head of Nissan being repeatedly arrested? Well, this is kind of a big epic drama. All the accusations that came around these charges. About culture clash on a grand scale. That are all biased. This is a story about money and greed. Twisted in a way to paint a personage of greed. And the crown jewel of Japan's economy, the auto industry.
Starting point is 00:02:15 And the personage of dictatorship. This is a story about a criminal justice system that, despite being part of a major democracy, seems to have violations of civil rights. I'm innocent of all the charges that have been brought against me. And above all, it's about the particularities of this one unique business executive, Carlos Ghosn. So tell us, who is Carlos Ghosn? So Carlos Ghosn is this international figure.
Starting point is 00:02:49 He was born in Brazil to Lebanese immigrants, and he moved to Beirut as a toddler. And then he went to some elite schools in Paris, studied engineering at an elite university. And then he was hired by Michelin, the tire company. And he was working his way up there. He worked there for 18 years. He started on the factory floor, but he was very quickly, his talent was spotted and he rose through the ranks. And then they gave him the job of being CEO of Michelin's North American division. At Michelin, he realized it was a family company and he really wanted to keep going up and he thought, I'm never going to get that far in this company.
Starting point is 00:03:26 I'm not going to get to the top in any case. So he took a job at Renault, which is a French company. And Renault at that point was reeling from a disastrous merger with Volvo.
Starting point is 00:03:37 And so he kind of came in and what his approach was, was he slashed costs and he kind of earned this name, Le Coste Coteur. L'alliance est désormais scellée entre les constructeurs français et japonais, Renault et Nissan. And Renault itself bought a very large stake in Nissan,
Starting point is 00:03:54 a Japanese company that was on the verge of going into bankruptcy. They had car models that nobody really wanted to buy, and they were lagging behind Toyota and Honda. And since Carlos Ghosn had been so successful at helping to turn around Renault, they thought he might want to try his hand at doing the same at Nissan. So they sent him to Japan as chief operating officer in 1999. So basically, this is a major turnaround operation. Right. And in fact, Bob Lutz, who was
Starting point is 00:04:28 then vice chairman of General Motors, famously said that Renault would be better off taking $5 billion, putting it on a barge and sinking it in the middle of the ocean. That's how bad things were. This is the company that Ghosn has sent in to rescue. And how big a deal is it for a Japanese car company to turn to a non-Japanese leader? It's a huge deal. I mean, it's pretty unusual for a Japanese company of any stripe to hire a foreigner to run the company. And in particular, Nissan was an auto company,
Starting point is 00:05:02 and the auto industry is the crown jewel of the Japanese economy. Back in the 80s, when everybody was worried that Japan was going to take over the world, it was the auto industry that was concerning people the most. And so the fact that this company was on the brink of bankruptcy and that the only way out they could see was to sell a large stake to a foreign company and then to have a foreign executive come in and basically take over leadership is a sign of desperation, but also highly unusual. So given that, what do the Japanese make of this new head of Nissan, Carlos Ghosn? I think there probably were a handful of people, certainly at Nissan and probably within government circles and elite business circles, who kind of cast a wary eye at him and thought, who is this guy?
Starting point is 00:05:51 Who is this foreigner? We're not sure we want him here. But he also brought in a breath of fresh air. He was different. He wore pinstripe suits and walked around with these rectangular sunglasses. And I think people started to glom on to the fact that, you know, he was a completely different leader than they were used to. And how did he actually do at the job?
Starting point is 00:06:12 So he came in and he did some really difficult things. I mean, he had his reputation of being le coste couture and he did it again at Nissan. So he looked at the structure of the company, which was very similar to a lot of Japanese companies where they'd been offering a lifetime employment. And he said, you know, this is a bloated workforce. And he slashed it by 14 percent. Like 21,000 people lost their jobs under Carlos Ghosn. But he also improved the product lines. The Nissan Maxima proves that
Starting point is 00:06:43 beauty can be more than skin deep. And under his leadership, he took Nissan and made it into the second largest car company behind Toyota. So he leapfrogged over Honda and made it number two in Japan. But please don't let all these attractive qualities go to your head or to your lead foot. He also got them to 100 million of sales in the United States. I think it was quadrupled the stock market value of the company within a couple of years. So he really delivered on his promise. When over 300,000 people buy the same car, it's more than a coincidence. It's a success.
Starting point is 00:07:21 So it kind of appears like he's performed a miracle in saving this auto company that no one thought that anyone could save. Exactly. He was promoted to CEO by 2001, and then his reputation started to kind of take off. Superstar CEO, also a larger-than-life figure, and almost an icon for many Japanese. He's kind of like the Steve Jobs, Elon Musk, Leah Iacocca all rolled into one for Japan, a place that they're not really all that used to having superstar corporate executives. He appeared everywhere. He was on TV a lot.
Starting point is 00:08:06 When he was at auto industry shows, he would stand and sign autographs. People really liked him. And there was even a manga comic book that was made about his life. Really? Yeah, yeah. There was a whole illustrated comic book about his life,
Starting point is 00:08:21 which all these Japanese businessmen are reading on the trains. He writes a memoir about this turnaround, and that's a bestseller. The emperor gives him a medal, which he becomes the first foreign business executive to win it. So he's definitely a big superstar. And then Nissan has bought properties for him to use in Rio de Janeiro, in Brazil, in Paris, France, in Beirut, Lebanon, in Amsterdam, in Holland. So now all of a sudden he has all these properties, including a very nice apartment in Tokyo. And he's living this very lavish lifestyle. And he even takes a second wife and they get married at Versailles in France and have a Marie Antoinette themed wedding. And we start to see a little bit of signs of maybe how he's crossing a line in Japan where there's a high value put on humility, modesty, being a little bit quiet, not necessarily bragging about yourself.
Starting point is 00:09:25 And I think from his perspective, he just felt, I'm just doing what a corporate CEO of a global company should be doing. He had rescued the company that's incontrovertible. And he had proven that his methods, though painful, worked for shareholders and for the company. methods, though painful, worked for shareholders and for the company. Management is not about doing easy things. Management is about doing things that usually people don't want to do. And I guess even if he's rubbing people the wrong way culturally, shareholders are happy with him. The media treats him like a darling. And it's working out perfectly well for him, given these houses that are being rented for him, this lavish wedding.
Starting point is 00:10:06 This is working well. You would think so, but it turns out that he was still quite unhappy. I think he felt that compared to his peers in the international auto industry, he was not paid well. even though he was making, say, $16.9 million. That was much less than the $21 million and change of, say, Mary Barra at General Motors. And so I think that he felt that he was not compensated appropriately for the level at which he was playing. People look at this and say, yeah, but in Japan, you're the highest seller in Japan. Yes. So at the same time, Nissan, it cannot be considered only as a Japanese company.
Starting point is 00:10:47 It is a company based in Japan, but on a global trend. So why is he making less money than his American counterparts? What explains that? So I think there are a couple of things going on here. First of all, in Japan in general, there's more of this egalitarian sense that it's somehow unseemly for the top executive in a company to make too many multiples of what the average salary person makes in the company. In the case of Nissan, they actually tried to sort of institute that in their own codes, and they put a cap on
Starting point is 00:11:20 the amount of pay that all executives could make. So this was in 2008. Japanese law actually began to require that companies disclose directors' pay in their annual report. And so that year, Nissan shareholders voted to set an annual cap of about $27 million on compensation, and that was for all board directors combined. So that was part of what was driving it, was that they knew that they would have to tell the public what they were paying everybody.
Starting point is 00:11:49 So if Carlos Ghosn wanted to make sure that he got top pay, that meant there would be very little left for all the other directors on the board. So the bigger his salary, the smaller the salary of those around him, his deputies who work with him. Exactly. around him, his deputies who work with him. Exactly. And meanwhile, Nissan itself is not doing so well. And it started to become clear that they were not meeting their targets. And dealers were starting to complain.
Starting point is 00:12:17 They were saying they were being forced to sell cars at deep discounts. So there was a lot of general dissatisfaction. So there started to be some whispers. It was the Ghosn magic disappearing? And then in November 2018, Carlos Ghosn lands in a corporate jet at Haneda Airport in Tokyo. And there are cameras waiting at the airport and prosecutors. And these prosecutors board the plane and they start to question him. And then they take him in and they arrest him.
Starting point is 00:12:47 Breaking news. In the past few minutes, Nissan has revealed that its chairman has been arrested. Carlos Ghosn, the chairman of the CEO of Toyota, has been arrested in Tokyo, Japan. And it's this sort of crazy scenario that the CEO, who was revered as a rock star in the auto industry, that was well known on the Davos circuit, was suddenly arrested in Tokyo and taken to jail. It was a total shock. The question is now, of course, will the board oust him, which of course we largely expect, not just from Nissan, but from the other car companies that Carlos Ghosn heads up.
Starting point is 00:13:24 And what has he been arrested for? What are the accusations? It was an internal investigation that was launched and took place in the last few months that led us to this moment. So the allegations have to do with pay. It turns out, according to the prosecutors, that Carlos Ghosn, in cooperation with a top aide named Greg Kelly, that they had basically figured out a way to pay Carlos Ghosn more than they were declaring on their annual reports. Nissan says it's been going on for years. So the allegation is that he hid about half his pay. And the way apparently he did that is that they effectively created sort of two pots of pay.
Starting point is 00:14:08 So there was the legal above board within limit pay that he was given every year. And then there were sort of these IOUs of the amount of pay that he would get after he left Nissan. And so the allegation is that he figured out a way to pay himself basically double what they were reporting to the securities agencies. And so the indictment is that they failed to report his full pay. And how big a deal is this charge? So this charge, I think, there's been a lot of debate. When he was first arrested, I think a lot of people said, why are they arresting him for this?
Starting point is 00:14:48 I mean, come on. First of all, it's the company's responsibility. Do you actually think that Carlos Ghosn sits in an office and fills out the securities filings? No. And then the other bigger point I think people were making was, if there's a debate about whether he's being paid too much or he's breaking the internal shareholder rule about the cap, isn't that something that should be dealt with by the board of directors, not something that should be brought to prosecutors?
Starting point is 00:15:13 Does the guy need to be thrown in jail for this issue? So there's a lot of debate about that. I think a lot of it is cultural. So when you talk to people in the expat community, you hear a lot of that sort of questioning of whether this was an appropriate use of prosecutorial power. Whereas if you talk to Japanese business people, a lot of them say, look, the law is that you have to report your pay. And they didn't report his pay. And he was the chief executive and chairman of the company. And so he should have known that they were misreporting his pay.
Starting point is 00:15:42 So there are all these reactions out there. And then Ghosn himself, as we've seen in this video. I've been always consistent with this position that I was innocent of all the charges. First and foremost, he says he's innocent. And he kind of leaves that out there. The second message I want to send you is the fact that. And then he goes on to talk about how he wants to emphasize that he loves Japan. I love Japan and I love Nissan. Nobody spends 20 years in a country without love and without attachment. But then he talks about how he has been the victim of a campaign of backstabbing.
Starting point is 00:16:18 This is a conspiracy. And he won't name names, but he's talking about these people who he says are now in charge of Nissan, and he's really worried about Nissan. I'm talking here about a few executives who, obviously, for their own interest and for their own selfish fears, are creating a lot of value destruction. Because these executives who he won't name, who he says have been backstabbing and betraying him, have done that because they are so threatened by the fact that Nissan is getting closer to Renault. There was first a fear that the next step of the alliance in terms of convergence
Starting point is 00:16:57 and in terms of moving toward a merger would in a certain way threaten some people or eventually threaten the autonomy of Nissan. So this big household name in Japan is worried about kind of being swallowed up by a French company. Which, by the way, has never been threatened for the last 19 years. And Carlos Ghosn is telling us that the executives at the Japanese company have been so worried about this that they are trying to kick him out. That was where the fear came. Because the performance of Nissan is not good.
Starting point is 00:17:29 It has degraded a lot. But he's being a little bit vague, and it's kind of cloak and dagger, and we're not quite sure what's happening. I am privileged to have three competent lawyers around me who's going to defend the case. And then he goes on to say... But they don't share with me a lot of serenity about the fairness of the trial. All I hope is that I will get a fair trial. That I can be hopefully vindicated.
Starting point is 00:17:56 And why would he not get a fair trial? Well, the Japanese criminal justice system, we've learned a lot through this case, is not what you would necessarily expect from a modern democracy. So prosecutors are allowed to keep any defendant for up to 48 hours without indicting them at all. And while they're questioning them, the defendant is not allowed to have his own lawyer present. Now, in the U.S., of course, if you don't charge someone within 48 hours, they're out. But in this case, after the 48 hours, the prosecutors have the right to go to the court and say, you know, we're not quite done questioning. Can we keep him for another 10 days? And after the 10 days, the prosecutors reapply to the court and say, you know what, we actually need 10 more days. And they gave it to him. So
Starting point is 00:18:45 he was held originally for 22 days without being charged at all, without being allowed to have his lawyer present while he's being questioned. So when you look at all of that, criminal justice experts in the United States are saying this is not how you would expect a democratic country with, you know, basic civil rights to run their criminal justice system. Motoko, is any of this typical for how Japan would treat an executive in similar circumstances, facing similar allegations? So that's a really good question. I mean, it's certainly when you talk to expats, they sort of say, aha, this is definitely a case of mistreating the foreigner. And I did talk to someone who said, look, you know, in Japan, we will tolerate fraud conducted on behalf of the companies.
Starting point is 00:19:32 But what Japan will not tolerate is personal greed. And so that is sort of the sense in which Carlos Ghosn has been cast, that what he is accused of having done was all for himself personally. So crime may be okay if it's done on behalf of a corporation and its employees, but crime done on behalf of oneself, pure greed, that crosses the line. That may help explain why Carlos Cohen was being treated this way. I think in part. That's certainly what a lot of people have told me.
Starting point is 00:20:04 But then, after he'd been out on bail for a month, he's rearrested. Early Thursday morning, Japanese prosecutors paid a visit to Carlos Ghosn's apartment. Blocking the entrance from prying eyes, they arrested the former auto titan. And that's kind of why we were seeing that video, right?
Starting point is 00:20:22 That he couldn't appear at the press conference that he was promising to give. He's now back in jail. And these charges seem a little more serious. This time, Ghosn's been arrested after suspicions by Nissan that some pavements to its Oman dealership were for personal use by its former chairman, to the tune of nearly 4 million euros, according to Japanese media. And that, if there's any evidence, sounds more like
Starting point is 00:20:46 a charge of embezzlement. So if true, these are far more serious allegations than setting up a long-term deferred compensation fund, as he was originally accused. Exactly. And I talked to this lawyer, an American who's been in Japan for a very long time, and he was one of the people who was defending Carlos Ghosn at the beginning and saying, come on, these are trumped up charges. You should just deal with this internally. And now he's saying it looks like the prosecutors went on a fishing expedition. At the beginning, all they had were a couple of minnows, but now they've got the big fish. I'm struck that Carlos Ghosn is celebrated for so long for having broken the mold because that's what creates this big success inside Nissan. And people seem to embrace all that mold breaking, but then say to him, you need to fit the rest of the mold culturally, especially around money. And that happens to
Starting point is 00:21:46 coincide with the company that had been such a success starting to tank. Right. I think in a lot of ways, and perhaps this is not unique to Japan, that you're kind of, you can get away with whatever you want as long as you're successful. And once you're not so successful anymore, then all that rule-breaking and brashness doesn't look so attractive and appealing anymore. So I think that may have been partly what happened to Carlos Ghosn. I think there's another thing operating here, which is that he really fundamentally represents a different way of looking at leadership. Japanese corporate culture is very consensual. And he even references this in his video. He sort of says something along the lines of,
Starting point is 00:22:33 what you call dictatorial is just good leadership. And what we need to do is what's good for the company, not just something we can agree upon. And that's really like taking a big, you know, water gun and pointing it right at the center of what is one of the most valued ways of doing business in Japan, which is that everything is decided by consensus,
Starting point is 00:22:55 or at least you give the appearance of everything being decided by consensus. And he did not pay attention to that. And so I think that's a lot of where the cultural clash is coming from. And he's really pay attention to that. And so I think that's a lot of where the cultural clash is coming from. And he's really being defined about it. Like he's going to go down kicking and screaming and he's not going to give up on wanting to say, I was a very good, I am a very good leader. And you don't recognize it and you're calling me a dictator.
Starting point is 00:23:19 But all I am is trying to show visionary leadership. is trying to show visionary leadership. Can we see this, Motoko, as Nissan kind of prioritizing the preservation of Japanese culture over saving the company itself? I think that there's part of it that is about Japanese culture wins out above all.
Starting point is 00:23:49 That if you're going to be in Japan, you need to learn to adhere to Japanese culture. I think there is a part of it there. I also think that in this particular case, he probably would have continued to get away with it if that's the way of putting it, or been allowed to behave as he does if the company was continuing to be successful. But it was starting to slow down.
Starting point is 00:24:12 There were signs that the magic had gone. And so then the mold breaker is no longer looked at as a success story, but more as someone who needs to be brushed aside and let's go back to the old ways. We know how to do things here. Motoko, thank you very much. We appreciate it. Thanks so much for having me. We'll be right back. Here's what else you need to know today.
Starting point is 00:24:53 A massive fire at the Cathedral of Notre Dame, an 800-year-old monument to Catholicism and architecture in the center of Paris, has destroyed most of the building's roof, central spire, and interior. The fire began around 6.30 p.m. local time in an area of the cathedral covered in scaffolding and quickly spread across its wooden roof, which dates back to medieval times. dates back to medieval times. The cause of the fire is unknown, but authorities said it was likely connected to a major renovation project.
Starting point is 00:25:38 Thousands of Parisians watched the fire in horror, with one witness telling the Times through tears, quote, we lose this, we lose Paris. It is apocalyptic. That's it for The Daily. I'm Michael Barbaro. See you tomorrow.

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