The Korea Herald

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Nissan hires Ram CEO for brand in U.S.

By Korea Herald

Published : April 14, 2013 - 19:50

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Nissan Motor Co., with U.S. sales lagging the industry’s rebound this year, said it hired a former Chrysler Group LLC executive to run its namesake brand in the country after the departure of a long-time sales official.

Fred Diaz, 47, formerly president and chief executive officer of Auburn Hills, Michigan-based Chrysler’s Ram brand and Mexican unit, will be vice president of U.S. sales and marketing for the Nissan brand, according to an e-mailed statement Friday. Diaz, who spent 24 years at Chrysler begins May 1 and the position is new, said Travis Parman, a Nissan spokesman.

Al Castignetti, who had been vice president of sales for the brand since 2008, resigned Friday to “pursue interests outside the company,” Brian Brockman, a spokesman for the Yokohama, Japan-based company, said in a phone interview.

Nissan’s U.S. sales, including its Infiniti luxury brand, slid 1.3 percent in the first quarter even as industrywide light-vehicle deliveries rose 6.4 percent, according to researcher Autodata Corp. While the company’s Altima sedan, was the best-selling car in the U.S. last month, the model fell to third place in the quarter from second a year earlier, trailing Toyota Motor Corp.’s Camry and Honda Motor Co.’s new Accord sedan.

“Nissan is losing market share right now and that’s a situation Carlos Ghosn must find intolerable,” said Rebecca Lindland, an analyst with Rebel Three Media & Consultants, based in Cos Cob, Connecticut. “This market is cutthroat, and manufacturers can’t afford to lose momentum, to lose time.”

Ghosn, chief executive officer of both Nissan and alliance partner Renault SA, in an interview last month said he was confident in the potential of the new Altima, redesigned last year, and Nissan’s U.S. sales officials. “I trust that the team would know how to position it in the United States to get the kind of return that we’re expecting from this car,” Ghosn said March 27 at the New York auto show. “And sooner more than later it will show up in the market.” 

(Bloomberg)