Daimler, Renault Form Global Car Alliance

 Daimler, Renault Form Global Car Alliance
Carlos Ghosn, Chairman and CEO of Renault-Nissan Alliance and Dr. Dieter Zetsche, Chairman and CEO of Daimler AG, sign the contract April 07 2010

German, French and Japanese automotive conglomerates Daimler, Renault and Nissan respectively have signed a cooperate agreement that comes into effect immediately. Renault and Nissan already have a wide-ranging alliance and are both run by the same man in Carlos Ghosn.

The new agreement involves the sharing and co-development of petrol and diesel engines, a cross-pollination of shareholdings and co-operation in the commercial vehicle sector. Basically each company will end up holding a 3.1% share in the other two.

Renault is now working with Mercedes-Benz in the development of the next-generation smart fortwo and Renault Twingo, both of which will be electric powered, rear-wheel-driven and can be expected to launch in 2013.

On the engine side, Renault and Nissan will provide 3 and 4-cylinder engines (petrol and diesel) to Daimler to use in its future small premium cars. On the other hand Daimler will give some of its existing 4 and 6-cylinder petrol and diesel engines to Nissan's luxury brand Infiniti. All engines will be made to fit the characteristics of each particular brand.

Finally the three companies will be working together in the light commercial vehicle sector where Mercedes-Benz for example, will produce a new entry-level vehicle from 2012 using Renault's basic architecture.

A steering committee headed by Daimler chairman Dieter Zetsche and Ghosn has been set up to manage the new alliance.


Renault-Nissan Alliance and Daimler AG announce wide-ranging strategic cooperation

  • Cooperation on the next-generation smart fortwo and Renault Twingo, including electric versions, as well as on expanding the smart and Twingo families
  • Widespread powertrain sharing and co-development on future projects with applications across passenger cars and light commercial vehicles, specifically:
    • The sharing and co-development of diesel and gasoline engines from the Renault-Nissan Alliance; to be used in the new smart and Renault Twingo and to be adapted and modified with Mercedes-Benz characteristics for its new generation of premium compact cars
    • The sharing of gasoline and diesel engines coming from Daimler to Infiniti, the luxury division of Nissan Motor Company, and providing the opportunity for further collaboration
    • The sharing of a Renault-Nissan Alliance diesel engine and transmission for the Mercedes-Benz Vito
  • Collaboration in the field of light commercial vehicles
  • One-time cross-shareholding amounting to 3.1% of each partner’s equity capital
  • Additional synergies encompassing selective common purchasing opportunities, exchange of operational benchmarks and best practices to be shared across both groups.

BRUSSELS, Belgium --- The Renault-Nissan Alliance and Daimler AG today announced a broad strategic cooperation that will enable both groups to already realize benefits quickly from a range of concrete projects as well as sharing of best practices. The two groups also announced an equity exchange that will give the Renault-Nissan Alliance a 3.1% stake in Daimler and Daimler a 3.1% in Renault and a 3.1% stake in Nissan.

According to Dr. Dieter Zetsche, Chairman of the Board of Management of Daimler AG and head of Mercedes-Benz Cars, “Daimler and the Renault-Nissan Alliance are combining common interests to form a promising foundation for a successful, strategically sound cooperation that is based on a number of very concrete and attractive project cooperations. Our skills complement each other very well. Right away, we are strengthening our competitiveness in the small and compact car segment and are reducing our CO2 footprint – both on a long-term basis. We know that we can make brand-typical products based on shared architectures. The individual brand identities will remain unaffected.”

Carlos Ghosn, Chairman and CEO of the Renault-Nissan Alliance, said: “The Renault-Nissan Alliance knows how to work successfully in collaborative partnerships, and this experience is extremely valuable in today’s and even more tomorrow’s global auto industry. This agreement will extend our strategic collaboration and create lasting value for the Renault-Nissan Alliance and Daimler as we work on broadening and strengthening our product offering, efficiently utilizing all available resources and developing the innovative technologies required in the coming decade.”

Highlights of the Cooperation

Following intensive and productive talks, specific projects have been agreed upon and will be implemented with immediate effect. Specifically:

New common architecture for small vehicles

The successor to the current smart fortwo, a new smart four-seater and the next-generation Renault Twingo will be engineered on the basis of a jointly developed architecture. All vehicles will clearly differ from each other in terms of product design. One main characteristic of the new architecture will be the unique rear wheel drive concept used by current smart vehicles.

The launches of the jointly developed models are planned for 2013 onwards. The smart plant in Hambach, France will be the production location for the two-seater versions, while the Renault plant in Novo Mesto, Slovenia will be the production location for the four-seater versions. Right from its market launch, the jointly developed future models will also be available with an electric drive.

Powertrains

The focus of the cooperation in the powertrain area is on the sharing of highly fuel-efficient, diesel and gasoline engines between the Renault-Nissan Alliance and Daimler.

The Renault-Nissan Alliance will provide 3 and 4 cylinder gasoline and diesel engines out of its portfolio to Daimler, which will then be adapted and modified to reflect Mercedes’ characteristics. The result is a win-win situation for both sides: Daimler will be able to utilize Renault-Nissan Alliance engines and capture additional sales potential for Mercedes-Benz’ future lineup of premium compact cars, while the Renault-Nissan Alliance will improve its capacity utilization.

Daimler will provide gasoline and diesel engines out of its current portfolio to Infiniti. This includes 4 and 6 cylinder gasoline and diesel engines. The result is a win-win situation for both sides: Infiniti will be able to utilize Daimler engines, while Daimler will improve its capacity utilization.

Daimler, Renault and Nissan will also cooperate on future gasoline and diesel engines. Final production decisions for newly, co-developed engines will be taken at a later time, seeking a production network that is well balanced, thus benefiting all sides.

The area of engine cooperation will be driven by a technical concept that ensures the preservation and clear distinctiveness of the individual respective brand and product identities, while at the same time providing a highly competitive cost structure. First, a high level of standardization of the non- brand-relevant components will provide substantial savings for both partners. Second, the use of separate, brand-specific technology packages will ensure
that the requirements of the respective brands are met.

A key objective is to increase competitiveness of all partners through a substantial increase in volumes, leading to economies of scale and cost sharing
in development.

Collaboration on light commercial vehicles

The companies have also agreed on a close cooperation in the light commercial vehicle segment. Mercedes-Benz Vans will expand its portfolio to offer an all new entry-level, intended for commercial usage, from 2012 onwards. The technical basis of this van will come from Renault and will be produced at the Renault plant in Maubeuge, France. Both partners will benefit from higher unit sales, better capacity utilization, shared investment burden, resulting in a better overall cost basis.

In addition to cooperating on small commercial vehicles, selected powertrain components will also be shared to enlarge mid-size van product offering and sales volumes. This includes a small diesel engine and transmissions which Daimler will procure from Renault-Nissan for its mid-size van, the Mercedes- Benz Vito. This additional entry-level motorization will generate additional unit sales for Mercedes-Benz and optimized capacity utilization at Renault.

Equity Exchanges

This strategic cooperation is underscored through a one-time cross-shareholding structure which enables the three companies to exchange, benchmark and create synergies on the basis of a long-term mutually beneficial relationship. The overall construction of the deal is based on the principle of a 3.1/3.1/3.1 percentage cross-holding between Renault, Nissan and Daimler; it will be transacted through an exchange of shares:

  • Daimler will get 3.1% of Renault’s newly issued shares;
  • Daimler will get from Renault 3.1% of Nissan existing shares;
  • Renault will get 3.1% of Daimler shares
  • Renault has independently agreed to exchange 1.55% of Daimler with Nissan for 2% of Nissan shares;
  • Renault and Nissan will each hold 1.55 % of Daimler treasury shares.

The strategic cooperation will be managed by Renault-Nissan B.V. for the Alliance and Daimler through a new cooperation committee giving representation to all parties. The cooperation committee will be co-chaired by Carlos Ghosn and Dieter Zetsche and steered by senior executives of the three companies.

Further opportunities for collaboration

It is the intention of both groups to create a long-term framework to work closely on future areas of cooperation between Renault, Nissan and Daimler. Each company will pursue future opportunities following the closing of the agreement on the strategic cooperation and the implementation of the first major cooperation projects. These include opportunities to be studied on shared modules and components between Infiniti and Mercedes-Benz vehicles, regional cooperation in the United States, China and Japan between Nissan, Infiniti and Daimler. In addition, opportunities to co-develop technologies relating to electric vehicles and batteries will be explored between Renault, Nissan and Daimler.

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 mn07 mn07
?? this is confusing
April 7, 2010 7:17 am
 freeway freeway
and one question: wasn't Mr. Zetsche the one who almost sunk the Chrysler brand giving them old platforms and engines and so many other bad management strategies? and now we can see the results
April 8, 2010 1:17 am
 autoficianado autoficianado
I agree. This article should have never made it past an editor and is very badly written. 3 cylinder engines in Infinitis ???? since when ?
April 7, 2010 7:22 am
 thamzn thamzn
It should say "its existing 4 and 6-cylinder engines" instead of "3 and 4 cylinder engines."
April 7, 2010 8:48 am
 Hero Sina Hero Sina
the Problem is i've never seen a 4-cylinder infiniti , so what 4-cylinder model is gonna be 3-cylinder?
April 7, 2010 9:09 am
 clinton clinton
The typo has now been updated
April 7, 2010 10:02 am
 schizo schizo
There was the Infinit G20 which was a re-badged Nissan Primera that sold in the US during the 90's.
April 7, 2010 11:18 pm
 Siawa Siawa
Well as long as Mercedes doesn't lose it's quality...
April 7, 2010 8:01 am
 ericthedog ericthedog
What quality ? Last decent car M-B produced was teh 190 , from then on its been downhill with good marketing to fool people to buy thier rubbish.
April 7, 2010 5:31 pm
 nederina nederina
Ahh a German mistress, how interesting. So now you have sausages, ratatouille and sushi. I was hoping for Swedish meatballs. Alliance's are the way forward to reduce costs and preserve brand identity.
April 7, 2010 8:04 am
 otakki otakki
And I hope Infiniti/Nissan doesn't pick up Mercedes-Benz's poor reliability.
April 7, 2010 9:29 am
 Solstice21 Solstice21
Funny, I was thinking more along the range of hoping that Benz wouldn't pick up Renault's poor Reliability. Considering its Infamous for it across Europe. Mb is rated 9th for quality on JD I believe...
April 7, 2010 9:39 am
 Renegade Renegade
They are pretty much equal in reliability, I'm more concerned that Merc will want to suppress Infiniti's expansion outside the USA and limit it's tech achievements and engine sizes.
April 7, 2010 10:13 am
 Edison Edison
Mercedes is doing very good in reliability now (a contrast from the late 90'2 and early 2000's). I also guess it depends on the vehicle. Every Mercedes in my family has been better than every Nissan in my family(except for the 1991 Pathfinder, which was simple and rugged, only issue was cracking exhaust manifold that plagued that version of the 3.0L V6). In fact, my stepdad's 2005 CLK has had 0 issues (minor or otherwise), while my mom's Quest had shoddy electrics and my dad's 350Z has had both window regulators go out and is in constant poor alignment. The Z is overall a troublefree car, however, and is fun to drive.
April 7, 2010 12:59 pm
 car-o-bar car-o-bar
Merc is going to top handle Nissan and Renault just like they did with Chrysler. This three way marriage will NOT be successful and will dilute the brands. I think it this is being done to a) meet new CAFE norms, b) give Merc a cheaper source for smaller cars to sell in India, China, Africa, and some European countries. I still do not understand how it will benefit Nissan and Renault from putting more expensive, complicated, less reliable engines in their cars.
April 7, 2010 1:02 pm
 MutantSushi MutantSushi
Mercedes is buying approximately 3% of each company, so it has absolutely no power over these companies. Both companies have exactly the same holding in Daimler itself. Having a 3% holding in another company is not relevant to CAFE standards about total fleet average efficiency, beyond that sharing tech makes it more economical to support their existing smaller cars. There is no evidence Daimler is planning on expanding small cars to India, Africa, etc, ALL reports clearly state they are interested in sharing tech/platforms on their existing Smart/A/B sold mostly to Europe, NA, and Japan, though if they can establish a small luxury-minicar market in China, India, SAfrica, LatAmerica, why wouldn't they? Plenty of companies cooperate in similar ways without the token 3% holding, which is exactly that, a token and justification to have one representative on each other's board.
April 8, 2010 12:43 pm
 joelynn joelynn
maybe finally there will be some stylish mercedes ;-)
April 7, 2010 2:29 pm
 schizo schizo
Wait...I've owned 2 cars with the Mercedes V6 engines and my sister had the Nissan Maxima with the VQ engine and my last long-term rental car back in the US for 5 days was an Infiniti FX-37. The V6 engine in the Infiniti was much more fun to drive than the V6 in the Mercedes E350 Coupe... Even MB is dropping its lower displacement V6 engines in favor of the 1.8L turbo charged in-line 4...which is a great engine. As for quality...after living with the Infiniti for 5 days...there is no comparison...MB is still much better...bit more boring...but still much better. I think it should be Nissan/Infiniti that should be sharing the technology for the V6 engines.
April 7, 2010 11:17 pm
 MutantSushi MutantSushi
Sounds like you're comparing old MB V6's. As you recognize, they're moving that tier of engine to turbo'd 4 cylinders. Logically, their future 6 cylinders will not be the ho-hum ones you remember, but will be the larger equivalent of the turbo'd 4 cylinders, replacing conventional 8 cylinders. Just like nearly every other manufacturer is doing.
April 8, 2010 12:46 pm
 alessandro alessandro
Nissan/Infinity are important brands in Americas however in continental Europe will that alliance visible on the line between Mercedes and Renault. What comes to reliability issues then MB was always better to the certain point. Renault has his own strength, the fun factor or something which makes people happy. MB 190 I had once was fantastically good car as well as my funny Laguna I. Both were reliable as hell, which is fantastic but incomparable as often RWD/FWD cars are. Now when "doubtfully fueled future" is almost now and hence development of new solutions needed is one of the most expensive things in that industry that alliance will be somewhat successful. Only hope is that they'll benefit from each-others best values not only in little cars sector but also beyond it. For addition I would like to say that few years ago when Renault was trying to buy Volvo from Ford for $3,89 or smthn. billion then now it is sold out for half of it and with no possibility to have any advantage from that most advanced alliance in car industry which is sad thing even to think.
April 8, 2010 12:59 am
 THERENAISSANCEMAN THERENAISSANCEMAN
tell me when honeymoon's over , baby , then i shall give you a rundown on my ugly divorce from Chrysler...baby
April 12, 2010 9:59 am
 smakola smakola
Does that mean my Nissan and MERC are cousins?
April 13, 2010 1:30 am