In This Article:
* Panel defers decision on new Nissan chairman nominee
* Ghosn could face longer detention - newspaper report
* Renault board expected to discuss crisis on Wednesday - sources (Updates throughout, adds details on panel's discussion)
By Maki Shiraki
TOKYO, Dec 4 (Reuters) - A Nissan Motor Co panel on Tuesday failed to nominate a successor to Carlos Ghosn as chairman in the wake of his arrest and dismissal for alleged financial misconduct last month, a source familiar with the situation told Reuters.
Ghosn could remain in detention until the end of the year as Tokyo prosecutors plan to rearrest him on a fresh claim of understating his income, the Sankei newspaper has reported.
Nissan has tasked a three-member panel of external directors with the selection of a new chairman. The panel includes Masakazu Toyoda - a former trade and industry official, Jean-Baptiste Duzan - a retired executive from Nissan's French partner Renault SA, and race car driver Keiko Ihara.
The panel plans to submit the name of a nominee at a board meeting on Dec. 17. Board changes must be approved by shareholders.
The panel did not discuss any particular executive as a nominee at its meeting on Tuesday, the source said, adding the selection was put off because Duzan asked for more time.
Two other people with knowledge of the matter said Renault's board was meeting on Wednesday to discuss the leadership crisis.
Ghosn continues to chair Renault's board, but was ousted from the position at Nissan and third alliance partner Mitsubishi Motors after his arrest on Nov. 19.
Some Nissan executives have long been unhappy with what they see as Renault's outsized influence over the Japanese automaker, which dwarfs Renault in vehicle sales.
Renault holds 43 percent of Nissan, while Nissan's 15 percent stake in its partner carries no voting rights.
DETENTION
Ghosn, the main architect of the alliance, has been detained in Tokyo since his arrest for allegedly conspiring with former Nissan Representative Director Greg Kelly to understate his income by about half of the actual 10 billion yen ($88 million), over five years from 2010.
Tokyo authorities on Friday extended Ghosn and Kelly's detention until the maximum Dec. 10.
Citing unnamed sources, the Sankei daily said prosecutors plan to arrest Ghosn and Kelly on Dec. 10 for the same crime covering the period from 2015 to 2017, during which they allegedly understated Ghosn's income by about 4 billion yen.
If authorities approve the maximum detention for that case, Ghosn and Kelly would remain in custody until Dec. 30, it said.