Nissan Americas head affirms continued U.S. production amid tariffs
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Summary
Bloomberg Television segment features Nissan Americas Chairman Christian Meunier discussing the company's North American production strategy. He states that Nissan will maintain and expand U.S. manufacturing at its Tennessee and Mississippi plants, noting a rise from 45% to 60% U.S.-built vehicles last year, and cites tariff pressures on Mexico-sourced models as a reason to continue investing domestically.
Editorial Assessment
The clip accurately conveys Meunier's public remarks on shifting production mix to mitigate 25% tariffs imposed in 2025 on vehicles from Mexico. Context on exact tariff cost pass-through and cost-reduction efforts is consistent with industry reporting. Viewers receive a clear executive perspective but limited data on overall financial impact or consumer price effects. Sourcing is direct from the executive; no contradictory evidence appears in contemporaneous coverage.
Key Moments
Nissan operates large plants in Smyrna, Tennessee and Mississippi and will continue building cars in the US
Confirmed by Nissan official sites and recent reporting; Mississippi plant is in Canton.
U.S.-built share of product mix rose from 45% early last year to 60% by year-end
Aligns with Automotive News reporting on Nissan's America-first production shift and tariff-cost reductions.
25% tariffs add roughly $2,000-$3,000 per Mexico-built vehicle
Matches multiple reports citing $2,500-$3,000 cost increase per affected vehicle under 2025 tariffs.
Aggressive cost-reduction program targets Mexico-built models to improve affordability
Consistent with executive statements and company efforts to offset tariff impacts.
Sources Consulted
- How Nissan cut tariff costs by $2.3 billion with its America-first strategy
- Nissan Americas Head Says Cheap Cars Can’t Be Built in the US
- Nissan Manufacturing - Our People, Products & Purpose
- Nissan aims to 'max out' U.S. production plant amid tariffs
- Nissan urges that low-cost US cars can only be made in Mexico