KEY POINTS
  • A variety of factors contributed to Nissan's weak performance for the fiscal year, including the slumping Chinese automotive market as well as problems in North America.
  • The automaker had to adjust production and lay out lavish incentives to compensate for overly aggressive sales targets.
  • Nissan's earnings fell by more than half to just 319.1 billion yen, or $2.9 billion, down from 746.9 billion yen during the fiscal year that ended March 31, 2018.
Former Nissan Motor Chariman Carlos Ghosn leaves the Tokyo Detention House in Tokyo, Japan April 25, 2019.

Prosecutors in Tokyo asked a judge for permission to revise one of the key financial misconduct charges facing former Nissan Chairman Carlos Ghosn, an allegation that he diverted company cash to a Saudi friend.

The move came on the same day that Japan's second-largest automaker announced its 2018 fiscal earnings had plummeted to their lowest level in 11 years. And the scandal surrounding the arrest of the man once credited with saving Nissan is getting at least some of the blame.