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Top Nissan supplier sees order returning to supply chain

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Auto parts maker Jatco Ltd., majority-owned by Nissan Motor Co., said supply-chain issues disrupting the industry won’t last much longer and carmakers will be able to ramp up production again this fiscal year.

“Automakers will definitely recover in the latter half” of the year through March, Jatco CEO Teruaki Nakatsuka said in an interview, noting that current supply-chain challenges caused by the pandemic and global semiconductor shortage are “beyond all of our expectations” and “a bit like force majeure.”  

For now, automakers continue to battle a global chip shortage, with Nissan and the likes of Ford Motor Co., Stellantis and General Motors forced to idle some of their factories. IHS Markit forecasts that the semiconductor shortage will extend into next year, a view shared by GM CEO Mary Barra. 

“Some countries are on track to recovery, there is demand for cars and we are seeing new developments like electrification,” Nakatsuka said. The chip crunch has crippled supply more than past events such as earthquakes, typhoons and floods, he said. 

“The industry has some upside aspects, but the recent supply issue is big,” Nakatsuka said. “All we can do is take basic steps and closely communicate.”

Jatco, in which Mitsubishi Motors Corp. and Suzuki Motor Corp. also own stakes, supplies transmissions to automakers. Some of the parts are procured in Southeast Asian countries such as Malaysia and Thailand, where industrial production has been hit by coronavirus outbreaks. 

Nissan temporarily stopped production lines at a plant in Tennessee last month due to a shutdown at a Malaysian supplier, and CEO Makoto Uchida has warned that this quarter “will be very difficult.” 

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