TOKYO, May 14 — Crisis-hit Nissan today revealed full-year net profits at a near-decade low and forecast a further decline as it battles to recover after the shock arrest of its talismanic former boss Carlos Ghosn.

The Japanese firm’s bottom-line profit for the fiscal year to March fell 57.3 per cent to ¥319.1 billion (RM12.1 billion), the lowest since 2009-10 when the company was struggling in the wake of the global financial crisis.

Sales fell 3.2 per cent with operating profit down for a third straight year, said Nissan — which is allied with France’s Renault and fellow Japanese carmaker Mitsubishi Motors.

The results were in line with its downward revision announced last month.

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For the year to March 2020, Nissan said its net profit would nearly halve further to ¥170 billion with sales projected to fall 2.4 per cent.

The results came as ex-chairman Ghosn, now released on bail, awaits his fate after prosecutors hit him with a fourth set of charges over alleged financial misconduct.

Among other accusations, authorities suspect he syphoned off around US$5 million for his personal use from money transferred from Nissan to a dealership in Oman.

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Ghosn denies that charge and insists he is innocent of all allegations against him. — AFP