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Oh carp: UK's Lammy on the hook after fishing with Vance without licence
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Sinner shrugs off rain to dispatch Mannarino in Cincinnati
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Tainted fentanyl blamed for 87 hospital deaths in Argentina
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Eyeing robotaxis, Tesla hiring New York test car operator
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NBA approves $6.1bn sale of Boston Celtics
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PSG beat Tottenham on penalties to win UEFA Super Cup after late comeback
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Cowboys owner Jones says experimental drug saved him after cancer diagnosis
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Striking Boeing defense workers turn to US Congress
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PSG beat Tottenham on penalties to win UEFA Super Cup
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Hong Kong court to hear closing arguments in mogul Jimmy Lai's trial
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US singer Billy Joel to sell off motorcycles due to health condition
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Barcelona's Ter Stegen validated as long-term injury by La Liga
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Storm makes landfall in China after raking Taiwan as typhoon
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Colombia buries assassinated presidential candidate
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Zverev finishes overnight job at Cincinnati Open
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Bukele critics face long exile from El Salvador homeland
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McIlroy 'shot down' suggestion of Ryder Cup playing captain role
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'Water lettuce' chokes tourism, fishing at El Salvador lake
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Peru's president signs military crimes amnesty bill into law
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At least 26 migrants dead in two shipwrecks off Italy
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Root says Warner jibe 'all part of the fun' heading into Ashes
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Plastic pollution treaty talks in disarray
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Trump eyes three-way meeting with Putin, Zelensky
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'Viable' chance for Ukraine ceasefire thanks to Trump: UK PM
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Vance visits US troops during UK trip
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Premier League has no say on delay over Man City charges, says chief exec
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Trump names Stallone, Strait among Kennedy Center honorees
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Israeli military says approved plan for new Gaza offensive
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Europeans urge Trump to push for Ukraine ceasefire in Putin summit
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Stocks extend gains on US rate-cut bets
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Venus Williams receives wild card for US Open singles
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Massive fire burns on mountain near western Canada city
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Plastic pollution plague blights Asia
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Typhoon Podul pummels Taiwan, heads towards China
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Russia in major Ukraine advance as Europe braces for Trump-Putin meet
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Stock markets extend gains on growing US rate cut hopes
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Typhoon Podul pummels Taiwan, heads towards mainland
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In heatwave, Romans turn to vintage snow cones to stay cool
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Russia in major Ukraine advance ahead of Trump-Putin meet in Alaska
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Ankara, Damascus top diplomats warn Israel over Syria action
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Deadlocked plastics treaty talks 'at cliff's edge'
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Stock markets rise on growing US rate cut hopes
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New cancer plan urged as survival improvements in England slow
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Japanese star convicted of indecent assault in Hong Kong
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Thousands battle Greece fires as heatwave bakes Europe
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Woodman-Wickliffe lines up 'one last ride' for Black Ferns at World Cup
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Bournemouth splash out on Diakite as Zabarnyi replacement
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Renowned Egyptian novelist Sonallah Ibrahim dies at 88
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Israel military says approved plan for new Gaza offensive
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Romero replaces Son as Spurs captain

Warning lights flash at Nissan after monster profit warning
The road ahead looks treacherous for Nissan after the Japanese auto giant predicted an enormous loss just as US President Donald Trump's tariffs on car imports hit the industry.
Nissan on Thursday warned it expected to have posted a loss of 700-750 billion yen ($4.9-$5.3 billion) in the business year that ended in March, blaming asset writedowns and restructuring costs.
"Despite these challenges, we have significant financial resources, a strong product pipeline and the determination to turn around Nissan in the coming period," the company promised.
But investors are unlikely to be reassured.
Nissan, one of the top 10 automakers by unit sales with roots going back over a century, is heavily in debt and lacking a clear next move after a mooted merger with rival Honda collapsed.
In March, the chief executive quit and investors have driven for the hills, sending Nissan shares down by more than 40 percent over the past year.
- Job cuts -
Nissan has lurched from crisis to crisis in recent years, with the dramatic arrest of former boss Carlos Ghosn -- who escaped Japan in a musical instrument box -- the Covid pandemic and the Ukraine war.
It has an uninspiring product line, including in electric cars, especially in China where unit sales tumbled 24.1 percent in the 2023 financial year.
On Wednesday, it announced investments of 10 billion yuan ($1.4 billion) into China, and said it would raise the number of new models it planned to launch by summer 2027 to 10, up from eight.
"We were not at the same speed, mainly because the Chinese brands were exceptional with speed," Nissan's China chief Stephen Ma said at the Auto Shanghai industry show.
Last year, Nissan announced 9,000 job cuts worldwide and that it was slashing production capacity by 20 percent.
In February, talks with Honda on merging to create the world's third-biggest automaker by number of vehicles collapsed. The negotiations had also involved Mitsubishi Motors.
This prompted Moody's to cut its credit rating on Nissan to junk, citing "weak profitability driven by slowing demand for its ageing model portfolio".
- Options limited -
Now, to make matters worse, since April, the United States has imposed a 25-percent surcharge on all imported vehicles.
Bloomberg Intelligence analyst Tatsuo Yoshida told AFP that Nissan will be the most severely impacted of all major Japanese automakers.
Last year, Nissan generated 30 percent of its revenues in the United States, selling 924,000 vehicles there, 45 percent of them imported from Japan and Mexico.
If Nissan absorbs the full impact of the tariffs without passing costs to the market or customers, this would mean a loss of 440 billion yen ($3.1 billion), Yoshida calculates.
To hedge, Nissan is tweaking its production.
This includes reversing plans to reduce output at its Tennessee plant and stopping sales in the United States of two models made in Mexico.
But more drastic measures could be needed, including shifting production wholesale from Mexico and Japan to the United States.
But this will take time, even assuming Nissan has spare factory capacity in America.
"Transferring production means creating capacity, tooling, finding suppliers," an industry source told AFP. "To achieve anything significant, it will take at least two years."
In any case, given the unpredictability of Trump's policies, analysts said it was unlikely that Nissan -- or any Japanese automaker -- would announce any major shift for now.
- Hon Hai help? -
"If this situation goes on forever, it can be a death blow for Nissan, in a sense that it will run out of cash and default," Yoshida said before Thursday's profit warning.
But he added that if this happens, he expects a financial partner to come to the rescue, in the shape of Honda or a technology firm like Apple.
In February, Nissan shares briefly surged on a reported push to bring Elon Musk's Tesla on as an investor.
Reports in December said Taiwan's Foxconn -- also known as Hon Hai, which assembles iPhones and wants to move into cars -- had approached Nissan to buy a majority stake.
jug-tmo-tsz-stu/sco
E.Rodriguez--AT