Nissan Motor Co., Ltd. (NSANF)
OTCMKTS
· Delayed Price · Currency is USD
2.890
0.00 (0.00%)
Mar 13, 2025, 4:00 PM EST
Nissan Motor Revenue
Nissan Motor had revenue of 3.16T JPY in the quarter ending December 31, 2024, with 1.64% growth. This brings the company's revenue in the last twelve months to 12.66T, up 3.17% year-over-year. In the fiscal year ending March 31, 2024, Nissan Motor had annual revenue of 12.69T with 19.71% growth.
Revenue (ttm)
12.66T JPY
Revenue Growth
+3.17%
P/S Ratio
n/a
Revenue / Employee
94.76M JPY
Employees
133,580
Market Cap
10.80B USD
Revenue Chart
* This company reports financials in JPY.
Revenue History
Fiscal Year End | Revenue | Change | Growth |
---|---|---|---|
Mar 31, 2024 | 12.69T | 2,089.02B | 19.71% |
Mar 31, 2023 | 10.60T | 2,172.11B | 25.78% |
Mar 31, 2022 | 8,424.59B | 562.01B | 7.15% |
Mar 31, 2021 | 7,862.57B | -2,016.29B | -20.41% |
Mar 31, 2020 | 9,878.87B | -1,695.38B | -14.65% |
Mar 31, 2019 | Pro | Pro | Pro |
Mar 31, 2018 | Pro | Pro | Pro |
Mar 31, 2017 | Pro | Pro | Pro |
Mar 31, 2016 | Pro | Pro | Pro |
Mar 31, 2015 | Pro | Pro | Pro |
Revenue Definition
Revenue, also called sales, is the amount of money a company receives from its business activities, such as sales of products or services. Revenue does not take any expenses into account and is therefore different from profits.
Full DefinitionNissan Motor News
- 1 day ago - Meet Ivan Espinosa, the ‘real car guy’ Nissan just tapped to be their new CEO - Fortune
- 2 days ago - The Ocean in Motion: Aurora Blue Metallic is Nissan's Newest Paint Color - Business Wire
- 2 days ago - Transcript: Nissan pushes CEO out - Financial Times
- 2 days ago - Nissan pushes CEO out - Financial Times
- 2 days ago - Honda agrees to ¥15,000 average monthly wage hike for 2025 - Forexlive
- 2 days ago - Toyota has met union pay rise request in full - Forexlive
- 2 days ago - Nissan agrees to a JPY 16,500 average monthly wage increase for 2025. - Forexlive
- 2 days ago - FirstFT: Ukraine ready to accept US-brokered ceasefire for resumption of military aid - Financial Times