Honda and Nissan are in talks to merge by 2026, a historic pivot for Japan's auto industry that underlines the threat Chinese EV makers now pose to the world's long-dominant legacy car makers.
The tie-up would create the world's third-largest auto group by vehicle sales after Toyota and Volkswagen.
It would also give the two companies scale and a chance to share resources in the face of intense competition from Tesla and more nimble Chinese rivals, such as BYD.
The merger of Honda, Japan's second-largest automaker, with Nissan, its No. 3, would be the biggest reshaping in the global auto industry since Fiat Chrysler Automobiles and PSA merged in 2021 to create Stellantis in a $52-billion deal.
Smaller Mitsubishi Motors, in which Nissan is top shareholder, was also considering joining and would make a decision by the end of January, the companies said.
Honda will appoint the majority of the holding company's board. (AP PHOTO)
The chief executives of all three held a joint press conference in Tokyo.
"The rise of Chinese automakers and new players has changed the car industry quite a lot," said Honda CEO Toshihiro Mibe, citing technological trends of electrification and autonomous driving.
"We have to build up capabilities to fight with them by 2030, otherwise we'll be beaten."
The two companies would aim for combined sales of 30 trillion yen ($A300 billion) and operating profit of more than three trillion yen through the potential merger, they said.
They aimed to wrap up talks about June 2025 before setting up a holding company by August 2026, when shares of both companies would be delisted.
Honda, which has a market capitalisation of more than $US40 billion, roughly four times that of Nissan, would appoint the majority of the company's board, they said.
Combining with Mitsubishi Motors would take the Japanese group's global sales to more than eight million cars.
The current No. 3 is South Korea's Hyundai and Kia.
Honda and Nissan have been exploring ways to bolster their partnership, including a merger, Reuters reported last week.
In March, both said they were considering co-operation on electrification and software development.
They widened the collaboration to Mitsubishi Motors in August.
Nissan and Honda have been exploring ways to bolster their partnership. (AP PHOTO)
In November, Nissan announced a plan to cut 9000 jobs and 20 per cent of its global production capacity after sales plunged in the key China and US markets.
Honda also reported worse-than-expected earnings due to a China sales slump, although solid motorcycle and hybrid car businesses helped it secure a relatively stable financial base.
"This is not a rescue of Nissan," however, Honda's Mibe said, adding that Nissan's business turnaround was a "prerequisite" for the merger.
Like other foreign car makers, Honda and Nissan have lost ground in the world's biggest market China to BYD and other domestic makers of electric and hybrid cars loaded with innovative software.
In a separate online news conference on Monday, former Nissan chairman Carlos Ghosn, now wanted in Japan as a fugitive for jumping bail and fleeing to Lebanon, said he did not believe the Honda-Nissan alliance would be successful, because the two were automakers were not complementary.
French auto maker Renault, Nissan's largest shareholder, said it would "discuss with Nissan and consider all possible options".
Taiwan's Foxconn, seeking to expand its nascent EV contract manufacturing business, approached Nissan about a bid but the Japanese company rejected it, sources have told Reuters.
Taiwan's Foxconn, seeking to expand its nascent EV contract manufacturing business, approached Nissan about a bid but the Japanese company rejected it, sources have told Reuters.
Foxconn decided to pause the approach after it sent a delegation to meet Renault in France, Bloomberg News said on Friday.
Nissan chief executive Makoto Uchida, at Monday's news conference, denied a view that Foxconn's move prompted its merger talks with Honda.
Uchida said Nissan continued to work with Renault on a "project basis" if there was synergy, while Mibe said Honda would not change its relations with General Motors.