|

Business

Toyota lifts profit forecast as disaster woes fade

Wednesday, February 08, 2012



TOKYO, Japan — Toyota's quarterly profit slid 13.5 per cent on production setbacks caused by last year's tsunami disaster and the flooding in Thailand, but Japan's top automaker raised its annual earnings forecast, saying a recovery is on track.

Toyota Motor Corp reported yesterday an 80.9 billion yen ($90.3 billion) profit for the October-December third quarter, down from 93.6 billion yen a year earlier.

Showing confidence in its ability to bounce back, the manufacturer of the Prius gas-electric hybrid, Lexus luxury models and the Camry sedan raised its annual profit forecast to 200 billion yen from 180 billion yen.

Still, the higher forecast is barely half of what Toyota raked in the previous fiscal year at 408 billion yen.

Last year was tough for Japanese automakers as the earthquake and tsunami in northeastern Japan devastated key suppliers. The flooding in Thailand in late 2011 hit them with new supply problems just as they were starting to recover from the March disaster.

Toyota Senior Managing Officer Takahiko Ijichi pointed to the strong yen as also behind the declining profits.

The dollar dropped to about 77 yen for the latest quarter from 83 yen the same period in 2010.

Ijichi credited cost cuts as behind the more upbeat annual forecasts.

"Toyota remains committed to pursuing an improvement of its earnings structure through various cost reduction activities as well as continuing the production recovery from the Japan earthquake and floods in Thailand," he said.

Toyota posted 4.865 trillion yen in quarterly sales, up 4.1 per cent from the previous year.

Although Toyota lost sales as a result of production disruptions, such problems have gradually been fixed.

Toyota said Tuesday its major plant in the US, the one in Mississippi that makes the Corolla, added a second shift, bringing annual production capacity to 150,000 vehicles, as planned.

The plant's construction was stalled after the 2008 financial crisis, and vehicle production finally began in October last year.

Toyota is now expecting to sell 7.41 million vehicles around the world for the fiscal year ending March 2012, up from the previous forecast for 7.38 million vehicles. It is optimistic sales will improve in North America, Europe and Japan as well as the rest of Asia.

The quarterly results were released after the stock market closed. Toyota stock was unchanged at 2,986 yen.



Red Stripe to grow own raw materials in Jamaica

  4 comments

 

Facebook falls flat in public debut

  2 comments

 

IT company launches cash recycler machine

  0 comments

 

'How bush can get us billions'

  0 comments

 

Slow growth projected for Deposit Insurance Fund

  0 comments

 

Beyond Facebook: A look at social network history

  0 comments

 

How to do tax reform when facing a fiscal crisis?

  0 comments

 

Jamaica National launches money transfer service in Ghana

  0 comments

 

Telecoms show support for customers

  0 comments

 

COK credits aggresive cost, debt management for turnaround

  0 comments

 

Exploratory oil well off Cuba comes up dry

  0 comments

 

Salary: Not a secret in the home

  0 comments

 

Pan Jam buys 20% of Chukka

  0 comments

 

C2W Music IPO clears $129-m

  0 comments

 

Growth will not come from the budget

  6 comments

 

Regional FDI hits record

  0 comments

 

Crime takes 6% of GDP

  0 comments

 

How Jamaica can escape international crisis

  0 comments

 

SMEs to access cheap software

  0 comments

 

Business climate needs fixing for growth

  0 comments

 

Today's Cartoon


Poll

 Do/Would you disclose details of your salary with your spouse? 
Yes
No

View Results

Results published weekly in Sunday Finance


Username:
Password: