. | . |
|
. |
by Staff Writers Tokyo (AFP) Aug 2, 2011 Japan's Toyota Motor on Tuesday raised its full-year profit target despite seeing first quarter net profit tumble 99 percent as it grappled with the March disasters and a strong yen. The world's biggest automaker said net profit plunged to 1.16 billion yen ($14.9 million) in April-June from a year-earlier 190.4 billion, squeezing out a gain despite disruption caused by the March 11 earthquake and tsunami. However, amid a faster-than-expected recovery from the disasters, Toyota said it expects a second-half production rebound to help it to an annual net profit of 390 billion yen, up 39 percent from its June estimate. "Restoration has occurred at a faster-than-expected speed," Toyota senior managing officer Takahiko Ijichi told reporters Tuesday. The automaker has said it planned to hire up to 4,000 contract workers at its Japan factories to make up lost ground, as component supplies normalise after the factories of Tohoku-based suppliers were damaged in the disasters. Production is expected to fully recover after September when post-quake parts shortages subside, Ijichi told reporters on Tuesday, after an inability to produce hammered sales in April-June. The firm now expects annual production to be reduced by 150,000 units due to the disaster, a third of a previous estimate. For the year ending March 2012, Toyota forecast an operating profit of 450 billion yen on net sales of 19 trillion yen. The maker of the Prius hybrid and upscale Lexus brand slipped to an operating loss of 108 billion yen in the period from a year-earlier profit of 211.6 billion yen. Net revenue fell 29.4 percent on-year to 3.4 trillion yen. Japanese companies are nevertheless staging a rebound from the impact of the 9.0-magnitude earthquake and a tsunami that left 20,000 dead or missing and crippled power-generating facilities, including a nuclear plant at the centre of an ongoing crisis. As power and parts supply woes mounted in the quake's aftermath, automakers announced production disruptions domestically and overseas because of the crisis, temporarily slowing output or shutting plants. "In Japan and North America where the effects of the earthquake were particularly serious, vehicle sales declined substantially," Ijichi said. In Japan, sales in the period plunged 42 percent on-year and 48 percent in the United States. Compounding the quake impact is a strong yen that analysts say threatens Japan's post-disaster rebound and could force more production overseas. For Toyota, which makes around 40 percent of its cars domestically, the strong yen makes it difficult to earn money on them when sold overseas. It recently announced plans to merge Tohoku-based subsidiaries to help it cope. At around 77 to the dollar and 111 to the euro, the yen is currently trading at a higher rate than Toyota's full-year assumptions of 80 yen to the dollar and 116 yen to the euro. "The yen's current level is really hard for exporters like us. The level is beyond the limit," Ijichi told reporters. "To be honest, we cannot catch up with the speed of forex rate fluctuations." However, he added: "It is important for Toyota to be based in Japan. The company needs to produce 3 million cars (in Japan annually). We have to cope with the yen's strength while protecting domestic production." Toyota is the third of Japan's big-three automakers to report April-June quarter earnings. Honda said net profit for the period plunged 88.3 percent to 31.7 billion yen. Nissan saw a less severe 20.3 percent decline to 85 billion yen. The March disaster hit Toyota just as it was recovering from a crisis that saw it recall nearly nine million autos between late 2009 and February last year due to brake and accelerator defects. Toyota shares closed down 0.31 percent at 3,160 in Tokyo trade before the announcement on Tuesday.
|
. |
|
The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2011 - Space Media Network. AFP and UPI Wire Stories are copyright Agence France-Presse and United Press International. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by Space Media Network on any Web page published or hosted by Space Media Network. Privacy Statement |