Honda's quarterly profit surged nearly 20 per cent on demand for remodelled cars in Japan and elsewhere in Asia.
The Japanese automaker also raised its full-year profit and sales forecasts.
Honda Motor Co reported a profit today of 146.5 billion yen (USD 1.4 billion) for the April-June fiscal first quarter, close to what analysts surveyed by FactSet had forecast.
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Honda, Japan's No. 3 automaker, posted 574 billion yen profit on 11.84 trillion yen sales for the last fiscal year, which ended March 2014.
Demand was strong recently for Honda's new City sedan in India, Mobilio seven-seater in Indonesia and the remodelled Fit subcompact in Japan, helping lift quarterly sales 5 percent year-on-year to 2.988 trillion yen (USD 29.3 billion).
Honda, which sold 1.06 million vehicles in April-June, expects to sell 4.83 million vehicles for the fiscal year through March 2015.
The Tokyo-based maker of the Odyssey minivan and Accord sedan sold 4.32 million vehicles last fiscal year.
Japanese rival Nissan Motor Co, which reported a quarterly profit jump of nearly 37 per cent on Monday, expects to sell 5.65 million vehicles this fiscal year, up 8.9 per cent from the previous year.
Toyota, the world's top automaker, reports earnings Aug 5.
Japanese automakers continue to do solid business in North America but have all embarked on an aggressive growth strategy in developing nations.
Honda is unique compared with Nissan and Toyota for its powerful motorcycle division that makes a significant contribution to its earnings.
Honda sold 4.14 million motorcycles during the fiscal first quarter, up from 4.05 million the same period a year earlier.