Toyota on Friday said nine-month net profit jumped nearly 10 per cent to 1.9 trillion yen ($16 billion), despite falling sales in most regions, with the world’s top automaker focused on squeesing more productivity out of its plants.
The Corolla and Prius maker also slightly raised its fiscal year profit forecast to 2.27 trillion yen, but unit sales were down in most regions, including Europe and Japan, while North America rose.
The region has stood out for Japanese automakers, with rival Honda last week saying it was a bright spot that helped offset sluggish sales at home. Toyota and its domestic rivals have benefited from healthy growth in the US where low interest rates proved a boon to consumers, although the slim possibility of rate hikes this year could dampen sales.
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“A further slowdown in emerging economies may affect (Toyota’s) sales overseas, and an expected rate hike in the US would dampen customers’ appetite” for new cars, said Shigeru Matsumura, analyst at SMBC Friend Research Center, adding, "These are potential risks."
The weaker yen has made Japanese automakers relatively more competitive overseas and inflated the value of repatriated overseas profits, although the unit has strengthened recently.
Toyota has said all its domestic parts plants would shut for a full day next week, expanding a production suspension that is set to be its longest since the March 2011 earthquake and tsunami disaster.
The move was due to a components shortage following an explosion at a supplier.
It was not clear if the temporary production shutdown would affect results in the current quarter.
"We are going to take all the necessary measures for a speedy recovery of production," Toyota managing officer Tetsuya Otake told a news briefing.
"The impact of the suspension is not taken into account in our forecasts - it is difficult to evaluate for the time being."
Also this week, Toyota said it will drop its Scion brand, the often-quirky line of cars it launched in the United States more than a decade ago targeted at younger Americans.
The company said the move was driven by a market shifting away from small cars and by changes in buying habits.