Los Angeles Toyota Motor, seeking record US Prius sales in 2012, said increased supply of the hybrid helped the automaker beat analysts' estimates for February sales and will buoy gains in March amid rising fuel prices.

Asia's largest carmaker reported on Thursday that sales of Toyota, Lexus and Scion vehicles rose 12 per cent last month, more than the 8.2 per cent average of seven estimates compiled by Bloomberg. Prius sales, including the v wagon, were up 52 per cent to 20,589, the highest in almost four years. The total for all Toyota and Lexus hybrids climbed 60 per cent.

"They're targeting 220,000 Prius sales," said Alan Baum, principal of Baum & Associates, a provider of auto-industry analysis in West Bloomfield, Michigan. "Given the assumption we'll have high gas prices into the summer, this looks like a reasonably good bet."

Revamped Camry

The Toyota City, Japan-based automaker sold 159,423 vehicles in the US last month. Toyota also benefited from demand for the revamped Camry sedan that went on sale in late 2011, with deliveries rising 27 per cent.

The carmaker is running no-interest loan offers for Avalon sedans, Tundra pickups, Venza wagons, Highlander and RAV4 sport-utility vehicles, and Sienna minivans to keep sales growing across the Toyota brand.

"They are clearly in the best position they've been in in the last two years," Jesse Toprak, industry analyst for pricing service TrueCar.com, said.

Consumers gained confidence in February as the Dow Jones Industrial Average exceeded 13,000 for the first time since May 2008 and the unemployment rate fell to the lowest in three years. The average price for a gallon of regular unleaded gasoline has increased 14 per cent this year to $3.74 as of February 29, according to AAA, the largest US motorist group.

Toyota started this month with more than 25,000 Prius hatchbacks and wagons already on the way to dealers, or at least 29 days of supply, one of the highest levels it has had in the US for the gasoline-electric model, Bob Carter, the company's group vice-president of US sales, said. The Prius c subcompact and plug-in model will also go on sale this month and boost sales for the hybrid, he said. "I like our positioning in the market," Carter said on the call. "We projected an increase in fuel prices as we moved into the spring. We didn't expect fuel prices would move this quickly and this rapidly."

That's benefiting dealers such as Don Mushin, general manager at Toyota of Hollywood in Los Angeles, which says it's among the top three Prius sellers in the US by volume. The dealership's supply of Prius models has nearly doubled in the past couple of months, and the new small version of the hybrid that arrives within the week should be a particularly strong seller, he said.

"It's a whole different story from a year ago," said Mushin. "If gas prices go to $5, I think the Prius c that's priced at around $20,000 (Dh73,000) will probably be the commuter car for everybody."

Honda, based in Tokyo, said sales for the Honda and Acura brands grew 12 per cent to 110,157, including a 42 per cent surge for the Civic small car. Nissan, based in Yokohama, Japan, posted a 16 per cent increase to 106,731 Nissan and Infiniti vehicles.

The averages of seven estimates were for gains of 4.5 per cent for Honda and 6.1 per cent for Nissan.

Hyundai, Kia

Hyundai and Kia, affiliates that operate separately, combined for a 26 per cent jump from a year earlier. The Seoul- based companies beat the average of five analysts' estimates for a 19 per cent gain. Sales of Hyundai's Accent small car were up 29 per cent. Kia benefited as deliveries of the Optima mid-size sedan more than doubled.

Market share drops 0.4%

Toyota's market share in February was 13.9 per cent, according to Woodcliff Lake, New Jersey-based Autodata. That was a drop of 0.4 point from a year earlier, as the company's sales gain trailed the industry's.

Honda, Nissan, Hyundai and Kia Motors also reported February sales that topped analysts' estimates. Toyota's gain contributed to a 16 per cent increase for all Asian brands last month, as the industrywide US annual sales pace was the highest since February 2008, according to Autodata Corp. With rising petrol prices stoking demand for fuel- efficient vehicles and signs of a strengthening economy helping light trucks, the industry's sales also advanced 16 per cent.