Life & Style | Motoring

Toyota to halt Japan output for 11 days

Toyota, Japan's largest automaker, will suspend some domestic production for 11 days in February and March, as the global recession saps car demand.

  • Bloomberg
  • Published: 23:58 January 6, 2009
  • Gulf News

Tokyo: Toyota, Japan's largest automaker, will suspend some domestic production for 11 days in February and March, as the global recession saps car demand.

Output at 12 domestic factories will be halted, company spokesman Hideaki Homma said yesterday by phone, confirming an earlier NHK television report.

The cut may reduce Toyota's production by about 200,000 units, according to Koji Endo, an analyst at Credit Suisse Securities (Japan) Ltd.

Toyota, which expects its first operating loss in 71 years, is cutting production, as its sales last month plunged 37 per cent in the US and 18 per cent in Japan. The company last month cut its sales forecast by 8.5 per cent to 7.54 million vehicles for the year ending March 31.

"The company has no other choice but to widen production cuts, should sales keep falling further," said Endo, who has an "underperform" rating on the stock. "Toyota needs to reduce inventory."

The company this month plans to halt domestic production for three days. Toyota will also scrap night shifts at 16 of its total 75 assembly lines worldwide from January, it said last month.

Toyota "aims to avoid" cutting full-time workers in Japan, President Katsuaki Watanabe told reporters today.

Toyota will cut 3,000 temporary staff by the end of the year, a measure that was unavoidable, Watanabe said.

Toyota's US deliveries plummeted to 141,949 in December from 224,399, as it failed to get a boost from no-interest loans offered on most models since October 2. In Japan, the company sold 77,157 units last month, as demand for Lexus luxury cars plunged 43 per cent.

The carmaker in December forecast an operating loss of 150 billion yen (Dh5.85 billion) in the year ending March 31. That compares with a previous profit forecast of 600 billion yen.

The Toyota City, Japan-based automaker lowered its sales forecast 6.5 per cent to 21.5 trillion yen.

"We don't know how much further the global economy will slide," Watanabe told reporters in Tokyo yesterday. "Car demand is falling from leading countries to emerging markets."

Toyota in November cut its domestic production forecast by 8.6 per cent to 3.85 million vehicles for the year ending March 31.

Toyota rose 1.3 per cent at the close of trading on the Tokyo Stock Exchange.

  • Rate this article
  • Average reader rating (0 votes) 0 Stars
Life & Style editor's choice
Baby Boomer: BMW's X1
Articles

Baby Boomer: BMW's X1

Richard M Hammond gets acquainted with BMW's new baby X1