THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
August 6, 2020 at 16:26 JST
A visitor stands by a Toyota Motor Corp. logo at the company’s showroom in Tokyo on Jan. 30. (AP file photo)
Toyota’s profit plunged 74 percent in the last quarter as the coronavirus pandemic sank vehicle sales to about half of what the top Japanese automaker sold the previous year.
Toyota Motor Corp. reported on Thursday a profit of 158.8 billion yen ($1.5 billion) in April-June, down from 619 billion yen in the same period last year.
Toyota sold nearly 1.2 million vehicles globally during the quarter through June, down from 2.3 million vehicles last year.
Quarterly sales dipped 40 percent to 4.6 trillion yen, almost entirely because of damage from the pandemic that resulted in lockdowns, production halts and sales disruptions, the company said.
Toyota’s sales were hurt in nearly all global markets, including the United States, Japan and Europe. Sales were starting to recover in China, where the outbreak began late last year.
Although all the world’s automakers have been hurt badly by the outbreak, Toyota managed to stay in the black for the quarter, highlighting the resilience of the manufacturer of the Corolla subcompact, Prius hybrid and Lexus luxury models.
Japanese rivals Honda Motor Co. and Nissan Motor Co., as well as Detroit-based General Motors Co., slid into red ink in the latest quarter.
Toyota is projecting a 730 billion yen profit for the fiscal year through March 2021, down 64 percent from the previous fiscal year.
Toyota officials said the sales decline was bottoming out, with sales expected to gradually return to near-normal levels later this year.
Toyota said the recovery was going better than it had expected.
It raised its vehicle sales forecast for the fiscal year through March 2021 to 7.2 million vehicles from the forecast of 7 million vehicles it gave in May. That’s still down from the nearly 9 million vehicles Toyota sold in the previous fiscal year.
Toyota warned huge uncertainties remain over the pandemic.
“The impact of COVID-19 is wide-ranging, significant and serious, and it is expected that weakness will continue for the time being,” the company said in a statement.
Also Thursday, Aichi Prefecture, the region where Toyota’s headquarters is located, announced a state of emergency for the area due to rising virus cases and asked businesses and people to curb their activities, especially during an upcoming holiday.
Governor Hideaki Ohmura said Aichi Prefecture has been seeing more than 100 new infections reported daily since mid-July after an extended period of zero new daily cases.
Toyota, which has businesses throughout the world, said measures were already in place at plants and other locations to keep infections in check, such as keeping seats apart in worker cafeterias and avoiding face-to-face dialogue. But it’s keeping its plants, as well as dealers and other operations going, company officials said.
Here is a collection of first-hand accounts by “hibakusha” atomic bomb survivors.
A peek through the music industry’s curtain at the producers who harnessed social media to help their idols go global.
Cooking experts, chefs and others involved in the field of food introduce their special recipes intertwined with their paths in life.
A series based on diplomatic documents declassified by Japan’s Foreign Ministry
A series about Japanese-Americans and their memories of World War II