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Toyota Slashes Profit Forecast by More Than Half
Topics:Earnings
Companies:Samsung
Reuters | 05 Nov 2008 | 10:06 PM ET
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Toyota Motor slashed its annual operating profit forecast by more than half Thursday as the financial crisis hits auto demand, cuts access to credit and sends the yen higher.

Toyota
David Zalubowski / AP
Toyota.

For the year to March 31, the world's biggest automaker now expects operating profit of 600 billion yen ($6.1 billion) versus a previous forecast of 1.6 trillion yen. A poll of 17 brokerages had forecast 1.34 trillion yen.

The maker of the Camry sedan, Prius gas-electric hybrid and Tundra pickup truck now expects net profit of 550 billion yen instead of 1.25 trillion yen.

Toyota [TM  Loading...      ()   ], until recently the envy of the industry with eight straight years of profit growth, has had to put factories on hold, release temporary staff and offer buyers unprecedented incentives as sales in the crucial U.S. market slumped further than it expected.

With two months remaining this year, Toyota's U.S. sales are down 12 percent to date, forcing it to lower its forecast there this week for the second time in four months.

Toyota's July-September operating profit fell 72 percent to 169.5 billion yen, while net profit sank 69 percent to 139.8 billion yen.  Shares in Toyota have lost 37 percent in the year to date, better than the 43 percent decline in Tokyo's transport sub-index.

The company reported a record 2.27 trillion yen profit last year, but the industry's woes have seen its shares slide by a third this year, to 3,870 on Thursday -- in line with a similar fall in Tokyo's transport sector subindex.

The Tokyo Shimbun reported last month that Toyota's operating profit would be 1-1.2 trillion yen, but said growing woes in the sector would mean a further downgrade to below 1 trillion yen ($10 billion).

     
U.S. Blues

Toyota, the maker of the Camry sedan, Prius gas-electric hybrid and Tundra pickup truck, has previously forecast a 30 percent fall in operating profit to 1.6 trillion yen this year.

Toyota's U.S. sales have fallen 12 percent so far this year, prompting the top Japanese automaker to lower its forecast there this week -- the second cut in four months.

Its October U.S. sales slid 26 percent from last year, while its non-minicar sales in Japan fell 13 percent.

Detroit's General Motors [GM  Loading...      ()   ], Ford Motor [F  Loading...      ()   ] and Chrysler LLC are faring worse, suffering sharper sales drops and struggling to return to profit.
The slump is also prompting talk of mergers between GM and Chrysler as sales plunge and they face deep losses.

The impact of the global credit crisis has spread to emerging markets such as China and India, throwing a wrench in automakers' plans to seek strong growth there to offset slumping sales in the big U.S. and European markets.

Toyota's announcement will complete a brutal earnings season for Japanese carmakers. Of the eight, only Fuji Heavy Industries did not lower its annual forecasts. Nissan Motor [NSANY  Loading...      ()   ] shocked investors last week by more than halving its operating profit forecast.

More From CNBC.com ...

Toyota has lost $77 billion in market capitalization this year, ceding its long-held post as the world's most valuable carmaker to Volkswagen, which has gained on Porsche's plan to buy more than three-quarters of the German car maker.

Copyright 2008 Reuters. Click for restrictions.

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