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Toyota had so far avoided the serious problems of its money-losing U.S. rivals General Motors Corp. and Ford Motor Co., which had seen on-year double-digit vehicles sale declines in the U.S. for some time. But in October, U.S. sales slid to their lowest in 17 years, dipping 32 percent overall. Like other Japanese automakers, Honda Motor Co. and Nissan Motor Co. Toyota sales were badly hurt, sliding down 23 percent despite a zero-percent financing offer. Toyota, which also makes the Lexus luxury models, revised its sales forecast for the year through March 2009 to 23 trillion yen ($232 billion). That's down 12.5 percent from 26.3 trillion yen the previous year. Toyota had earlier expected 25 trillion yen ($253 billion) in sales for the fiscal year. Toyota said it was wary of the global slowdown and the gyrations in stock and currency markets, where the yen surged to a 13-year high late last month and has since eased some. It also said competition in compact cars and other lower priced models is growing. For the quarter ended Sept. 30, Toyota produced 1.95 million vehicles worldwide, down 2.6 percent from 2.00 million vehicles the same period a year ago. Toyota stock fell 10.4 percent to 3,810 yen ($38). Toyota's earnings were released after trading ended in Tokyo.
[Associated
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