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Toyota has said it is fully cooperating in the investigation and has issued a warning not to use the problem mats. But U.S. authorities said earlier this week that was an "interim measure" and have urged Toyota to come up with a solution for "the underlying defect in the vehicles." As with other Japanese exporters, Toyota has been hurt by a strong yen. The dollar has traded at 90 yen levels in recent months, down from about 108 yen a year ago. Toyota said unfavorable exchange rates erased 180 billion yen (about $2 billion) from its latest quarterly profit. Ryoichi Saito, auto analyst with Mizuho Investors Securities in Tokyo, said Toyota's recovery appeared to be slower than Honda's because of costs related to withdrawing from F1 and closing a California plant it ran with General Motors Co. "Although vehicle sales may be turning out better than expected, Toyota still has a long ways to go in the second half," he said. "There is some optimism for auto operations." On the bright side, Toyota is seeing rising demand in emerging markets like China, although that has yet to completely offset flagging sales in the key North American market. And sales are growing in Japan for its Prius hybrid, which is now tax free thanks to a government stimulus measure. Signs are also emerging the decline in U.S. demand may finally be bottoming out, but sales remain weak. Toyota's vehicle sales in October edged up less than a percent in the U.S. For the first fiscal half, Toyota lost 56 billion yen ($622 million), a reversal from 494 billion yen in profit, on 8.378 trillion yen ($93 billion) in sales, down 31 percent from the same period the previous year. Honda, Japan's No. 2 automaker, last month raised its profit outlook for the full fiscal year to 155 billion yen ($1.7 billion), nearly four times its initial projection. Earlier this week, Nissan, the nation's third-largest automaker, said it expects a narrower net loss of 40 billion yen ($444 million) for the fiscal year through March 2010, better than its earlier forecast for a 170 billion yen ($1.8 billion) loss. Shares of Toyota, which reported after the close of trade Thursday, closed down 0.8 percent at 3,580 yen ($39) in Tokyo.
[Associated
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