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The latest results appear to show Toyota has managed to contain the damage from the spate of recalls
-- at least, so far. Toyota officials said the company spent 100 billion yen on recall-related measures, and lost between 70 billion yen and 80 billion yen in sales during the year ended March 31. They were vague about such damage for the current year, except to say Toyota estimates spending 80 billion yen for incentives to boost sales. Although sales have held up in recent months, much of that came from unprecedented incentives to lure customers in North America as well as growth from fast-growing Asian nations like China. For the fiscal year through March 31, Toyota posted a 209 billion yen ($2.3 billion) profit, a dramatic reversal from a 437 billion loss in the previous fiscal year, which was the automaker's worst annual red ink since being founded in 1937. The annual results were much better than analysts' forecasts and Toyota's cautious, internal forecast for an 80 billion yen profit. Global sales for the year ended March 31 totaled 7.24 million vehicles, down 4 percent from the previous year. Toyota is expecting that to improve to 7.29 million for the current fiscal year. Toyota is forecasting revenue to improve 1.3 percent to 19.2 trillion yen for the year through March 2011, from 18.95 trillion yen for the year ended March 31. That had marked a 7.7 percent decline from the previous year. Toyota said it has figured in costs for recall-related expenses in its forecasts for the current fiscal year. "To achieve further profit recovery, what we need to do is offer high quality, reasonably priced vehicles," said Toyoda, while stressing that tough times were likely to continue. He said Toyota will focus on green vehicles such as hybrids and emerging markets, including China, for its next phase of growth. Honda Motor Co. has also seen a recovery, with profit surging 96 percent to 268.4 billion yen ($2.9 billion) for the year ended March 31. Japan's No. 2 automaker is forecasting a 340 billion yen ($3.7 billion) profit for the year through March 2011. Nissan Motor Co. reports earnings Wednesday. Toyota's stock price slipped 0.7 percent to 3,495 yen in Tokyo.
[Associated
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