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The dollar has slid to about 77 yen in the past few days. Automakers are counting on it trading at about 80 yen this year. Toyota recorded lower vehicle sales in all key regions around the world in the latest quarter, including Japan and North America. But it is optimistic about a comeback in the second half of the fiscal year. Toyota has said that car production is almost back to normal after initially warning that restoring full capacity would take until late in 2011. Ijichi said Toyota will offer a new models in coming months in the U.S. and likely resort to fleet sales and aggressive incentives to regain market share so it can be back at pre-disaster levels by early next year. Toyota sold 1.22 million vehicles worldwide in April-June, down about a third from 1.82 million vehicles during the same period in 2010. Separately, Toyota announced Tuesday its production and sales plan for the January-December 2011 calendar year. Toyota plans to make 8.04 million vehicles around the world in 2011 and sell 7.9 million vehicles
-- showing that the automaker is back on a growth track after being hit by the global financial crisis and massive recalls. Before those woes, Toyota had been targeting global sales of 10 million vehicles for 2009. Two days before Japan was struck by the magnitude-9.0 earthquake, President Akio Toyoda, the grandson of the automaker's founder, outlined a global strategy aimed at achieving an industry first of annual sales of 10 million vehicles by 2015. Other Japanese automakers also surprised by holding up relatively well, partly due to good sales in high growth markets such as China, where they remain strong players. Nissan Motor Co., Japan's No. 2 automaker, last week reported a smaller-than-expected 20 percent drop in quarterly profit to 85 billion yen ($1 billion), and stuck to its forecast for 270 billion yen ($3.5 billion) in annual profit. Honda Motor Co. reported Monday a nearly 90 percent plunge in quarterly profit to 31.7 billion yen ($412 million), but raised its full year forecast to a 230 billion yen ($2.9 billion) profit. Honda expects to sell 3.435 million vehicles worldwide, some 135,000 more than it forecast in June. It sold 3.512 million vehicles the previous fiscal year. Toyota stock slipped 0.3 percent to 3,160 yen. Earnings were announced after trading ended in Tokyo.
[Associated
Press;
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