Toyota
lifts profit outlook as weak yen offsets Japan slump
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[February 04, 2015]
By Chang-Ran Kim
TOKYO (Reuters) - Toyota Motor Corp lifted
its operating profit guidance on Wednesday in a widely expected move, as
a weaker yen increases the value of sales overseas and makes up for
slumping demand at home.
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The yen's decline has been a boon for Toyota, which exports roughly
half of its vehicles produced in Japan. Cost-cutting undertaken when
the yen hovered at record highs in recent years has also helped the
automaker's bottom line.
The world's biggest automaker now expects record profit of 2.70
trillion yen ($22.93 billion) for the year ending March 31. That is
8 percent higher than the previous forecast of 2.5 trillion yen and
compares with the 2.762 trillion yen average estimate of 30 analysts
polled by Thomson Reuters I/B/E/S.
The revised guidance puts Toyota's operating profit margin forecast
at 10.0 percent from 9.4 percent based on the previous projection.
"This is the result of our efforts started during the strong-yen era
to boost per-vehicle profitability and lower fixed costs," Managing
Officer Takuo Sasaki said of the margin.
For October-December, Toyota said operating profit grew 27 percent
to 762.88 billion yen, versus the 690.21 billion yen estimate of 15
analysts. It also changed its U.S. dollar-yen exchange rate
assumption to 109 yen for the current year, from 104 yen.
In the United States, Toyota's biggest market, the automaker has
outperformed Japanese rivals thanks to a line-up that spans all
vehicle categories. Cheaper fuel has hit sales of the Prius and
other green models but fanned demand for its Lexus luxury brand,
pickup trucks and other high-margin vehicles where Japanese peers
have fewer offerings.
On Wednesday, the company nudged up its annual sales forecast for
North America to 2.75 million vehicles from 2.74 million, while
trimming its projections for Japan, Asia and Europe.
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Company watchers are now awaiting the end of Toyota's three-year
freeze on new factories through March 2016, aimed at preventing
unchecked expansion. In the meantime, capacity constraints are
widely expected to curb sales growth.
Last month, Toyota said it expects its global sales to drop 1
percent this calendar year, dragged down by a sharp decline in
Japan, where car sales are dwindling due to the lingering effect of
a sales tax hike last April.
Shares of Toyota ended 2.4 percent higher ahead of the earnings
announcement, versus a 2.0 percent gain in the benchmark index.
($1 = 117.7300 yen)
(Additional reporting by Mari Saito; Editing by Christopher Cushing)
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