Toyota to build $1.6
billion U.S. plant with rival Mazda: source
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[August 04, 2017]
By David Shepardson and Joseph White
WASHINGTON/
DETROIT (Reuters) - Toyota Motor
Corp and rival Mazda Motor Corp are expected to announce plans on Friday
to build a $1.6 billion U.S assembly plant as part of a new joint
venture, a person briefed on the matter said.
The plant will be capable of producing 300,000 vehicles a year, with
production divided between the two automakers, and will employ about
4,000 people when it opens in 2021, the person said.
A new auto plant would be a major boost to U.S. President Donald Trump,
who campaigned on promises to increase manufacturing and expand
employment for American autoworkers.
The source, who was not authorized to speak to the media and requested
anonymity, said the plant in a yet-to-be-determined U.S. location was
expected to build Toyota Corolla cars and a Mazda crossover utility
vehicle.
Japan's Nikkei reported earlier on Thursday that Toyota would take a
roughly 5 percent stake in Mazda Motor Corp <7261.T> to develop key
electric vehicle technologies and jointly build a factory in the United
States.
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The source confirmed the Japanese carmakers planned future joint efforts
on electric vehicles.
Toyota said the two companies have been exploring various areas of
collaboration under a May 2015 agreement, and added that the group
intended to submit a proposal to its board on Friday regarding Mazda. It
did not comment further.
"The industry pace of electrification has really picked up," Toyota
Chairman Takeshi Uchiyamada, widely known as the father of the Prius
hybrid, said at an event outside Tokyo on Friday, declining to comment
on the U.S. plant or a Mazda deal.
He defended Toyota against concerns the company has fallen behind its
competition on electric cars, citing new technology.
Mazda said in statement that “nothing has been decided yet” and added
the company would have a board meeting today. It did not comment
further.
"Mazda needs electrification technology. In the past they've poo-pooed
EVs, they've felt that they can make internal combustion engines more
efficient, but the bottom line is that globally you need to have this
technology," said Janet Lewis, head of Asia transportation research at
Macquarie Securities.
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With an R&D budget of around 140 billion yen ($1.27 billion) this year,
a fraction of Toyota's 1 trillion yen, Mazda has said that it lacks the
funds to develop electric cars on its own. Subaru Corp <7270.T>, Japan's
smallest major automaker, also has a partnership with Toyota.
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A Toyota automaker
employee moves an engine at the Toyota engine assembly line in
Huntsville, Alabama, U.S. on November 13, 2009. REUTERS/Carlos
Barria/File Photo
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PRODUCTION BOOST
Toyota, the world's second-largest automaker by vehicle sales in 2016 and
Japan's dominant car company, has been forging alliances with smaller Japanese
rivals for several years, effectively consolidating the Japanese auto sector.
A new U.S. assembly plant would likely become the prize in a fierce competition
among Midwestern and Southern states eager to expand manufacturing jobs.
The plan comes as demand for cars has fallen sharply. Toyota's Corolla sales in
the United States are down nearly 9 percent this year.
In North America, Toyota builds Corolla cars in Canada and Mississippi and
announced plans in 2015 to shift Canadian Corolla production to a new $1 billion
plant in Mexico.
Mazda, whose annual global vehicle sales are one-eighth that of Toyota,
currently exports vehicles from Japan and Mexico to supply the U.S. market,
where it generates roughly one-third of its global vehicle sales.
It caters to a niche audience in North America with its design-conscious sedans
and SUVs, and has been focusing on developing more fuel-efficient gasoline
engines.
Trump in January criticized Toyota for importing cars to the United States from
Mexico. The Republican president also threatened to impose a hefty fee on Toyota
if it were to build Corolla cars for the U.S. market at a plant in Mexico.
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But since January, Trump has praised Toyota for its U.S. investments. Toyota
said in January it planned to invest $10 billion in the United States over the
next five years to meet demand.
Last month, Trump complimented Toyota for completing its long-planned new North
American headquarters in Texas.
"We want to be the car capital of the world once again and we are taking steps
to achieve that goal," Trump wrote.
The White House declined to comment on the Toyota-Mazda joint venture.
(Reporting by David Shepardson in Washington, Joe White in Detroit, Naomi
Tajitsu in Tokyo and Arunima Banerjee in Bengaluru; Editing by Tom Brown and
Clara Ferreira Marques)
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