Toyota extends its world No. 1 title with record vehicle sales

Toyota extends its world No. 1 title with record vehicle sales

TOKYO - Agence France-Presse
Toyota extends its world No. 1 title with record vehicle sales

This file picture taken on May 11, 2012 shows Toyota workers checking paint and bodies of Toyota Motor’s best selling ‘Corolla’ car, at a Toyota Motor East factory in Ohira village in the Miyagi prefecture, northern Japan. AFP Photo

Japan’s Toyota sold a record 9.98 million vehicles last year, it said  on Jan. 23, outpacing rivals General Motors and Volkswagen to maintain its title of world’s biggest automaker.

The auto giant’s highest-ever annual sales volume came thanks to a weaker yen and strong U.S. sales, signaling it had recovered from a series of damaging safety recalls and Japan’s 2011 quake-tsunami disaster. The figures beat U.S.-based GM, which said it sold 9.71 million cars last year, while Germany’s Volkswagen logged annual sales of 9.5 million.

Toyota broke GM’s decades-long reign as world’s top automaker in 2008 but it lost the crown three years later as the quake-tsunami hammered production and disrupted the supply chains of Japanese automakers. However, in 2012 it once again overtook its U.S. rival, which sells the Chevrolet and luxury Cadillac brands.

Yesterday, the Japanese maker of the Camry sedan and Prius hybrid said it expects this year to become the first car maker to break the 10 million barrier.

Toyota has outmaneuvered other automakers with a “comprehensive edge” in product lineup, sales network and cost structure, said SMBC Nikko Securities auto analyst Shotaro Noguchi.

“They have maintained that balance well, compared to its rivals,” he said. “Toyota should have reached the 10 million mark sooner if they had not faced major negative factors like the impact of the quake disaster and flooding in Thailand.”

No room for complacency

But he warned that the auto giant should not get complacent, adding: “If they only pay attention to production and sales figures, they could lose their competitive edge and wind up in trouble.”

The sales figures cap off an impressive comeback for Toyota, which took a heavy blow from a series of mass recalls affecting millions of cars that damaged its once-stellar reputation for quality and safety and led to U.S. congressional hearings in 2010.

The firm has said it expects a net profit of 1.67 trillion yen ($16.02 billion) in the fiscal year to March thanks to a sharply weaker yen and improving sales in North America.

Toyota has ramped up its drive to tap emerging markets while key US demand has also been on the upswing, helping the firm book ever-increasing profits, with its half-year earnings surging 82.5 percent.

Japanese industry has benefited from the big-spending and easy-money policies of Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, with huge monetary easing measures from the premier’s hand-picked team at the Bank of Japan helping push down the currency.

The weaker currency boosts Japanese manufacturers’ bottom line by making them more competitive overseas and inflating repatriated overseas profits.

The latest sales also signal improving demand in China after Japanese automakers were hammered in 2012 by a damaging consumer boycott in the world’s biggest vehicle market that was sparked by a territorial spat between Tokyo and Beijing. Toyota has also announced plans to develop components for hybrid vehicles with two Chinese automakers.