Toyota Kenya managing director Sachio Yotsukura poses with the new
Toyota RAV4 2016 during its launch in Nairobi recently: The Japanese
auto industry faces uncertainty over Trump's drive to support US firms
over foreign imports. PHOTO | FILE
Japanese auto giant
Toyota on Monday revised up its full-year forecast but warned of an
uncertain outlook with the car industry bracing for Donald Trump's
presidency with his expected protectionist agenda.
The
firm, which lost its crown as the world's top-selling automaker last
year, said a drop in the value of the yen had allowed it to lift its
earnings, despite a fall in its nine-month net profit.
It said net profit fell 24 percent to 1.43 trillion yen ($12.7 billion).
However,
the maker of the Prius hybrid forecast a full-year net profit of 1.7
trillion yen, up from its earlier estimate of 1.55 trillion yen. That
was already up from an earlier 1.45 trillion outlook.
In
a statement it said the upward revision was "based on the current trend
of financial results, due to changes in foreign currency exchange rates
and the upward revision of our sales plans".
Japanese
exporters have enjoyed a boost since the November election of Donald
Trump as US president as the yen has weakened on expectations his
big-spending, tax-cutting plans would fire inflation and force the
Federal Reserve to hike interest rates.
A weaker yen
boosts exporters' bottom lines by making their products relatively less
expensive overseas, while inflating the value of their earnings abroad
when repatriated.
But the latest forecast is far below the record 2.31 trillion yen net profit in the year to March 2016.
The
Japanese auto industry faces uncertainty over Trump's drive to support
US firms over foreign imports, a stance that has raised fears of a
possible global trade war.
He has targeted Toyota with
strong criticism of its ongoing project to build a new factory in
Mexico, threatening it with painful tariffs.
"It is
difficult to forecast the impact of the Trump administration at this
time," Toyota executive Tetsuya Otake told reporters. "
Shigeru
Matsumura, an analyst at SMBC Friend Research Center, said the outlook
for the Japanese auto industry faced "political risks".
"Toyota
and other Japanese carmakers have tough steering to do on their
strategies in North America," he said before the earnings announcement.
Toyota
CEO Akio Toyoda met Prime Minister Shinzo Abe on Friday ahead of a
Japan-US summit this week, with the auto trade row one of the key
issues.
Toyoda declined to comment on details of his meeting with Abe, but said: "We discussed the current situation."
Separately,
Toyota and small car maker Suzuki agreed on Monday to begin detailed
discussions on a technology tie-up as well as mutual supply of products
and components after announcing initial plans in October.
"What
the companies have agreed on is to create a partnership which will be
win-win for both parties, not one in which Toyota would rescue Suzuki,"
said Suzuki chief executive Yasuhito Harayama.
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