Toyota Q1 profit tumbles as supply constraints, costs bite

The Toyota emblem is seen on the tyre rim of a vehicle during the media day of the 41st Bangkok International Motor Show after the Thai government eased measures to prevent the spread of the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) in Bangkok, Thailand July 14, 2020. REUTERS/Jorge Silva

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  • Q1 operating profit 578.66 bn yen vs 997.4 bln yen yr-ago
  • Hit from global chip shortage, COVID curbs in China
  • Sticks to FY profit, output forecasts citing strong demand
  • Raises FY materials costs estimate by 17%; shares drop 3%

TOKYO, Aug 4 (Reuters) – Toyota Motor Corp’s (7203.T) profit slumped a worse-than-expected 42% in its first quarter as the Japanese automaker was squeezed between supply constraints and rising costs.

Operating profit for the three months ended June 30 sank to 578.66 billion yen ($4.3 billion) from 997.4 billion yen in the same period a year ago, Toyota said on Thursday, capping a tough period. It has repeatedly cut monthly output goals due to the global chip shortage and COVID-19 curbs on plants in China.

The scale of the earnings hit was far beyond expectations – analysts polled by Refinitiv had estimated a 15% drop – and appeared to catch investors by surprise. Toyota’s shares extended losses, sliding 3%.

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Despite the grim quarter, the automaker stuck to both its forecast for full-year operating profit and its plan to produce 9.7 million vehicles this year, citing what it said was strong residual demand.

Profit in the quarter was hit by constraints in supply, lower sales and a rise in materials costs, a Toyota spokesperson said.

“We were not able to produce enough, with customers globally waiting for their vehicles to be delivered,” the spokesperson said.

Delivery times are longer for electrified vehicles because they require more semiconductors, the spokesperson added.

Like other auto manufacturers, Toyota is grappling with higher costs and fears that global inflation could put the brakes on consumer demand.

It expects material costs for the full year to increase by 17% to 1.7 trillion yen from its previous estimate – the majority of the increase reflecting a rise in the price of steel and aluminium.

But Toyota’s current production woes mark a departure from its initial success in navigating supply chain problems in the early stages of the pandemic.

The carmaker cut its monthly production targets three times during the April-June quarter, falling 10% behind its initial goals, due to shortages of semiconductors and the impact of COVID-19 lockdowns in China. read more

Toyota shares, which were down 0.5% just before the release of the earnings, extended losses immediately after and closed down 3% at 2,091 yen, while the benchmark Nikkei 225 index (.N225) was slightly firmer.

($1 = 133.7200 yen)

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Reporting by Satoshi Sugiyama; Editing by Kenneth Maxwell and David Dolan

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

source: reuters.com