Toyota, Honda beat profit estimates but remain wary of chip crunch

Japan’s automakers join host of global car makers in warning chip shortage likely to persist

Toyota said  net profit jumped more than 460 per cent in the first quarter, boosted by strong sales fuelled by the recovery from the coronavirus crisis. Photograph: Philip Fong/AFP
Toyota said net profit jumped more than 460 per cent in the first quarter, boosted by strong sales fuelled by the recovery from the coronavirus crisis. Photograph: Philip Fong/AFP

Toyota Motor Corp posted a record quarterly profit on Wednesday and Honda Motor Co raised its annual profit estimate as pandemic-hit sales rebounded, but the automakers saw no end in sight to the global chip shortage.

Japan's top-two automakers joined a host of global car makers, including BMW and Stellantis, in warning that the shortage in chips was likely to persist, as post-lockdown auto demand booms in markets such as the United States.

Toyota shares fell 2 per cent in afternoon trading on Wednesday, extending losses from the morning session, with some investors disappointed that the company had not lifted its profit guidance.

The world’s biggest automaker by vehicle sales stuck by its forecast made in May for an operating profit of 2.5 trillion yen (€19.34 billion) for the current fiscal year, trailing an average forecast for a 2.88 trillion yen profit, according to analysts polled by Refinitiv.

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Honda swung to a first-quarter operating profit that was double analyst expectations and raised its full-year forecast by 18 per cent to an operating profit of 780 billion yen in the current financial year based on strong sales.

Both automakers cautioned that a global chip shortage and rising Covid-19 cases were weighing on their outlooks, though Honda said it had boosted its forecast because of its cost-cutting efforts.

Toyota said it was also benefitting from a cost improvement programme.

“We will continue these activities in the future, but the situation is still unpredictable due to the expansion of Covid-19 in emerging countries, semiconductor shortage, and soaring material prices,” Toyota said in a statement.

Toyota’s operating profit soared to 997.49 billion yen ($9.15 billion) for the three months ended June 30 from the pandemic-hit first quarter of last year, and was higher than analysts’ average estimate of 752 billion yen.

Profit for the latest quarter was also boosted by favourable foreign exchange movements.

Toyota maintained its forecast for 8.7 million vehicle sales in the current fiscal year, up from 7.65 million last year. Sales volumes in the first quarter recovered to near 2019 levels and the ratio of electrified vehicles rose steadily, it said in an investor presentation.

Honda, Japan’s number two automaker by sales, lowered its full-year auto sales forecast to 4.85 million vehicles from 5 million previously due to the chip shortage. It sold 4.55 million vehicles last year.

Chip shortages

Toyota has been stockpiling semiconductors, used in everything from engine maintenance to car safety and entertainment systems, amid a global supply shortage that has hit production at rivals such as Hyundai Motor Co and Ford Motor Co.

It has benefitted from a business continuity plan developed in the wake of the Fukushima earthquake in 2011 that required suppliers to stockpile anywhere from two to six months' worth of chips depending on the time it takes from order to delivery, Reuters reported in March.

The global semiconductor chip shortage will cost automakers $110 billion in lost revenues this year, consulting firm AlixPartners said in May.

On Tuesday, General Motors Co said it will shut down several North American plants because of the shortage, including three next week.

Toyota too has not gone unscathed.

It has faced production difficulties in Thailand, where it suspended vehicle production last month at three of its manufacturing plants due to a pandemic-related parts shortage.

Honda said its China sales had risen only slightly in the first quarter due to the impact of the chip shortage.

The automaker suspended production at its plant in Wuhan, China, on August 3rd due to a Covid-19 case cluster that developed at one of its parts suppliers, its executive vice president Seiji Kuraishi told reporters, though he said the stoppage was not expected to last long. – Reuters