Showing posts with label Exports Japan. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Exports Japan. Show all posts

Saturday, February 5, 2011

Toyota may end Corolla exports from Japan due to yen

TOKYO - Toyota Motor Corp is considering halting exports from Japan of the Corolla sedan from around 2013 and shifting that output overseas due to the yen's strength, the Tokyo Shimbun daily reported on Thursday.

The yen's rise to a 15-year high against the dollar is threatening the competitiveness of Japanese exports and prompting manufacturers to consider shifting more output outside Japan.

The Corolla is one of Toyota's best-selling models and is built in 15 countries. In 2009, Toyota made about 235,000 Corollas in Japan -- nearly 60 percent of those exported -- and 815,000 abroad. Toyota is due to start producing the Corolla at its new Mississippi plant from autumn 2011 after the closure of a California factory formerly owned with General Motors Co.

Toyota spokesman Paul Nolasco said the company was constantly looking to optimize its global production structure, but that no decision had been made regarding the shift of export-bound Corollas outside Japan.

"At the current exchange rate, the more Corollas Toyota ships overseas, the more money it loses," Advanced Research analyst Koji Endo said. He added that to make money on the compact Corolla model, Toyota would have to shift production overseas or drastically reduce costs, or both.

Tokyo Shimbun reported that the world's largest car maker was also considering shifting production of all Corolla cars sold in Japan to one of its subsidiaries. Toyota currently builds the model at its own Takaoka factory, and at two units, Kanto Auto Works and Central Motor Co.

In a similar move aimed at making its domestic operations more competitive, Nissan Motor Co said this month it may turn one of its Japanese factories into a new subsidiary, allowing it to broach wage negotiations with labor unions and seek lower prices from suppliers.

Most automakers have vowed not to close any assembly plants in Japan but executives have warned that suppliers may be forced to shift production abroad in a threat to jobs in Japan's fragile economy.

"Maybe they don't realize just how much damage poses on companies," Mitsubishi Motors Corp President Osamu Masuko told reporters on Thursday.

"I guess we have to speed up our efforts to deal with the strong yen. Shifting production overseas takes time, but for example we can vastly increase purchases of auto components from abroad. That can be done in the near term."

Toyota is aiming to make its domestic factory lines more flexible and introduce other changes to be able to break even at a dollar rate of 90 yen and capacity utilization of 70 percent, equivalent to daily production of 12,000 units.

The dollar was trading near 81 yen on Thursday.

A production shift away from Japan would mean even more capacity in Japan would go unused unless Toyota is able to fill the hole with other cars.

Overall production of vehicles in Japan plunged 31.5 percent in 2009 to 7.93 million units, below 10 million for the first time in eight years. Exports fell by a much sharper 46 percent as automakers sought to limit foreign exchange losses.

Shares of Toyota closed up 3 percent at 2,930 yen, while the benchmark Nikkei average gained 1.9 percent.

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Monday, January 10, 2011

Time right for Vietnam to woo Japan: economist

A Japanese economist who advises the Vietnamese Ministry of Planning and Investment has said Vietnam should take advantage of the current economic and political situation to boost exports to Japan and attract Japanese investment.

With the yen’s relentless rise taking it to a 15-year high against the dollar last month, Vietnam’s exports to Japan are cheaper while Japanese investors are doing business more aggressively overseas, Kyoshiro Ichikawa told Tuoi Tre in an exclusive interview.

The recent territorial tension between China and Japan will surely make Japanese investors think twice about pouring more money in China and they are likely to partially or wholly relocate their investments and production facilities to Vietnam, he said.

The yen is likely to rise further in the short term since US economic recovery is slower than expected, he said.

But he allayed the fears that the appreciating yen will mean Vietnam’s official development assistance debt to Japan will rise since the appreciation is a short-term phenomenon.

Japan ODA commitments to Vietnam are worth over 1.394 trillion yen.

It used to be the equivalent of $14 billion but has risen to nearly $16.3 billion. In terms of the depreciating dong, it has risen from VND251 trillion to VND304.5 trillion.

Projects funded by ODA loans and yen-denominated commercial loans will be affected adversely by the currency appreciation, the ministry had said earlier.

Japan is one of Vietnam’s largest trading partners.

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Time right for Vietnam to woo Japan: economist

A Japanese economist who advises the Vietnamese Ministry of Planning and Investment has said Vietnam should take advantage of the current economic and political situation to boost exports to Japan and attract Japanese investment.

With the yen’s relentless rise taking it to a 15-year high against the dollar last month, Vietnam’s exports to Japan are cheaper while Japanese investors are doing business more aggressively overseas, Kyoshiro Ichikawa told Tuoi Tre in an exclusive interview.

The recent territorial tension between China and Japan will surely make Japanese investors think twice about pouring more money in China and they are likely to partially or wholly relocate their investments and production facilities to Vietnam, he said.

The yen is likely to rise further in the short term since US economic recovery is slower than expected, he said.

But he allayed the fears that the appreciating yen will mean Vietnam’s official development assistance debt to Japan will rise since the appreciation is a short-term phenomenon.

Japan ODA commitments to Vietnam are worth over 1.394 trillion yen.

It used to be the equivalent of $14 billion but has risen to nearly $16.3 billion. In terms of the depreciating dong, it has risen from VND251 trillion to VND304.5 trillion.

Projects funded by ODA loans and yen-denominated commercial loans will be affected adversely by the currency appreciation, the ministry had said earlier.

Japan is one of Vietnam’s largest trading partners.

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Monday, October 18, 2010

Exports to Japan total $4 billion in seven months

HA NOI — Exports to Japan in the first seven months of the year totalled US$4.1 billion, up 25.44 per cent over the same period last year, according to the General Statistics Office.

Export turnover accounted for 10.78 per cent of the country's total export earnings in January-July.

With earnings of more than $580 million, equivalent to a 13.17 per cent year-on-year increase, garments and textiles topped the exports to Japan in the first seven months.

Electric lines and cables followed with $508 million, up 83.25 per cent over the same period last year.

Although earning only $30.8 million in January-July, exports of rubber saw the highest growth rate with a surge of 199.95 per cent.

However, there remained seven export commodities to Japan that saw a decrease in the first seven months.

Among the commodities, exports of crude oil reduced 55 and 69.8 per cent to 169,000 tonnes and $102 million in terms of volume and value, respectively.

Exports of coffee, pottery products, precious stones, petroleum, pepper and cassava also reported reductions.

Japan mainly imports garments and textiles, rubber, mineral, seafood, and electric wire and cables from Viet Nam.

In recent years, exports of garments and textiles to Japan have risen constantly and the country is one of the three leading export markets for Viet Nam's garments and textiles, after the US and the EU. Despite the impact of the global financial crisis, the garments and textiles sector last year earned $1 billion from exports to Japan, a year-on-year increase of 20 per cent, with the figure expected to reach $1.2 billion this year. However, deputy director of the Ministry of Industry and Trade's Multilateral Trade Policy Department Le Quang Lan said that poor quality goods, inadequate information about the market, and a lack of familiarity with the Japanese business culture were obstacles that domestic exporters needed to overcome if they expect to better conquer the Japanese market. — VNS

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