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TOKYO: Toyota on Wednesday posted a record full-year net profit helped by strong sales and a cheaper yen, but issued cautious forecasts as the pandemic and war in Ukraine disrupt supply chains.

The Japanese auto giant, which kept its crown as the world’s top-selling carmaker in 2021, reported a net profit of 2.85 trillion yen ($22 billion), up 26.9 percent from the previous year.

But for the current year to March 2023, it said it expects to post an annual net profit of 2.26 trillion yen ($17.3 billion), citing ongoing uncertainties.

Toyota said its robust results were due in part to beneficial foreign exchange rates, with a cheaper yen helping inflate profits from sales abroad.

It also cited cost reduction efforts and stronger sales helped by marketing efforts.

In the year to March 2022, operating profit surged 36.3 percent year-on-year to three trillion yen, as sales increased 15.3 percent to 31.4 trillion yen – also a record.

Toyota’s strong sales came despite the firm being forced to repeatedly adjust production targets because of supply chain issues ranging from the semiconductor shortage to pandemic-linked factory closures.

On Tuesday it said it was suspending production at its eight domestic plants for six days due to impact from China’s tough Covid measures – particularly in economic engine Shanghai which has been under lockdown since April.

Toyota to slash production plan, suspend some domestic operation due to COVID lockdown in China

The closure forced Toyota to lower its global production target in May by 50,000 units to 700,000 vehicles, the latest in a string of revisions.

Operations have also been hit by an earthquake in Japan and a cyberattack on a Toyota supplier.

The firm set a production target for the current fiscal year of 9.7 million units, after meeting a revised target of 8.5 million units for the year to March 2022.

“We have set our production volume assumption to an appropriate level, having safety and security as our top priority,” Toyota said.

“We expect a decrease in our operating income due to unprecedented increases in materials and logistics costs.”

Chips, currency, Covid, conflict

Russia’s invasion of Ukraine was the most unpredictable factor for now, said Masayuki Kubota, chief strategist of Rakuten Securities.

“The chip shortage and the impact of Covid are issues that have been there for a while and drag on, but the more serious problem is Russia,” he told AFP.

“It is not clear how the Russia situation will turn out,” so companies are likely to issue conservative full-year forecasts, he added.

In March, Toyota said it would suspend operations at its only factory in Russia and stop shipping vehicles to the country, citing “supply chain disruptions” linked to Moscow’s assault on Ukraine.

Its plant in Saint Petersburg produced around 80,000 vehicles last year, mainly for the Russian market and representing just a fraction of the 10.5 million vehicles made worldwide by the Japanese group.

Other factors though are likely to be more positive for the automaker, including a slide in the yen which has touched 20-year lows against the dollar in recent weeks.

Rising commodity prices could also be a boon, said Kubota.

“Surge in gasoline prices have in the past worked in favour of fuel-efficient Japanese gasoline cars,” he said, though pricier commodities can also affect production costs.

Like other automakers, Toyota is still struggling with the impact of a global shortage of semiconductors – an essential component of modern vehicles.

Toyota has found itself unable to escape the crisis, but still appears better placed than some rivals, having developed strong ties with domestic suppliers after Japan’s 2011 earthquake and tsunami.

“Its recovery is faster than competitors even as it faces the chip shortage… the company has kept up direct talks with suppliers,” said Eiji Hakomori, auto sector analyst of Daiwa Securities, in a report ahead of Toyota’s earnings.

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