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Toyota to merge units in face of strong yen
by Staff Writers
Tokyo (AFP) July 13, 2011

Japanese automaker Toyota said on Wednesday it would merge car making subsidiaries in northeast Japan to boost productivity in the face of a strong yen that is eroding its profitability.

Toyota said it would turn subsidiaries Toyota Auto Body and Kanto Auto works into 100 percent-owned units through share exchanges by January 2012, with both becoming more involved in vehicle development and production.

In addition, Kanto Auto, Central Motor and Toyota Motor Tohoku will begin discussions with Toyota for the units to be converted into wholly-owned subsidiaries by July 2012.

By integrating the three, Toyota will create a large manufacturing centre for the Tohuku region in Japan's northeast, its third in Japan following bases in central Chubu and Kyushu in the southwest.

"The environment surrounding the Japanese manufacturing sector is tough," Toyota President Akio Toyoda told a press conference.

"We would like to implement what we can now for the future. Toyota believes the latest move will raise the company's global competitiveness".

The recent strength of the yen has raised fears that more Japanese manufacturing will be shifted abroad. The strong domestic unit erodes the overseas earnings of Japan's exporters when repatriated.

However, Toyoda pledged: "Toyota is determined to maintain (annual) domestic production of three million automobiles," or roughly half of the automaker's total.

Last month Toyota said it expected net profit in this fiscal year to drop 31 percent on-year on a strong yen and the effect on production of the March 11 disasters.

The Japanese unit is currently trading below 80 to the dollar, having hit a post-War high of 76.25 in the aftermath of the March 11 earthquake.

Recent sessions have seen it surge on safe-haven demand as a deepening debt crisis sweeps through eurozone nations.

"Toyota finds it very hard at the current currency levels. We can manage up to levels at 85 yen for the dollar. Toyota is making utmost efforts to compete at 80 yen for the dollar," vice president Atsushi Niimi said.

The automaker said the reorganisation was unrelated to the March 11 earthquake and tsunami, a disaster that left more than 20,000 dead or missing and caused massive disruption to Japanese production.

Along with rivals and other Japanese firms, the automaker was forced to shutter plants and halt production lines amid post-quake power shortages and chronic component supply shortages.

However, a loss of electricity generating capacity -- including the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant, which has suffered reactor meltdowns as a result of the disasters -- has led to power consumption curbs, complicating the efforts of big users such as manufacturers to recover from the disasters.

Toyota said it would work to secure the jobs of permanent employees at the companies, but did not mention the fate of temporary workers.




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China's BYD sees 95% tumble in first-half profit
Hong Kong (AFP) July 13, 2011 - Chinese car maker BYD has warned that its first-half profit will shrink by about 95 percent amid stiff competition and the loss of a consumer car subsidy.

The company said in a statement late Tuesday that it expects a net profit between 121.1 million yuan ($18.7 million) and 363.2 million yuan in the first six months of this year, compared with 2.42 billion yuan a year ago.

BYD, backed by US investment titan Warren Buffett, said the decline was partly due to the removal of government car sales incentives, which were ushered in to cushion the impact of the worldwide economic downturn.

China's auto sector overtook the United States in 2009 to become the world's largest but it has lost steam after Beijing phased out the subsidies.

BYD also said the company's cellphone components division would be dented by a delayed order from its single largest client, which it did not identify, according to the statement posted to the Shenzhen Stock Exchange.

The firm's shares, which debuted in the southern Chinese boomtown last month, closed down 1.02 percent at 31.19 yuan on Wednesday, while BYD's Hong Kong-listed stock ended three percent higher at HK$23.70 ($3.04).

The bleak earnings forecast comes after BYD recorded an 84 percent drop in first-quarter earnings, with a 12 percent tumble in operating revenue during the same period.





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Belgium's highways shine into space - but for how long?
Brussels (AFP) July 11, 2011
When Belgian astronaut Frank De Winne feels homesick when in space, all he needs to do, provided it's night, is look down for the bright spot for even nowadays, Belgium keeps its highways switched on. The almost 100 percent illumination of the country's highways can indeed be seen from space with a telescopic lens, said European Space Agency (ESA) spokesman in the German city of Cologne. ... read more


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