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Honda quarterly profit jumps fourfold to $1.7 bn
by Staff Writers
Tokyo (AFP) July 31, 2012



Honda Motor said Tuesday its net profit surged more than fourfold to $1.7 billion for the three months to June, underscoring a recovery from the impact of last year's quake-tsunami disasters.

The Japanese automaker posted a net profit of 131.7 billion yen ($1.7 billion) for the April-June quarter, up from 31.8 billion yen for the same period last year.

Sales soared 42.1 percent to 2.44 trillion yen while operating profit jumped to 176.0 billion yen from 22.6 billion yen a year earlier, the company said.

The sales and profit gains were "due primarily to increased revenue in automobile business operations as production recovered from the effects of the Great East Japan Earthquake", it said in a statement.

Honda left unchanged its full-year forecast, still projecting net profit at 470 billion yen on sales of 10.3 trillion yen for the fiscal year to March 2013.

"Strong sales of new models as well as a strong recovery from the supply chain disruption caused by the (natural disasters) contributed to a significant increase in profit in Japan and North America automobile operations," the automaker said in a statement.

It added that a boost in its Asian car and motorcycle business also helped the bottom line despite a still-weak European market.

Honda shares climbed 2.08 percent to 2,551 yen in Tokyo on Tuesday, with the results released after markets closed.

Japanese automakers saw extensive damage to their supply chains as a result of last year's earthquake and tsunami in Japan and flooding in Thailand in the autumn.

A high yen also ate into exporters' sales and profits.

Japanese automakers have come under pressure from the value of the currency, which last year hit record highs against the dollar and remains strong, making exports relatively more expensive overseas and cutting the value of repatriated earnings.

In April, Honda said its net profit for the fiscal year to March plunged 60.4 percent to 211.5 billion yen while its full-year sales were down 11.1 percent to 7.95 trillion yen.

Among Japan's biggest carmakers, Honda was hardest hit and the slowest to recover from last year's natural disasters.

But Honda's results Tuesday were rosier than rival Nissan, which last week said its quarterly profit tumbled 15 percent as strong yen and weak European market dented earnings.

But Nissan, Japan's second-biggest automaker after Toyota, said its full-year forecast was on track.

In its fiscal first-quarter through June, Nissan said its net profit fell to 72.3 billion yen on sales of 2.14 trillion yen, up 2.6 percent.

On Tuesday, smaller Japanese rival Mazda Motor reported a quarterly net loss of 6.46 billion yen, shrinking a year-earlier shortfall of 25.54 billion yen.

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Japan's Toshiba falls into quarterly net loss
Tokyo (AFP) July 31, 2012 - Japan's Toshiba said Tuesday it fell into a quarterly net loss of $155 million owing to restructuring costs and the impact of a strong yen, but kept its full-year profit forecast unchanged.

The technology and engineering conglomerate said it booked a net loss of 12.1 billion yen ($155 million) for the April-June quarter, reversing a net profit of 470 million yen for the same period last year.

The loss was mainly due to "increased expenditure to promote steady business restructuring for strengthening profitability and the impact of yen appreciation," it said in a statement.

Sales in the quarter fell 4.3 percent to 1.27 trillion yen.

Toshiba left unchanged its full-year forecast, projecting a net profit of 135.0 billion yen on sales of 6.4 trillion yen for the year to March 2013.

In May, Toshiba said its latest full-year profit tumbled by almost half to 73.7 billion yen.

Last year it said it would shut three semiconductor factories in Japan and slow production at a number of other plants as part of a reorganisation of its business, which also includes the manufacture of liquid crystal display televisions.

Electronics manufacturers worldwide are struggling to profit from making televisions amid fierce pricing competition in the overcrowded, low-margin market.

The strong yen has made exporters' products more expensive overseas while eroding the value of foreign-earned profits, amid sagging global demand.

Japanese firms were also pounded by last year's quake-tsunami disaster, and flooding in Thailand, which disrupted operations for firms with plants in the Southeast Asian nation.



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Why Some Types Of Multitasking Are More Dangerous Than Others
Columbus OH (SPX) Jul 25, 2012
In a new study that has implications for distracted drivers, researchers found that people are better at juggling some types of multitasking than they are at others. Trying to do two visual tasks at once hurt performance in both tasks significantly more than combining a visual and an audio task, the research found. Alarmingly, though, people who tried to do two visual tasks at the same tim ... read more


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