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Nissan's profit down 15% on strong yen, Europe woe
by Staff Writers
Tokyo (AFP) July 26, 2012


Nissan on Thursday posted a 15 percent drop in quarterly profit as a strong yen and weak European market dented earnings, but Japan's second-biggest automaker said its full-year forecast was on track.

Nissan, part-owned by France's Renault, has announced plans to release 10 new products globally over the year as it locks horns with global heavyweights General Motors, Toyota and Volkswagen.

But Japan's automakers have been hit hard by the value of the yen, which remains near record highs reached last year against the dollar, making their vehicles relatively more expensive overseas and shrinking foreign income.

On Thursday, Nissan said its business in the debt-hit European market took a beating, with sales down 1.7 percent.

In its fiscal first-quarter through June, Nissan said its net profit fell 15 percent to 72.3 billion yen ($927 million) with an operating profit of 120.7 billion yen, which is down 19.7 percent from a year earlier.

Sales were 2.6 percent higher at 2.14 trillion yen, it said.

"Operating profit declined chiefly because of the impact of historic high levels of the yen that continue until now and a temporary increase in sales costs in North America," Nissan said in a statement.

On forex markets the dollar is currently sitting at the 78 yen level, just above the record low around 75 yen touched late last year.

In the same release, Nissan president Carlos Ghosn said: "Nissan has delivered a respectable performance in the first quarter despite challenging macro-economic conditions.

"Our innovative models remain in high demand, with further exciting vehicles due for launch. Against that background, we remain on track to achieve our full-year forecasts," he added.

Nissan also said its outlook for the full-year to March remains unchanged, forecasting net profit of 400 billion yen on sales of 10.3 trillion yen.

In its latest quarter, Nissan said it sold 1.2 million vehicles globally, up 14.6 percent from the same three months last year.

Sales to the key China market, Nissan's biggest, rose 12.2 percent.

Daiwa Securities auto analyst Eiji Hakomori said Nissan has so far been slow to release its promised new models.

"Talking about Altima, a popular model in the United States, its new model was released on June 26," he said.

"So that means the April-June quarter was a difficult quarter for them to earn profits as they had to sell older model cars while pouring money into plants to bring out new models," he told AFP.

"I'd say the decline in profit is not very worrisome" longer term, he added

In May, Nissan posted a 341.43 billion yen full-year net profit and record sales for the year to March, as it shrugged off the devastating impact of last year's quake-tsunami disaster on production and flooding in Thailand.

Rivals Toyota and Honda saw profits plunge during the same period.

Nissan's full-year sales rose to their highest-ever 9.41 trillion yen with 4.85 million vehicles sold globally.

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Toyota world's top carmaker in first half: reports
Tokyo (AFP) July 26, 2012 - Toyota Motor has returned to the top of the global carmakers' league, Japanese media reported on Thursday, after the firm said it had sold almost five million vehicles in the first half of the year.

The group, whose brands also include Lexus, Daihatsu and Hino, sold a record 4.97 millions units worldwide in the period, up nearly 34 percent from the same period last year, according to company figures.

That vaulted Toyota ahead of rivals General Motors and Volkswagen, which sold 4.67 million and 4.45 million units in the first half respectively, local media said.

Toyota last year lost the title of world's biggest carmaker -- a spot it had held between 2008 and 2010 -- following a slump in production and sales owing to Japan's March 11 quake-tsunami disaster, floods in Thailand and the strong yen.

General Motors, with about 9 million vehicles sold last year, was the world's biggest carmaker followed by Germany's Volkswagen with more than 8 million vehicles sold. Toyota sold 7.95 million vehicles.

For all of 2012, Toyota said it expected to sell 9.58 millions units worldwide, but it was uncertain whether it could retain the global top spot for the full year.

Toyota shares were up 1.38 percent at 2,856 yen in Thursday afternoon trade.



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Boston MA (SPX) Jul 24, 2012
Barrels and cones dot an open field in Saline, Mich., forming an obstacle course for a modified vehicle. A driver remotely steers the vehicle through the course from a nearby location as a researcher looks on. Occasionally, the researcher instructs the driver to keep the wheel straight - a trajectory that appears to put the vehicle on a collision course with a barrel. Despite the driver's ... read more


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