| Toyota Struggles to Meet Hybrid, Small Car Demand
US: July 3, 2008
DETROIT - The surge in popularity for small cars and fuel-efficient hybrids
has left Toyota Motor Corp facing an unusual problem: deepening shortages of
popular models such as the Prius hybrid.
A limited inventory of small cars hurt Toyota, which reported a 11.5 percent
drop in US sales in June.
In stark contrast, Japanese rival Honda Motor Co reported a 13.8 percent
sales rise on record demand for its Fit subcompact car and Civic sedan.
Toyota executives said a dwindling inventory of vehicles, such as the Prius,
Yaris and Corolla, had forced the automaker to scramble to try to keep up
with demand in June, a month when industry-wide US auto sales dropped almost
9 percent.
Sales of Toyota's Prius, the top-selling hybrid in the US market, fell 26
percent as dealers ran short of inventory and customers faced a six-month
waiting list. Toyota said it would only partly be able to satisfy the
backlog of demand from its dedicated Prius factory in Japan this year.
Hybrids command about a US$5,000 price premium compared with equivalent
vehicles without the expensive battery.
"It is very doubtful that there is going to be a lot of recovery this year
to be able to satisfy consumer demand and that is very unfortunate," said
Jim Lentz, Toyota's head of North American sales, referring to the Prius.
Toyota had a one-day supply of the Prius hybrid and a 2-1/2 day supply of
its hybrid Camry sedan at the end of June.
Inventory of other popular Toyota cars also ran low in June. Dealer supply
of Corolla sedans was down to a 15-day supply, while Yaris had a 7-day
supply at the end of June, the automaker said.
Toyota said it expected inventories of Yaris and Corolla to increase in
August and was working to add capacity at its hybrid battery manufacturing
plant in Japan.
The current generation Prius uses nickel-metal hydride batteries made by
Panasonic EV, a joint venture between the automaker and Matsushita Electric
Industrial Co Ltd.
Toyota, which put the world's first hybrid car on the road in 1997, has a
goal of reaching global annual sales of 1 million hybrid vehicles soon after
2010 -- more than double last year's sales tally.
Toyota's Lentz said the production constraint made it hard to forecast how
large the market for the hybrid model could be in the United States, the
Japanese automaker's largest market.
"We don't know what the top end on Prius is," Lentz said.
In a J.D. Power survey, 72 percent of US consumers said they were interested
in buying a hybrid.
Overall, the US sales performance of the three major Japanese automakers
were mixed in June with Nissan Motor Co posting a 7.5 percent decline.
Honda bucked the downtrend in overall US light car sales, outselling
Chrysler LLC for the second consecutive month in June to grab the No. 3 spot
in the US market.
On a combined basis, the three major Japanese automakers increased their
share of the US market to 34.7 percent, up from 32.9 percent from a year
ago.
The market share of the three Detroit automakers -- General Motors Corp,
Ford Motor Co and Chrysler -- fell to 45.8 percent in June from 50.2 percent
a year earlier.
(Reporting by Poornima Gupta, editing by Richard Chang)
Story by Poornima Gupta
REUTERS NEWS SERVICE
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