World's biggest car maker says sales and cost cutting beat its forecasts

Toyota Motor Corp.'s surprise quarterly profit and halving of its annual loss forecast failed to convince investors the world's No.1 carmaker is back on track, as government subsidies peter out and a strong yen takes its toll.
Major Japanese automakers have raised their forecasts for the year to March 2010 as they squeeze out savings and government incentives from Germany to China, the U.S. and Japan prop demand through the worst economic crisis in generations.
But with such stimulus programs beginning to run out, Toyota is looking to eliminate more spending, announcing its exit from Formula One racing on Wednesday to put that annual budget of around $300-million to better use.
“The biggest challenge for Toyota now is cutting overheads," said Koji Endo, a senior analyst at Advanced Research Japan in Tokyo.
“The company has not been able to respond to a sudden plunge in revenue with speedy cost reductions."
Toyota, until two years ago the world's most profitable automaker, is expecting the biggest loss among its domestic peers this year, weighed down by severe overcapacity after adding new factories during its boom years before the financial crisis hit.
While Toyota said it expects an additional 350-billion yen ($3.9-billion) in emergency cost savings than what it had planned three months ago, investors were unimpressed by its revised outlook, especially after the consensus-beating forecasts from rivals Honda Motor Co and Nissan Motor Co.
Toyota expects an operating loss of 350-billion yen for the year to March, smaller than the 750-billion yen previously forecast but bigger than the 293-billion yen consensus from Thomson Reuters I/B/E/S.
“It seems too large," Koichi Ogawa, chief portfolio manager at Daiwa SB Investments. “Toyota looks a little less attractive than other companies such as Honda and Nissan," he said, adding the market may find the news disappointing.
Toyota shares ended down 0.8 per cent before the results, having risen 23 per cent this year. Nissan has more than doubled, while Honda is up by almost half over the same period.
Toyota narrowed its annual net loss forecast to 200-billion yen from 450-billion yen, as it lifted its group-based global vehicle sales forecast by 6.5 per cent to 7.03 million units.
For the July-September quarter, the maker of the Prius hybrid car reported an operating profit of 58.0-billion yen, down 66 per cent from a year earlier but beating an average estimate of a loss of 63 billion yen from five analysts.
Toyota said the overshoot mainly came from improved used cars prices in the United States. Without such finance-related gains, it would have stayed in the red, an executive said.
Second-quarter net profit fell 84 per cent to 21.84-billion yen, while revenue dropped 24 per cent to 4.54-trillion yen.
Struggling U.S. rival Ford Motor Co also reported a quarterly profit this week, defying Wall Street estimates as it seized market share from General Motors Co and Chrysler.
But the yen's strength remains Toyota's Achilles heel as it exports more than half of its vehicles built in Japan.
“There's not much we can do to battle the stronger yen apart from continuing with our cost reductions," Executive Vice President Yukitoshi Funo told reporters.
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