toyota-motor

May 4 (Bloomberg) — Vivek Vaidya, automotive and transportation director at research company Frost & Sullivan, talks about the global auto industry. General Motors Co., less than two years after declaring bankruptcy, is poised to reclaim the global auto sales lead this year from Toyota Motor Corp., Japan’s automaker rattled by natural disasters and reports of slipping quality. Vaidya speaks from Singapore with Rishaad Salamat on Bloomberg Television’s “On the Move Asia.” (Source: Bloomberg)

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Video: Vaidya Says Toyota in Danger of Slipping Behind GM, VW

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LOUISVILLE, Ky. — Toyota Motor Corp. said Friday that it will suspend production at its North American plants in a series of one-day shutdowns this month as a result of parts shortages caused by the earthquake that hit Japan. The temporary shutdowns will affect 25,000 workers, but there will be no layoffs, the world’s No. 1 automaker said. A March 11 earthquake and tsunami damaged auto parts plants in northeastern Japan, causing shortages. All 13 of its North American plants will have down time, though the duration may vary at a few plants, Toyota spokesman Mike Goss said. For most plants, the one-day shutdowns will begin April 15 and end April 25, the company said. Toyota said future production plans will be determined later. “We’re just monitoring supplier progress on a daily basis, and we’ll make decisions as we go along,” Goss said. The North American plants have been using parts in their inventory or relying on those that were shipped before the earthquake. “We are slowing down to conserve parts yet maintain production as much as possible,” said Steve St. Angelo, executive vice president of Toyota Motor Engineering and Manufacturing North America. Toyota gets only about 15 percent of its parts from Japan for cars and trucks built in North America. Those parts include electronic and rubber components, and a paint additive, Goss said. The production shutdowns will total five days – April 15, 18, 21, 22 and 25 – at its North American vehicle plants, except at Georgetown, Ky., where production will be halted four days. The Kentucky plant makes the popular Camry, along with the Avalon and Venza vehicles. Most of the company’s North American engine and component plants will follow the same schedule, the company said. The schedule might vary for just a few of those plants, Goss said. The incremental stoppage in production is meant to “keep as much production going on a weekly basis as we possibly can so we keep vehicles flowing to our dealerships,” Goss said. Shortages of parts from Japan are also affecting manufacturers outside the country. Ford Motor Co. and Nissan Motor Co. recently said that several North American plants would be closed for part of this month. Chrysler Group LLC is cutting overtime at plants in Canada and Mexico to conserve parts from Japan. Toyota said its North American plant workers will focus on training and reviewing operations when production is halted so that they can still earn a paycheck. However, they can also take vacation or unpaid time off. Meanwhile, Toyota announced Friday it will resume car production at all its plants in Japan at half capacity from April 18 to 27. The March earthquake and tsunami had forced the company to halt manufacturing due to shortages of parts and power. The company said production at the plants will then halt from April 28 to May 9, which includes a holiday period when factories would normally close.

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Toyota Will Begin Suspending North American Production Next Week

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Totoya To Shutdown North American Factories Due To Parts Shortage

April 4, 2011

LOUISVILLE, Ky. — A Toyota Motor Corp. spokesman says it’s inevitable that the company will have to shut down its North American factories due to shortages of parts from Japan. Spokesman Mike Goss says the shutdowns are likely to take place later this month, affecting about 25,000 workers. But he says no layoffs are expected. He says the length of the shutdowns is unknown and depends on how fast earthquake-damaged Japanese parts factories get back in operation. Toyota gets about 15 percent of its parts from Japan for cars and trucks built in North America. The company has more than a dozen North American factories. Goss made the comments Monday before an appearance in Louisville by Toyota’s head of North American operations.

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Toyota Indefinitely Shuts Down Two Japanese Factories

March 12, 2011

(Reuters) – Toyota Motor Co (7203.T) said it has halted production at two factories with combined annual capacity of 420,000 small cars built mainly for overseas markets, after a massive earthquake hit Japan the previous day. Toyota, Japan’s biggest carmaker, said it had not decided when it will restart either facility. Managers at the plants, one in Iwate prefecture and the other in Miyagi prefecture, the areas hardest hit by Friday’s quake and subsequent tsunami, has evacuated personnel, so the current state of the facilities is unknown, Toyota said. Nissan Motor (7201.T) said that it had halted output at four plants in northeast Japan and close to Tokyo and suspended work at an operation center. The factories will stay idle Sunday and Monday, it said. Staff at locations close to the coast were evacuated, while employees at other facilities were urged to remain on site. Two workers at a plant in Tochigi prefecture were slightly injured by the quake, Nissan said. Honda Motor (7267.T), Japan’s No. 3 carmaker, said four of its domestic plants and a research and development center will stayed shuttered on Monday. (Reporting by Kentaro Sugiyama; Writing by Tim Kelly) Copyright 2011 Thomson Reuters. Click for Restrictions .

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UAW In Talks To Unionize Other U.S. Auto Plants

January 12, 2011

DETROIT (Reuters) – The United Auto Workers has had preliminary private discussions with some nonunion automakers about organizing U.S. plants as it aims to expand to Asian and European companies, UAW President Bob King said on Wednesday. King declined to name the companies the UAW has talked to under its latest organizing plan that includes a plea to companies to agree to “trust principles” for bargaining with the union. “We are in some preliminary discussions which we agreed to keep confidential so we will do that,” King told reporters at the Automotive News World Congress that is held on the sidelines of the Detroit auto show. “These are all really good companies,” King said. “We just have to convince them that we are not the evil empire that they thought we were at one point.” The UAW said in December that it would launch a campaign to organize the U.S. manufacturing plants for Asian and German automakers. The union has sought unsuccessfully to organize plants for the non-U.S. manufacturers since the 1990s. Toyota Motor Corp, Honda Motor Co, Nissan Motor Co, Hyundai Motor Co and Kia Motors Co have extensive manufacturing facilities in the United States. Volkswagen is building a new plant in the United States and BMW has a large U.S. facility that builds vehicles both for the U.S. and international markets. The newer plants built by non-U.S. automakers are largely in southern states and areas where the union has traditionally struggled to organize workers. The UAW already represents the U.S.-based General Motors Co, Ford Motor Co and Chrysler, which is managed by Fiat. The union’s contracts with the three U.S. automakers expire in September. It did not disclose a timetable for talks with non-U.S. based automakers. Last year the UAW held protests outside Toyota dealerships in California to demonstrate against the automaker’s decision to close a union-represented plant in Fremont, California. King said the “bannering” at Toyota dealerships was a taste of what automakers could expect if they do not adhere to the union’s “trust principles” for bargaining. (Reporting by David Bailey and Deepa Seetharaman; Editing by Tim Dobbyn) Copyright 2010 Thomson Reuters. Click for Restrictions .

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Hyundai Recall: 139,000 Sonata Sedans Recalled For Steering Defect

September 27, 2010

WASHINGTON — Hyundai Motor Co. said it is voluntarily recalling 139,500 Sonata sedans in the U.S. because of a manufacturing defect that could cause drivers to lose steering control. The recall affects 2011 models built between Dec. 11, 2009 and Sept. 10, the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration noted on its website Sunday. Some of the cars have steering column shafts with connections that may not have been tightened enough or were improperly assembled. As a result, the steering wheel could become separated from the column or a driver could lose the ability to properly steer the car. The U.S. government had opened an investigation into possible steering problems in the vehicle in August. Hyundai, South Korea’s top automaker, has said there have been no related injuries or crashes reported. Owners of affected vehicles can go to their dealers for inspection. Dealers also will update power steering software. Owners may also call NHTSA at 888-327-4236 for more information. The recall comes as automakers ramp up their focus on safety and quality control in the wake of Toyota Motor Corp.’s massive global recall last year over gas pedal and floor mat problems. In February, Hyundai announced a recall of about 47,000 Sonata midsize sedans, mostly sold in South Korea, to replace front door latches following a handful of customer complaints. The company said it had discovered a mechanical problem with the latches which, in rare instances, would not close properly. Earlier this month, Hyundai affiliate Kia Motors said Chung Sung-eun resigned as vice chairman following a global recall of more than 100,000 vehicles due to defective wiring. Of that total, 35,185 vehicles were recalled in the United States. Together, Kia and Hyundai form the world’s fifth-largest automotive group. So far this year, U.S. sales are up 17 percent for Hyundai Motor America, though August sales fell 11 percent from a year-earlier record sparked by federal Cash for Clunkers rebates. The new Sonata has been selling well and nearly doubled its sales numbers to 21,399 in August.

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‘Somos Muchos’: Toyota Offers Free Hispanic Pride Stickers

September 7, 2010

TORRANCE, Calif. — Toyota Motor Corp., hoping to solidify its standing as the top brand for Hispanic buyers in the U.S., is offering drivers a series of stickers that celebrates their Hispanic heritage. The decals contain the phrase “somos muchos,” or “we are many,” followed by cultures, regions and popular descriptors from all over Latin America, such as “somos muchos Mexicanos” and “somos muchos Hondurenos.” The decals, designed to be stuck on bumpers or windows, come in more than 100 different versions and are available in the U.S. and Puerto Rico. Toyota is offering the stickers free on the Spanish-language version of its Facebook page. It’s also distributing them at upcoming festivals in Los Angeles, Houston, Dallas, Miami, New York and Chicago. Toyota is the top brand among Hispanic buyers in the U.S., according to vehicle registration data gathered by R.L. Polk and Associates. The automaker says it has held that title since 2004. In a recent speech to the National Council of La Raza, Toyota President Yoshi Inaba said one of every four Hispanic car buyers in the U.S. bought a Toyota last year.

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Video: TrueCar.com’s Painter Says U.S. Auto Market Has Bottomed: Video

September 1, 2010

Sept. 2 (Bloomberg) — Scott Painter, chief executive officer of TrueCar.com, an automotive-sales data-marketing company, talks about the outlook for the U.S. auto industry. Toyota Motor Corp., General Motors Co. and Ford Motor Co., the three largest sellers of autos in the U.S., reported bigger sales declines than analysts projected as the industry posted its worst August in 28 years. Painter speaks with Rishaad Salamat on Bloomberg Television. (Source: Bloomberg)

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Toyota Prius Gets ‘Electronic Humming Device’ To Protect Pedestrians

August 24, 2010

TOKYO — Toyota’s Prius hybrid is becoming a little less quiet with a new electronic humming device that is the automaker’s answer to complaints that pedestrians can’t hear the top-selling car approaching. The 12,600 yen ($148) speaker system that goes under the hood of the third-generation Prius sets off a whirring sound designed to be about the same noise level as a regular car engine so that it isn’t annoying, Toyota Motor Corp. said Tuesday. It goes on sale Aug. 30 in Japan, and owners pay extra for installation charges. Its use is voluntary. Overseas sales plans are still undecided, but Toyota is studying regulations and considering offering it in the U.S. and other markets, said spokeswoman Monika Saito. The gasoline-electric hybrid gets good mileage but is also quiet because it runs as an electric car much of the time. That advantage has drawn complaints that pedestrians, the blind in particular, are at greater risk of being hit by the car, especially at low speeds. The U.S. government’s auto safety agency found in a research report last year that hybrids are twice as likely to be involved in pedestrian crashes at low speeds compared with cars with conventional engines. Toyota, which also makes the Camry sedan and Lexus luxury models, said it plans versions of the device for other hybrid models, plug-ins, electric vehicles and fuel-cell vehicles. Pedestrian deaths compared to overall traffic fatalities are higher in Japan than in the U.S. and many other nations because of Japan’s narrow and crisscrossing crowded streets. Japan is also a rapidly aging society, making audible cars critical. Toyota said the device is based on guidelines addressing the dangers of silent cars, including hybrids, issued in January by the Japanese government. Other automakers, including General Motors Co., Ford Motor Co. and Nissan Motor Co., are also working on countermeasures to make quiet ecological cars safer. The Prius device’s humming is so soft it is barely audible in a noisy street but can be a lifesaver in quieter environments. It can be turned off with a switch but goes on automatically every time the car starts. The Prius has been the top-selling car in Japan for the past 15 months straight, benefiting from incentives designed to boost sales of green cars. Toyota, the world’s biggest automaker, has sold nearly 337,000 third-generation Prius cars in Japan. It has sold more than 2.68 million hybrids around the world so far, a million of them in Japan. ___ On the Net: Video demonstration of the device: http://www2.toyota.co.jp/en/news/10/08/0824.html

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Video: Harper Reviews $375,000 Lexus Versus a $140,000 Maserati: Video

August 19, 2010

Aug. 19 (Bloomberg) — In a bid to rebuild its reputation, Toyota Motor Corp. is looking to add more sports cars to its lineup, including the Lexus LFA, a $375,000 luxury supercar. Bloomberg auto reviewer Jason Harper talks with Melissa Long about the LFA, the Maserati GranTurismo convertible and General Motors Co.’s initial share offering. (Source: Bloomberg)

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Video: Toyota Making Renewed Push Into Sports Car Market: Video

August 18, 2010

Aug. 19 (Bloomberg) — Bloomberg’s Mike Firn reports on Toyota Motor Corp.’s renewed push into sports cars. As the world’s largest carmaker tries to rebuild its reputation for quality following record recalls, President Akio Toyoda, a racing fan, has said he wants to add more fun to his cars. Under Toyoda, who became president in June 2009, the company has taken orders for the Lexus LFA $375,000 supercar, is readying an “affordable” rear-wheel drive coupe and may even add a sporty version of the Prius. Bloomberg’s Phillip Yin also speaks. (Source: Bloomberg)

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Video: IHS’s Lindland Sees U.S. Auto Industry Recovery: Video

August 3, 2010

Aug. 3 (Bloomberg) — Rebecca Lindland, an analyst at IHS Automotive, talks about July U.S. vehicle sales reported today and the condition of the automotive industry. Lindland, speaking with Matt Miller and Lizzie O’Leary on Bloomberg Television’s “Street Smart,” also discusses the impact of Toyota Motor Corp. recalls on sales. (Source: Bloomberg)

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Toyota Subpoenaed By Federal Grand Jury

July 20, 2010

TOKYO — Toyota Motor Corp. said Tuesday it has been subpoenaed by a federal grand jury in New York to submit documents related to problems with rods that connect a vehicle’s steering system to its front wheels. The world’s largest automaker, which is trying to repair a reputation damaged by recalls of millions of cars worldwide since October, said the federal grand jury issued the subpoena to its U.S. subsidiary in late June. Toyota said it was the company’s second subpoena from a federal grand jury – a panel that can determine whether evidence exists to bring criminal charges. “The company and its subsidiary are sincerely cooperating with authorities on the probe,” Toyota said in a statement. Defective steering relay rods led Toyota to recall 4Runner sports utility vehicles and T100 pickup trucks in the United States in 2005. Toyota said the grand jury’s subpoena did not specify vehicle models and it was not clear that the subpoena was linked to the 2005 recall, which came several years before safety lapses erupted into a global recall crisis late last year. The automaker has recalled more than 8.5 million vehicles worldwide since October, including 6 million in the U.S. alone, to address the possibility of unintended acceleration and to fix a braking problem in its Prius hybrid. In February, Toyota was subpoenaed by a U.S. federal grand jury seeking documents related to unintended acceleration in its vehicles and the braking system of its Prius hybrid. Earlier this year, Michigan’s attorney general also asked Toyota to submit information on the recent U.S. recalls, Toyota spokeswoman Ririko Takeuchi said. She declined to elaborate. Toyota paid a record $16.4 million fine for being slow to recall vehicles with an accelerator pedal problem and is facing hundreds of state and federal lawsuits. Congress is considering an upgrade to auto safety laws in the aftermath of the Toyota recalls that began in October. In Tokyo, Toyota shares fell 2.6 percent Tuesday to close at 3,055 yen before the subpoena announcement was made.

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Toyota: China Factory Workers Could Get A Raise

July 9, 2010

NAGOYA, Japan — Toyota’s president says the company is open to raising the wages of workers in China, where strikes have disrupted the automaker’s operations in that fast-growing market. Toyota Motor Corp. President Akio Toyoda says raising wages brings benefits because it creates more customers who can buy Toyota vehicles. He says workers and managers in China should work more cooperatively because they both have the same goal of building quality cars. Toyota as well as rival Honda Motor Corp. have repeatedly halted production at car assembly plants in China since mid-May because of strikes at affiliated suppliers. The strikes have inspired labor unrest at a number of factories in China, where workers have complained about poor conditions.

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Toyota Recall: Engines Bad In 270,000 Vehicles, Including Seven Lexus Models

July 1, 2010

TOKYO — Toyota Motor Corp. said Thursday about 270,000 cars sold worldwide – including luxury Lexus sedans – have potentially faulty engines, the latest quality lapse to hit the automaker following massive global recalls of top-selling models. Japan’s top-selling daily Yomiuri said in its evening edition that Toyota will inform the transport ministry of a recall on Monday. The paper cited no sources. Toyota spokesman Hideaki Homma said the company was evaluating measures to deal with the problem of defective engines that can stall while the vehicle is moving. He would not confirm a recall was being considered. The automaker has been working to patch up its reputation after recalling more than 8 million vehicles worldwide because of unintended acceleration and other defects. Of the 270,000 vehicles with engine problems, some 180,000 were sold overseas and the rest in Japan. They include the popular Crown and seven models of luxury Lexus sedans. Toyota said it has received around 200 complaints in Japan over faulty engines. Some drivers told Toyota that the engines made a strange noise. Homma said there have been no reports of accidents linked to the faulty engines. The automaker’s shares dropped 2.3 percent to close at 3,010 yen in Tokyo on Thursday. U.S. authorities recently slapped Toyota with a record $16.4 million fine for acting too slowly to recall vehicles with defects. Toyota dealers have repaired millions of vehicles, but the automaker still faces more than 200 lawsuits tied to accidents, the lower resale value of Toyota vehicles and the drop in the company’s stock. In the aftermath of the recalls, Congress is considering an upgrade to auto safety laws to toughen potential penalties against automakers, give the U.S. government more powers to demand a recall and push car companies to meet new safety standards. Toyota said last week it will recall 17,000 Lexus luxury hybrids after testing showed that fuel can spill during a rear-end crash.

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Video: China Experiencing Its `Henry Ford Moment’: William Pesek

June 27, 2010

June 28 (Bloomberg) — Bloomberg columnist William Pesek speaks from Tokyo with Bloomberg’s Rishaad Salamat about the impact of labor disputes in China on the nation’s economy. Widening labor unrest has forced auto parts makers to raise wages in China, increasing production costs for Toyota Motor Corp. and Honda Motor Co. Boosting salaries will help the government increase domestic consumption and move the economy away from a reliance on exports for growth. (William Pesek is a Bloomberg News columnist. The opinions expressed are his own. Source: Bloomberg)

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Video: McGinn Says BP Ads Not Right Idea, Scholarships Needed: Video

June 25, 2010

June 25 (Bloomberg) — Dan McGinn, chief executive officer at TMG Strategies, talks with Bloomberg’s Margaret Brennan about BP Plc’s media campaign in response to the worst oil spill in U.S. history. McGinn also discusses the public images of Goldman Sachs Group Inc. and Toyota Motor Corp. (Source: Bloomberg)

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Toyota to Reopen Chinese Factory After Strike at Parts Maker Is Called Off

June 19, 2010

By Yuki Hagiwara June 19 (Bloomberg) — Toyota Motor Corp.’s assembly plant in Tianjin, China, closed because of a supplier strike at Toyoda Gosei Co., will reopen on June 21 after the strike was called off today, Mieko Iwasaki, a spokeswoman for the Japan-based carmaker said today. The Toyoda Gosei factory in Tianjin will restart tomorrow, Iwasaki said by telephone. To contact the reporter on this story: 萩原ゆき at yhagiwara1@bloomberg.net

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Toyota to Reopen Chinese Factory After Strike at Parts Maker Is Called Off

June 19, 2010

By Yuki Hagiwara June 19 (Bloomberg) — Toyota Motor Corp.’s assembly plant in Tianjin, China, closed because of a supplier strike at Toyoda Gosei Co., will reopen on June 21 after the strike was called off today, Mieko Iwasaki, a spokeswoman for the Japan-based carmaker said today. The Toyoda Gosei factory in Tianjin will restart tomorrow, Iwasaki said by telephone. To contact the reporter on this story: 萩原ゆき at yhagiwara1@bloomberg.net

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Most Asian Stocks Advance on Japan Economic Growth, Commodities UFJ Gains

June 9, 2010

By Anna Kitanaka June 10 (Bloomberg) — Most Asian stocks rose after Japan’s economy grew faster than initially reported in the first quarter and commodity prices advanced. Mitsubishi UFJ Financial Group Inc., Japan’s largest bank by market value, gained 1 percent in Tokyo. Toyota Motor Corp. , the world’s largest automaker, climbed 0.3 percent. Mitsubishi Corp. , which gets about 40 percent of sales from commodities, increased 1.2 percent. BHP Billiton Ltd. , the world’s biggest mining company, climbed 0.2 percent in Sydney. The MSCI Asia Pacific Index was little changed at 109.90 as of 9:20 a.m. in Tokyo, with about twice as many stocks advancing as declining. The gauge has retreated 15 percent from this year’s high on April 15 on concern debt crises among European countries will undermine a global economic recovery. The drop cut the price of shares in the index to 14.1 times estimated earnings on average yesterday, near the lowest level since January 2009. Japan’s Nikkei 225 Stock Average gained 0.4 percent after a Cabinet Office report showed the nation’s economy grew at a 5 percent annual rate in the first quarter, compared with the 4.9 percent reported last month. That exceeded the median estimate of economists surveyed by Bloomberg. Australia’s S&P/ASX 200 Index increased 0.5 percent. New Zealand’s NZX 50 Index gained 0.2 percent even after the nation’s central bank raised its benchmark interest rate for the first time in three years on concern inflation will accelerate. Futures on the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index were little changed. The index declined 0.6 percent yesterday as the cost to protect against default by BP Plc rose to a record on concern over the fallout from the Gulf of Mexico oil spill. To contact the reporter on this story: Anna Kitanaka in Tokyo at akitanaka@bloomberg.net .

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Toyota Rating Cut to Aa2 by Moody’s on Risk Record Recall Will Curb Profit

April 21, 2010

By Makiko Kitamura April 22 (Bloomberg) — Toyota Motor Corp. ’s credit rating was cut by Moody’s Investors Service because it expects profit to remain at “a low level” through at least 2012. Moody’s downgraded Toyota to Aa2 from Aa1, the ratings agency said today in a statement. The world’s largest carmaker has recalled more than 8 million vehicles globally and has predicted this will cost it at least $2 billion in lost sales and warranty repairs. The Toyota City, Japan-based company also faces 180 consumer and shareholder lawsuits stemming from the recalls. Toyota faces a “material risk that its operating profit margin will remain well below that appropriate for its rating level until 2012 at the earliest and possibly beyond,” Moody’s analyst Tadashi Usui wrote. Toyota has predicted it will post net income of 80 billion yen ($862 million) for the year ended in March 31. The company’s shares fell 1.9 percent to 3,580 yen as of 12:44 p.m. in Tokyo. To contact the reporter on this story: Makiko Kitamura in Tokyo at mkitamura1@bloomberg.net .

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Toyota Said to Agree to Pay Record $16.4 Million U.S. Fine on Auto Recalls

April 18, 2010

By Angela Greiling Keane and Alan Ohnsman April 19 (Bloomberg) — Toyota Motor Corp. , the world’s biggest carmaker, will agree today to pay a record $16.4 million fine levied by the U.S. Transportation Department, according to an official at the agency. The company, which has recalled more than 8 million vehicles worldwide for defects that may cause unintended acceleration, was fined by the U.S. auto safety regulator for failing to alert the government about circumstances in which gas pedals may stick. The department official asked not to be identified ahead of the announcement. The fine, which amounts to less than 2 percent of Toyota’s projected net income for the year ended March 31, may bolster the case for plaintiffs seeking compensation from the Japanese carmaker. At least 180 consumer and shareholder lawsuits are seeking class-action status and at least 57 individual suits are claiming injuries or deaths caused by sudden acceleration incidents in Toyota vehicles. Paul Nolasco , a Toyota spokesman in Tokyo, declined to comment. The carmaker could have contested the fine, which is the maximum amount the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration can levy. Toyota has 30 days to pay the fine, imposed April 5 by NHTSA. It may be followed by additional penalties because the pedals supplied to Toyota by CTS Corp . “had two separate defects that may require two separate remedies,” the agency told the carmaker in a letter the day it announced the civil penalty. Four-Month Delay Toyota shares fell 2 percent to 3,620 yen as of 1:03 p.m. in Tokyo trading. A recall in January of 2.3 million vehicles involved pedals from CTS, based in Elkhart, Indiana, that were slow to return after being depressed as well as pedals on various vehicles that could become stuck. Manufacturers have five days to report safety defects to NHTSA. The regulator said Toyota waited at least four months before notifying authorities about the defects. The carmaker, based in Toyota City, Japan, failed to share defect information adequately among regional units, company President Akio Toyoda has said. His grandfather founded the company. The U.S. fine might have been as much as $13.8 billion were it not for a statute limiting NHTSA to a civil fine to $16.4 million, the agency said in its letter. That’s based on each of the 2.3 million vehicles involved in the U.S. recall qualifying for a fine of as much as $6,000 each. To contact the reporters on this story: Angela Greiling Keane in Washington at agreilingkea@bloomberg.net ; Alan Ohnsman in Los Angeles at aohnsman@bloomberg.net

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Toyota Sudden-Acceleration Lawsuits Combined in California Federal Court

April 9, 2010

By Margaret Cronin Fisk April 9 (Bloomberg) — Lawsuits against Toyota Motor Corp. related to sudden acceleration will be consolidated in a federal court in Santa Ana, California, a panel of judges said. Toyota, the world’s largest automaker, is facing at least 177 consumer and shareholder lawsuits seeking class-action status and at least 57 individual suits claiming personal injuries or deaths caused by sudden acceleration incidents. All the class actions and most of the individual suits were filed after September, when Toyota began the first of several recalls related to inadvertent acceleration. Toyota and lawyers for consumers asked in court filings and a March 25 hearing that the federal suits be combined in a multidistrict litigation, or MDL, in which one judge overseeing the litigation would decide issues such as evidence-gathering and allowable legal arguments. The lawsuits will be combined in federal court near Toyota’s U.S. sales headquarters in Torrance, California, to be handled by U.S. District Judge James V. Selna . Selna will oversee class actions and personal injury cases filed in federal court, the judges said in a ruling posted on the panel’s Web site today. Centralization “will eliminate duplicative discovery; prevent inconsistent pretrial rulings, including with respect to class certification; and conserve the resources of the parties, their counsel, and the judiciary,” the panel said. The central district of California “is the most appropriate choice” because of its proximity to Toyota headquarters, the panel said. Vehicle Recalls The Toyota City, Japan-based company has recalled more than 8 million vehicles for fixes related to sudden, unintended acceleration. The automaker announced in September that it was recalling 3.8 million Toyota and Lexus vehicles because of a defect that may cause floor mats to jam accelerator pedals. The company later recalled vehicles over defects involving the pedals themselves. The incidents, which have been linked to at least 51 deaths, spurred congressional hearings and an announcement last week by U.S. Transportation Secretary Ray LaHood that Toyota’s accelerator flaws and electronic vehicle controls will be examined by engineers from NASA. About half of the lawsuits claim the mats and pedals don’t explain all the sudden- acceleration incidents and may be linked instead to electronic throttle controls. “We are pleased with the outcome, including the location,” said Brian Lyons , a spokesman for Toyota’s U.S. sales unit. Lawyers’ Organization The decision “allows the plaintiffs’ lawyers to organize as a group,” with the best attorneys taking leadership positions in the combined cases, said Ken Seeger of Seeger Salvas in San Francisco, who isn’t involved in the litigation. “Toyota won’t be able to pick off the weakest or least experienced of the trial lawyers,” he said. Toyota may have won one advantage by the assignment to Santa Ana rather than Los Angeles, Seeger said. Prospective jurors would be drawn from Orange County, a more conservative pool than Los Angeles, he said. “Plaintiffs would have rather been in Los Angeles.” “That’s not much of a concern,” plaintiffs’ attorney Hunter Shkolnik , whose firm has class actions and personal injury suits, said today in an interview. “Judge Selna is highly qualified. We got a good assignment and now we can move forward.” Since November, at least 171 class actions have been filed against Toyota by consumers alleging the company withheld information about the risk of sudden acceleration, driving down the value of the vehicles. The lawsuits are seeking damages that range from a loss of car value to a return of Toyota profits. Blue Book Drop By February, Kelley Blue Book, the used-auto pricing service used as a guide in private-party sales, reported that Toyota values had dropped by as much as 4.5 percent, according to a complaint filed in federal court in California last week. Toyota is also facing at least five class actions by investors claiming the company inflated its shares by failing to disclose information about safety issues. A separate lawsuit seeking class-action status for Toyota dealers claiming losses because of recalls has been filed in federal court in Jefferson City, Missouri. At least 57 lawsuits claiming injuries or deaths caused by sudden-acceleration incidents have been filed in federal and state courts, with plaintiffs’ lawyers reporting plans to file dozens more. The lawsuits filed so far include claims of at least 26 deaths caused by such incidents. Injury Cases Plaintiffs’ lawyers disagreed at the March 25 hearing in federal court in San Diego whether the personal injury cases should be brought into the MDL or handled by the same judge overseeing the class actions. Both types of lawsuits should be combined before Selna, the judicial panel said in the ruling posted today. “The liability discovery in all the cases will certainly overlap.” Most of the plaintiffs’ lawyers were seeking to have the lawsuits consolidated before one judge, disagreeing over exactly which court. Lawyers suggested about a dozen different jurisdictions, including federal courts in California, Louisiana and Kentucky. Toyota and many of the plaintiffs’ lawyers at the San Diego hearing supported combining the lawsuits in California. More than one-quarter of the class actions have been filed in the central district of California, according to data compiled by Bloomberg News. “Relevant documents and witnesses are likely located there,” the panel said in its ruling. “Far more actions are pending there than in any other district.” The lawsuits will be combined as In Re: Toyota Motor Corp. Unintended Acceleration Marketing, Sales Practices, and Products Liability Litigation, MDL 2151, U.S. District Court, Central District of California (Santa Ana). To contact the reporter on this story: Margaret Cronin Fisk in Southfield, Michigan, at mcfisk@bloomberg.net .

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Toyota Lengthens Free Maintenance, Extends No-Interest Offer After Recalls

April 6, 2010

By Alan Ohnsman April 6 (Bloomberg) — Toyota Motor Corp. is extending no- interest loans and discount leases for another month on some U.S. models and expanding an offer of two years of free maintenance to hold onto sales gains after record recalls. The incentives include zero-percent financing for as long as five years on 2010 Camry, Avalon, Corolla and Matrix cars; Highlander and RAV4 sport-utility vehicles; and Tundra pickups. All consumers are now eligible for the service plan, not just repeat customers. The deals run until May 3. “We’re extending the two-year complimentary maintenance program, that proved to be very popular with existing Toyota owners in March, to all buyers in April,” Bob Carter , group vice president and general manager of Toyota brand sales, said today in a statement. Toyota is trying to build on momentum in U.S. sales in March, when discount loans and leases helped the world’s biggest automaker boost deliveries 41 percent after two monthly declines. The company has recalled more than 8 million vehicles to adjust brakes and fix flaws linked to sudden acceleration. U.S. Transportation Secretary Ray LaHood said yesterday the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration will seek to fine Toyota a record civil penalty of $16.4 million, the maximum allowed. The Toyota City, Japan-based automaker “knowingly hid a dangerous defect” related to accelerator pedals that can stick, LaHood said. All standard service will be covered for two years under the new maintenance plan, Sona Iliffe-Moon , a spokeswoman, said in an e-mail. Customers also can choose a $3,000 rebate on Avalon rather than the loan, according to Toyota’s Web site . Toyota initially announced incentives on March 2, and those offers expired yesterday. Toyota’s U.S. sales unit is based in Torrance, California. The company’s American depositary receipts rose 4 cents to $81.30 at 12:03 p.m. in New York Stock Exchange composite trading. To contact the reporter on this story: Alan Ohnsman in Los Angeles at aohnsman@bloomberg.net

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Toyota Faces Record $16.4 Million U.S. Fine for Hiding Accelerator Defect

April 5, 2010

By Angela Greiling Keane April 5 (Bloomberg) — Toyota Motor Corp. may face the maximum civil penalty of $16.4 million from the U.S. because it “knowingly hid a dangerous defect” that caused sudden acceleration, Transportation Secretary Ray LaHood said. Toyota, the world’s largest automaker, waited at least four months before it told the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration about vehicle accelerator pedals that may stick, LaHood said today in an e-mailed statement. “We now have proof that Toyota failed to live up to its legal obligations,” LaHood said in the statement. “Worse yet, they knowingly hid a dangerous defect for months from U.S. officials and did not take action to protect millions of drivers and their families.” The fine would be the largest civil penalty assessed by the auto safety regulator against an automaker. Toyota, based in Toyota City, Japan, in January recalled about 2.3 million cars and trucks for sticky accelerator pedals. The company has recalled more than 8 million vehicles worldwide for flaws that may cause unintended acceleration. To contact the reporter on this story: Angela Greiling Keane in Washington at agreilingkea@bloomberg.net .

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Toyota Faces Record $16.4 Million U.S. Fine for Hiding Accelerator Defect

April 5, 2010

By Angela Greiling Keane April 5 (Bloomberg) — Toyota Motor Corp. may face the maximum civil penalty of $16.4 million from the U.S. because it “knowingly hid a dangerous defect” that caused sudden acceleration, Transportation Secretary Ray LaHood said. Toyota, the world’s largest automaker, waited at least four months before it told the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration about vehicle accelerator pedals that may stick, LaHood said today in an e-mailed statement. “We now have proof that Toyota failed to live up to its legal obligations,” LaHood said in the statement. “Worse yet, they knowingly hid a dangerous defect for months from U.S. officials and did not take action to protect millions of drivers and their families.” The fine would be the largest civil penalty assessed by the auto safety regulator against an automaker. Toyota, based in Toyota City, Japan, in January recalled about 2.3 million cars and trucks for sticky accelerator pedals. The company has recalled more than 8 million vehicles worldwide for flaws that may cause unintended acceleration. To contact the reporter on this story: Angela Greiling Keane in Washington at agreilingkea@bloomberg.net .

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Hyundai Motor Rises to Record in Seoul After China, U.S. Sales Increase

April 2, 2010

By Seonjin Cha April 2 (Bloomberg) — Hyundai Motor Co. , South Korea’s largest automaker, rose to a record in Seoul trading after sales increased in the U.S. and China, fueling speculation that first-quarter earnings may beat expectations. Hyundai jumped 5.8 percent to close at 128,000 won on the Korea Exchange, while the key Kospi index rose 0.3 percent. Sales at the Seoul-based automaker’s Chinese venture last month jumped 47 percent from a year earlier, while the company boosted U.S. deliveries 15 percent to 47,002 vehicles. The U.S. gains trailed a 24 percent industrywide increase as sales incentives and rising consumer confidence created the strongest automobile demand in seven months. Hyundai also trailed a 41 percent U.S. jump for Japan’s Toyota Motor Corp. , which offered no-interest loans and discount leases to rekindle demand after record vehicle recalls. “Given the tough incentive and promotion competition by stronger rivals in the U.S., I think Hyundai’s U.S. March sales were superb,” said Kang Sang Min , an analyst at Hanwha Securities Co. in Seoul. “With strong sales at home, in China and the U.S., first-quarter earnings will likely beat the market’s expectations.” Hyundai’s global sales in the first quarter gained 36 percent to 840,258 units, while affiliate Kia Motors Corp. increased January-through-March sales 69 percent to 475,144, the companies said yesterday. Chung’s Target The increases suggest Hyundai Chairman Chung Mong Koo may meet his goal of lifting global sales 17 percent to 5.4 million vehicles this year, Hanwha’s Kang said. Kia , South Korea’s second-biggest carmaker, dropped 1.1 percent to 26,050 won. The stock climbed 30 percent this year after more than tripling in 2009. Hyundai’s first-quarter net income may rise to 751.1 billion won ($667 million) in the three months ended March 31, according to the median of 21 analyst estimates compiled by Bloomberg. That compares with a 225 billion won profit a year earlier, when a global recession reduced auto demand. To contact the reporter on this story: Seonjin Cha in Seoul at scha2@bloomberg.net

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March Car Sales: Sweet Deals Make For A Buyer’s Market For Auto Shoppers

April 2, 2010

DETROIT — It’s a buyer’s market for car shoppers, with good deals expected to last at least another month as automakers continue to match Toyota discounts that lured thousands of buyers in March. Seeking to repair the damage from a series of safety recalls, Toyota Motor Corp. offered unprecedented incentives last month, including low-interest financing and free maintenance for returning customers. The deals worked so well that Toyota’s U.S. sales jumped 41 percent and the automaker sold just 1,683 fewer cars than General Motors Co., the closest it has ever come to overtaking GM in monthly sales, according to auto research site Edmunds.com. GM and other automakers matched the deals, boosting the industry’s sales by 24 percent compared to the same month a year earlier, according to figures released Thursday and compiled by AutoData Corp. Incentives were the main factor for Jason Lopez, 26, a Toys R Us manager from Brooklyn, N.Y., who bought a 2010 Camry last month after his mother told him about the deals. Lopez spent about an hour researching which cars were affected by the recalls but he trusted Toyota’s reputation. “I know it’s safe,” he said. Lopez paid $20,800 for the car, which was listed at $23,115. Industry incentives averaged $2,742 per vehicle last month, according to Edmunds.com. That was down $423 from record-high levels a year earlier, when the economy was faltering and automakers saw one of the worst sales months in nearly 30 years. Incentives this March rose $100 from February. The big change last month was Toyota, which normally limits sales promotions but resorted to them after recalls of more than 8 million vehicles worldwide for problems involving brakes and accelerator pedals. Toyota’s incentives hit $2,256 per vehicle, their highest level ever, up nearly $700 from the year before. Toyota’s incentives averaged $1,700 before the crisis began last fall, said Jesse Toprak of auto pricing site TrueCar.com. Toyota is offering current owners interest-free financing for 60 months on the popular Camry sedan. On a base model with automatic transmission that costs $21,395, the financing would save a buyer $3,722 compared with the average new-car interest rate of 6.5 percent. Leasing may be April’s incentive battleground. Honda recently added a $250 per month lease on an Accord with nothing down. Toyota is offering $169 per month on Camrys for three years with $1,999 down. Toprak said the sweet lease deals are likely to continue for many months because automakers have access to inexpensive money. High demand for used cars also has driven up resale values, so automakers can afford better deals. Toyota’s incentives are scheduled to run through Monday, but Don Esmond, senior vice president of automotive operations at Toyota Motor Sales USA, said that some are likely to extend beyond that date. Toyota executives will evaluate market conditions over the weekend and decide. “We needed a little bit of a kickstart to get the market in our direction,” he said. “We’re not going to walk away from our customers.” Toyota also continues to face lingering questions about its safety record. This week, the federal government announced an investigation to see whether electronics caused sudden acceleration problems in Toyotas and other cars. Honda Motor Co. has already matched Toyota’s incentives through May 3, so automakers will be forced to compete through April. And new deals are in the works. Ford Motor Co. plans to announce a new program next week that will offer cash to switch to a Ford. Eventually, however, incentives will drop because automakers are limiting production more than they used to so they don’t have large inventories to get rid of, according to Jessica Caldwell, an industry analyst for Edmunds.com. That could lead to lower sales because consumers have been trained to wait for deals. The flurry of incentives has made it tough for automakers to gauge the strength of the industry’s recovery. Sales rose 15.5 percent in the first three months of this year, but some of that was due to heavy fleet sales, which are less profitable for automakers. Ford’s chief economist, Ellen Hughes-Cromwick, said the industry is on track for sales of 11.5 million new vehicles this year, one million more than 2009, but far below the 17 million sold five years ago. Toyota’s recovery is tenuous, too. James Bell, an analyst with auto pricing company Kelley Blue Book, said Toyota can successfully attract bargain-hunters and loyalists. But other buyers who might have considered Toyota are now looking at a variety of brands. “The elephant in the room for Toyota is what happens after this incentive ends,” he said. GM reported 21 percent jump in new vehicles sales for the month. Without the four brands GM is shedding – Pontiac, Saab, Hummer and Saturn – Toyota would have beaten GM for the month. Ford’s sales climbed nearly 40 percent on strong demand for the Fusion and Taurus sedans, while Honda’s rose 23 percent. GM, however, recaptured the top spot from Ford, which outsold GM in February. Sales at Subaru shot up 46 percent, while Nissan Motor Co.’s sales rose 43 percent. Hyundai Motor Co.’s sales rose 15 percent. Chrysler Group LLC, which has few new products, continued to struggle, with sales down 8 percent. ___ AP Auto Writer Tom Krisher in Detroit and Business Writer Emily Fredrix in Queens, N.Y., contributed to this report.

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General Motors RECALLS Vans, Halts Sales

March 27, 2010

DETROIT — General Motors Co. is recalling about 5,000 heavy-duty Chevrolet Express and GMC Savana vans because of a faulty alternator. The automaker also halted sales of the vans Friday. It has also stopped production of them until it can fix the problem. GM spokesman Alan Adler says there have been no injuries related to the recall. Purchasers of the recalled vans, built in February and March, are urged to stop driving them and park them outside away from buildings and other vehicles. It is rare for an automaker to halt sales because of a safety defect. GM’s decision to stop sales of the vans comes two months after Toyota Motor Corp. halted sales of eight models because of faulty accelerator pedals. ____ On the Net: General Motors: http://www.gm.com

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Video: Toyota, Lawsuit Lawyers Ask Judges for Consolidation: Video

March 25, 2010

March 26 (Bloomberg) — Bloomberg’s Lizzie O’Leary reports on requests from Toyota Motor Corp. and lawyers handling consumer and personal injury lawsuits against the company related to sudden acceleration for a panel of judges to consolidate all federal claims in one court. Bloomberg’s Alan Ohnsman reports on Toyota’s appointment of the head of its largest North American plant as its first vehicle-quality chief for the region. Bloomberg’s Susan Li also speaks. (Source: Bloomberg)

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Toyota Crash Warning Was Sent To Dealers In 2007

March 25, 2010

DETROIT (Reuters) – When Toyota Motor Corp concluded that seemingly harmless floormats posed a danger in all of its cars and trucks, the automaker sent a stark warning intended to prevent crashes.

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Toyota Asks ABC News to Retract `Irresponsible’ Sudden-Acceleration Report

March 18, 2010

By Alan Ohnsman and Jeff Plungis March 19 (Bloomberg) — Toyota Motor Corp. asked U.S. broadcaster ABC News to retract and apologize for an “irresponsible” report it aired last month suggesting electronics as the cause of sudden acceleration in its cars. The world’s largest automaker is working to repair its reputation after recalling 8 million vehicles worldwide to fix defects linked to bursts of speed. The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration said yesterday that evidence from a Toyota Prius involved in a Harrison, New York, crash tied to unintended acceleration found no sign the car’s brakes had been applied. Toyota has said accelerators that stick or snag on floor mats are at fault in sudden acceleration, with no evidence of failures in the electronic-control systems of its cars and trucks. An ABC News report on Feb. 22 challenged that assumption, and the network in a response to Toyota defended its right to air the report. The network owned by Walt Disney Co. “relentlessly promoted” a view that electronics in Toyota and Lexus models were a cause of sudden-acceleration complaints, without providing “credible scientific evidence,” Christopher Reynolds , Toyota’s U.S. general counsel, said in a March 11 letter to ABC News President David Westin . “Toyota deserves a public retraction and formal apology from ABC News for your irresponsible broadcast,” Reynolds said in the four-page letter, reported yesterday by the Web site gawker.com. ‘Legitimate, Newsworthy’ ABC News’s report on the design of Toyota electronic throttle controls was “legitimate and newsworthy,” John Zucker , ABC Inc. senior vice president of law & regulation, said yesterday in a three-page letter to Reynolds. Toyota was contacted on Feb. 22, before the broadcast for a response to be included in the report, and didn’t respond, Zucker said. ABC News had included a fabricated video image of a car tachometer in the broadcast “to create the false and misleading impression with viewers of a dangerous and uncontrolled acceleration,” Reynolds wrote. The original video image was deemed difficult for viewers to observe because of the car’s motion, Zucker responded. Using a different shot was an “editorial error,” and a re-edited video has been posted to the abcnews.com Web site, he said. “The larger point, however, is that the use of the video shot was not intended to, and did not, materially mislead the public,” Zucker said. “ABC News intends to continue to cover the issues surrounding reports of unintended acceleration by Toyota vehicles.” Harrison Accident Toyota City, Japan-based Toyota faces more than 100 class- action and individual lawsuits from customers related to vehicle defects. Toyota’s American depositary receipts, each equal to two ordinary shares, fell 49 cents to $78.81 yesterday in New York Stock Exchange composite trading. The shares have lost $25.2 billion in market value since Toyota announced a recall on Jan. 21. In the suburban New York crash on March 9, a 2005 Prius sped out of control before hitting a stone wall. The Prius’s diagnostic recorder indicated the car’s accelerator was engaged, NHTSA said in the e-mailed statement. “Information retrieved from the vehicle’s onboard computer systems indicated there was no application of the brakes and the throttle was fully open,” the Washington-based auto safety agency said in the statement. “Any release of information regarding an investigation that’s not complete or without consulting local investigating authorities is irresponsible,” said Captain Anthony Marraccini, head of the Harrison police department. Gilbert’s Test The information mentioned by NHTSA is “just one snapshot,” Marraccini said. Harrison police are still meeting with Toyota to analyze the data and is using the Rockville, Maryland, office of RTI International, a forensic engineering company, to help assess the crash, he said. Toyota told reporters March 8 that Southern Illinois University professor David Gilbert ’s test, featured in the ABC broadcast, altered a circuit in a way that couldn’t occur in everyday driving, so it couldn’t be used as evidence of sudden acceleration. Toyota Motor Sales vice president of corporate communications, Mike Michels , said at the time that the company wasn’t planning legal action against ABC. Reynolds couldn’t be immediately reached for comment yesterday. The automaker “reserves the right to take any and every appropriate step to protect and defend the reputation of our company and its products from irresponsible and inaccurate claims,” Reynolds wrote in the letter, which was copied to Disney Chief Executive Officer Robert Iger . Gilbert testified before a U.S. House of Representatives hearing on Feb. 23 that he had isolated weaknesses in Toyota’s electronic throttle system not found in units from other automakers. Toyota engineers and those from the firm it hired to assess its electronics, Exponent Inc., used Gilbert’s technique to induce engine-revving in vehicles from General Motors Co., Daimler AG and Chrysler Group LLC at the March 8 demonstration. To contact the reporters on this story: Alan Ohnsman in Los Angeles at aohnsman@bloomberg.net ; Jeff Plungis in Washington at jplungis@bloomberg.net

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Honda Recalls 410,000 Vehicles Over Faulty Brake System

March 16, 2010

Honda has recalled more than 400,000 vehicles over concerns of brake failure, according to several news reports today. While Honda’s announcement pales in comparison to Toyota’s recall of 8.5 million vehicles , its part of a growing number of automaker concerns about the possibility of faulty brake systems. Here’s the AP: The recall includes 344,000 Odysseys and 68,000 Elements from the 2007 and 2008 model years. Honda said in a statement that over time, brake pedals can feel “soft” and must be pressed closer to the floor to stop the vehicles. Left unrepaired, the problem could cause loss of braking power and possibly a crash, Honda spokesman Chris Martin said. “It’s definitely not operating the way it should, and it’s safety systems, so it brings it to the recall status,” he said. The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration has reported three crashes due to the problem with minor injuries and no deaths, Martin said. Honda notified NHTSA of the recall on Monday, he said. The problems with uncontrolled acceleration acceleration seem to not be limited to Toyota. As Bloomberg noted yesterday , American automakers may also have had brake issues. Here’s Bloomberg: U.S. regulators have tracked more deaths in vehicles made by Ford Motor Co., Chrysler Group LLC and other companies combined than by Toyota Motor Corp. during three decades of unintended acceleration reviews that often blamed human error. The agency received 15,174 complaints involving unintended acceleration in the past decade and has run 141 investigations of the phenomenon since 1980, closing 112 of them without corrective action. NHTSA’s repeated conclusion that crashes occurred because drivers mistakenly stomped the accelerator became a policy position that caused investigators to take complaints of runaway vehicles less seriously than they should have, safety advocates say. Here’s more from the AP: Drivers who fear that they’ve lost braking power should have their dealer check the brakes sooner, Martin said. The dealer can “bleed” air bubbles out of the hydraulic lines, which should fix the problem until the parts arrive for the final repair, he said. Honda technicians will put plastic caps and sealant over two small holes in the device to stop the air from getting in, Martin said. The automaker is still preparing a list of affected vehicles. After April 19, owners can determine if their vehicles are being recalled by going to or by calling (800) 999-1009, and selecting option number four. http://www.recalls.honda.com

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Toyota Says It’s Upgrading Software That Records Data Following Accidents

March 12, 2010

By Jeff Plungis March 13 (Bloomberg) — Toyota Motor Corp. said it is upgrading software that helps read information from devices used to record vehicle crash data, according to a statement on the automaker’s Web site. Toyota, the world’s biggest automaker, has recalled about 8 million vehicles to repair defects that may cause unintended acceleration. Its handling of the recalls, and the government’s response, have been the subject of hearings by three committees in Congress. Media reports have “mischaracterized how Toyota uses and discloses information” from recorders in its Toyota and Lexus vehicles, the company said in the statement . Toyota has always made all data recorded available to the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, law enforcement officials and courts “when requested or ordered to do so,” the automaker said. The software for the data recorders will be upgraded to be compatible with all vehicles, Toyota said in the statement. The Toyota City, Japan-based company delivered a specialized computer used to read crash data to U.S. regulators on March 3, and three more will be delivered in April, the company said. Toyota will also provide 150 computers to read the “event data recorders” throughout North America by the end of April, the statement said. “Once the additional read-out units are available and appropriate procedures are in place, Toyota will provide vehicle owners with access to EDR data from their vehicles upon request,” Toyota said. To contact the reporter on this story: Jeff Plungis in Washington at jplungis@bloomberg.net .

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Video: Brady Sees `Battle of Wills’ in Cable Fight Over Content: Video

March 12, 2010

March 12 (Bloomberg) — Diane Brady, senior editor at Bloomberg BusinessWeek, talks with Scarlet Fu about cable, satellite and telecommunication companies’ efforts to control television content on the Internet and wireless devices. Brady also discusses the impact of Toyota Motor Corp.’s recalls on the automaker’s image and the battle over food in Venezuela. (Source: Bloomberg)

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Video: Matsumoto Says Regulators Must Step Up Car Safety Rules

March 12, 2010

March 12 (Bloomberg) — Yasuhiro Matsumoto, a senior analyst at Shinsei Securities Co., talks about Toyota Motor Corp.’s recall and the need for regulators to increase scrutiny of the car industry. Matsumoto also discusses Toyota’s plan to increase its market share in the U.S. this year. He speaks with Bloomberg’s Mark Barton from Tokyo.

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Toyota Says Electronics Test Cited in U.S. House Hearing Isn’t Realistic

March 8, 2010

By Jeff Plungis and Alan Ohnsman March 8 (Bloomberg) — Toyota Motor Corp. said a test of its electronic throttle-control system cited in testimony to Congress as possible evidence of a cause of unintended acceleration couldn’t occur in the real world. Toyota said David W. Gilbert, an associate professor of automotive technology at Southern Illinois University, altered a circuit in the accelerator pedal he tested, making it unreasonable to draw conclusions about vehicles on the road. The accelerator circuit in Gilbert’s test was “rewired and reengineered in multiple ways that is impossible in the real world,” a Toyota spokesman, Mike Michels , said at a demonstration at the automaker’s U.S. sales headquarters in Torrance, California, today. Gilbert testified before a House panel last month that he was able to isolate weaknesses in Toyota’s electronic throttles that aren’t found in units from other automakers. Toyota has recalled about 8 million cars and trucks worldwide for defects that may cause sudden acceleration. To contact the reporters on this story: Jeff Plungis in Washington at jplungis@bloomberg.net ; Alan Ohnsman in Los Angeles at aohnsman@bloomberg.net .

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Toyota Plans Demonstration to Discredit Professor’s Throttle-Control Study

March 5, 2010

By Angela Greiling Keane and Alan Ohnsman March 6 (Bloomberg) — Toyota Motor Corp. plans to duplicate a professor’s findings critical of the automaker’s electronic throttle-control system in order to discredit them. Toyota, which has recalled about 8 million cars and trucks worldwide for defects that may cause sudden acceleration, will host a demonstration on March 8 with company and independent engineers who will refute an experiment by David W. Gilbert of Southern Illinois University, the company said yesterday in a statement. “This presentation will show that the sequence and nature of manipulated faults in the Gilbert demonstration are completely unrealistic under real-world conditions and can easily be reproduced on a wide range of vehicles made by other manufacturers,” Toyota, the world’s largest automaker, said in the statement. The event, available to reporters over the Internet, will take place at Toyota’s U.S. sales headquarters in Torrance, California. Gilbert, an associate professor of automotive technology at the SIU campus in Carbondale, Illinois, said in testimony before a House panel last week that he was able to isolate weaknesses in Toyota’s electronic throttles that aren’t found in units from other automakers. Toyota drew criticism at three congressional hearings in the past two weeks for dismissing electronics as a possible cause of unintended acceleration episodes that forced the recalls. Two Toyota managers resigned from an SIU advisory panel after Gilbert’s testimony. The Toyota City, Japan-based automaker has blamed sticky accelerators and floor mats for the episodes, which the U.S. government said March 2 have been linked in consumer complaints to 43 crashes that caused 52 deaths and 38 injuries. To contact the reporters on this story: Angela Greiling Keane in Washington at agreilingkea@bloomberg.net ; Alan Ohnsman in Los Angeles at aohnsman@bloomberg.net .

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Toyota Recalls Spark Divergence in Swaps, Bond-Yield Spread: Chart of Day

March 4, 2010

By Takashi Ueno March 4 (Bloomberg) — Toyota Motor Corp.’s recall of about 8 million cars has elicited divergent responses from foreign and Japanese investors, with the cost of protecting the company’s bonds against default rising while the yield spread to sovereign debt has varied little this year. The CHART OF THE DAY shows credit-default swaps on Toyota’s five-year bonds and, in the lower panel, the yield spread to similar-maturity government notes. The price on five-year swaps linked to Toyota’s debt widened by about 40 basis points between Jan. 15 and Feb. 9, as the world’s biggest automaker expanded its recall in the U.S., according to data compiled by CMA DataVision. By contrast, the spread between yields on Toyota’s five- year bonds maturing in June 2014 and counterpart government notes has been little changed, trading close to 22 basis points since the start of this year, Japan Securities Dealers Association’s data show. A basis point is 0.01 percent. One reason for the different reactions is that foreign investors are active in Japan’s CDS market, while Toyota’s bondholders are mainly Japanese, said Hisayoshi Nogawa , a strategist at BNP Paribas Securities Japan Ltd. “Foreign investors are cautious about Toyota’s creditworthiness, whereas Japanese don’t expect the recalls to break the automaker’s back,” he said. Toyota’s credit ratings probably won’t be lowered to the extent that a debt sell-off or default could be triggered, Nogawa said. The automaker is currently rated Aa1 by Moody’s Corp., AA by Standard & Poor’s, and AAA by Japan’s Rating and Investment Information Inc. Credit-default swaps pay the buyer face value in exchange for the underlying securities or the cash equivalent should a company fail to adhere to its debt agreements. (To save a copy of the chart, click here.) To contact the reporter on this story: Takashi Ueno in Tokyo at tueno@bloomberg.net

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General Motors to Recall 1.3 Million Compact Cars to Fix Power Steering

March 1, 2010

By Jeran Wittenstein March 1 (Bloomberg) — General Motors Co. plans to recall 1.3 million Chevrolet and Pontiac vehicles in North America to fix power steering systems, after the U.S. started an investigation spurred by consumer complaints. GM will replace a motor in the power steering system of Chevrolet Cobalt small cars and three Pontiac models after more than 1,100 complaints cited a loss of power-steering assist. The defect was linked to 14 crashes and one injury, the company said in an e-mailed statement. The Detroit-based carmaker told the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration about the recall today, the statement said. The action follows global recalls of more than 8 million vehicles by Toyota Motor Corp. for problems including unintended acceleration, which have prompted lawsuits and Congressional hearings. The cases have triggered a review of the NHTSA by the U.S. Transportation Department’s inspector general to examine the way government investigators monitor automotive defects. “Recalling these vehicles is the right thing to do,” Jamie Hresko, a vice president for quality at GM, said in the statement. The steering problem tends to occur in older vehicles for which the warranties have expired, he said. The vehicles covered are the 2005-2010 Cobalt, 2007-2010 Pontiac G5, 2005-2006 Pontiac Pursuit sold in Canada, and the 2005-2006 Pontiac G4 sold in Mexico. A remedy is being developed and customers will be notified when the plan is completed, the statement said. The vehicles can still be steered when the power steering system fails, although it requires greater effort, Hresko said. The NHTSA said Feb. 1 it was investigating the Cobalt because of reports of “sudden loss” of power steering. GM reported U.S. sales of 104,724 Cobalts last year, a decline of 44 percent from 2008. The automaker said in January it plans to build fewer of the cars through April as it adjusts output to match demand. To contact the reporter on this story: Jeran Wittenstein at jwittenstei1@bloomberg.net

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Video: Toyota’s President to Meet Press in China Amid Recalls: Video

February 28, 2010

March 1 (Bloomberg) — Bloomberg’s Stephen Engle reports on Toyota Motor Corp. President Akio Toyoda’s plan to hold a press conference today in China, the world’s biggest car market. Toyota is struggling to salvage its reputation amid global recalls of more than 8 million vehicles. (Source: Bloomberg)

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Toyota Doesn’t `Run Away’ From Problems, Akio Toyoda Tells U.S. Lawmakers

February 24, 2010

By Angela Greiling Keane and Jeff Plungis Feb. 24 (Bloomberg) — Toyota Motor Corp. ’s president told a U.S. congressional panel “we never run away from our problems,” as the committee examines the world’s largest automaker’s record recalls. Akio Toyoda ’s remarks before the U.S. House Oversight and Government Reform Committee came in his first U.S. testimony following recalls of about 8 million cars and trucks worldwide for defects that may cause sudden acceleration. To contact the reporters on this story: Angela Greiling Keane in Washington at agreilingkea@bloomberg.net ; Jeff Plungis in Washington at jplungis@bloomberg.net

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Toyota’s `Pattern of Hiding’ to Be Probed in Hearing on Recalls, Issa Says

February 19, 2010

By Jeff Plungis and Lizzie O’Leary Feb. 19 (Bloomberg) — Toyota Motor Corp .’s “pattern of hiding” will be examined at a congressional hearing next week on safety recalls by the world’s largest automaker, U.S. Representative Darrell Issa said today. Toyota said yesterday that President Akio Toyoda will testify at the Feb. 24 hearing of the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee . That’s important because “he’s the only person that can speak for a global enterprise” about “getting those problems addressed quickly,” Issa, the panel’s senior Republican, said in a Bloomberg Television interview. The panel will also examine the failure of the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration to use its legal authority to force recalls, said Issa. Regulators should be looking more globally for potential defects, the California lawmaker said. Issa said he hoped the hearings wouldn’t lead to new auto- safety legislation. “I want them to use the power they have,” Issa said of NHTSA. Toyota, the world’s biggest automaker , is fixing more than 8 million vehicles worldwide for defects including unintended acceleration, and faces an investigation on a possible steering flaw on its Corolla sedan, the world’s top-selling car. To contact the reporter on this story: Jeff Plungis in Washington at jplungis@bloomberg.net ; Lizzie O’Leary in Washington at loleary2@bloomberg.net ;

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Toyota Said to Face U.S. Probe After Corolla Power Steering Complaints

February 17, 2010

By Jeff Plungis Feb. 17 (Bloomberg) — Toyota Motor Corp. faces a defect investigation after complaints over power steering in the 2009 and 2010 Corolla sedan, a person familiar with the matter said. The probe will cover about 500,000 vehicles, said the person, who asked not to be identified because Toyota hasn’t been formally notified. The Associated Press reported the inquiry earlier today. To contact the reporter on this story: Jeff Plungis in Washington at jplungis@bloomberg.net

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Toyota Says It May Provide Brake-Override Systems for Additional Models

February 13, 2010

By Mina Kawai Feb. 13 (Bloomberg) — Toyota Motor Corp. , the world’s largest automaker, said in a letter to a U.S. lawmaker this week it may provide brake-override systems to more models to prevent sudden acceleration. The auto maker “will consider expanding brake override capability to additional models,” said Theodore M. Hester , a partner at King & Spalding LLP in Washington, in a Feb. 9 letter addressed to U.S. Representative Edolphus Towns . Hester didn’t specify any make or quantity of models that could be involved in the letter to Towns, a New York Democrat and chairman of the House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform. Toyota suspended some sales while working to correct defects with about 8 million vehicles globally. The recalls involving sudden acceleration focus on floor mats that snagged the accelerator pedal and pedals that tended to stick, according to the company. Brake-override systems disengage the engine when the brake and throttle are both depressed, and are used on many autos that use computers instead of cables to control acceleration. They work in tandem with the electronic throttle control technology that was unveiled in the late 1980s and are becoming an industry standard. The systems will be installed as standard equipment in most Toyota and Lexus vehicles by year-end, Hester said in the letter. At least three U.S. congressional committees plan hearings on the Toyota recalls. Separately, Toyota said yesterday it’s recalling a “limited number” of Tacoma pickups because of cracks in drive- shaft components. To contact the reporter on this story: Mina Kawai in New York at minkawai@bloomberg.net .

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Toyota Said to Consider Warranties, Discounts to Lure Buyers After Recall

February 12, 2010

By Doron Levin Feb. 12 (Bloomberg) — Toyota Motor Corp. is considering longer warranties and cash discounts to woo U.S. consumers after recalls that forced the automaker to halt sales of eight models, dealer executives familiar with the talks said. Ideas being considered include warranties of as long as 10 years and rebates of thousands of dollars per vehicle that would start in March, said three executives from retailer groups with Toyota franchises. They declined to be identified because the discussions are private. “Toyota has got to be aggressive on this,” Mike Maroone , chief operating officer of AutoNation Inc. , the biggest U.S. retailer of the automaker’s vehicles, said in an interview today at an industry conference in Orlando, Florida. “Toyota has to put a wall around its customers.” Boosting incentives might help Toyota keep customers as it tries to recover from recalls linked to unwanted acceleration that included about 8 million vehicles worldwide. The Toyota City, Japan-based company’s U.S. sales fell 16 percent in January while the industry total rose 6.3 percent. Mike Michels , a spokesman at Toyota’s U.S. sales unit in Torrance, California, wouldn’t comment about any planned incentives. Maroone also declined to discuss details of the plan. Toyota’s American depositary receipts rose $1.05, or 1.4 percent, to $77.05 in New York Stock Exchange composite trading. The automaker has declined 8.4 percent this year. Like Hyundai In 1998 Hyundai Motor Co. offered an industry-leading 10- year warranty on the engine and transmission of its vehicles to neutralize consumer worries about durability. Hyundai said in 2006 it would continue the warranty at least through 2010. The U.S. House Energy and Commerce Committee, headed by California Democrat Henry Waxman , is among three congressional panels that have scheduled hearings on Toyota’s recalls and their handling by the Transportation Department. The hearings are scheduled for Feb. 24 through March 2. Toyota won’t offer a new warranty program until the hearings are complete, said one of the executives. To contact the reporters on this story: Doron Levin in Southfield, Michigan, at Dlevin5@bloomberg.net

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Toyota Recall: Two Toyota Employees, Former NHTSA Regulators, Got US To Stop Accelerator Probes

February 11, 2010

Feb. 12 (Bloomberg) — Former regulators hired by Toyota Motor Corp. helped end at least four U.S. investigations of unintended acceleration by company vehicles in the last decade, warding off possible recalls, court and government records show. Christopher Tinto, vice president of regulatory affairs in Toyota’s Washington office, and Christopher Santucci, who works for Tinto, helped persuade the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration

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Honda to Recall 437,763 Vehicles Globally to Fix Air Bags After Injuries

February 10, 2010

By Alan Ohnsman and Tetsuya Komatsu Feb. 10 (Bloomberg) — Honda Motor Co ., Japan’s second- largest automaker, will recall 437,763 vehicles globally to repair air bags that can deploy with too much pressure, adding to previous U.S. recalls for the same defect. The expansion covers 378,758 vehicles in the U.S., Honda said in a statement late yesterday. The Tokyo-based carmaker will recall about 4,000 cars and minivans in Japan, it said in a filing to the nation’s Transport Ministry today. The recall expansion heightens safety scrutiny of Japan’s largest automakers. Honda’s biggest competitor, Toyota Motor Corp. , is working to reassure customers after recalling more than 8 million vehicles worldwide to fix problems linked to unintended acceleration and brake failures. “Because of the Toyota recalls, Honda’s action is getting a lot of attention, but it’s not fundamentally a big deal,” said Mamoru Kato , an analyst at Tokai Tokyo Research Center in Nagoya, Japan. “Recalls are kind of an everyday thing.” Honda fell 0.2 percent to 3,055 yen as of the 11 a.m. trading break in Tokyo. The company knows of one death and 12 incidents related to the air-bag defect, John Mendel , Honda’s U.S. executive vice president, said in a conference call. “The air bag produces excessive internal pressure, and there’s a risk of some metal shards coming through. That could cause injury.” Takata Corp. U.S. vehicles to be repaired include some 2001 and 2002 Accord and Civic cars, Odyssey minivans, CR-V sport-utility vehicles and 2002 Acura TL cars. An initial U.S. recall in November 2008 included 4,600 Accords and Civics, and another 440,000 of those cars and some Acura TLs were added in July. In Japan, Honda is recalling Inspire and Saber cars and Lagreat minivans, the carmaker said in today’s filing. Mendel said some vehicles in Canada and other markets would also be affected by the action, without elaborating. The air bags were made by Tokyo-based Takata Corp. , according to Honda. Takata shares fell 1.6 percent to 1,890 yen. Honda’s U.S. operations are based in Torrance, California. To contact the reporter on this story: Alan Ohnsman in Los Angeles at aohnsman@bloomberg.net

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Toyota Corolla Steering Complaints Are Being Reviewed By U.S. Regulators

February 9, 2010

By John Hughes Feb. 9 (Bloomberg) — Toyota Motor Corp. ’s Corolla, the world’s best-selling car, is being reviewed by the U.S. after driver complaints about steering, according to a government spokeswoman. The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration has recorded more than 80 complaints about Corolla steering for 2009 and 2010 models, according to the agency’s online database. “We are reviewing steering complaints with the Corolla,” Karen Aldana , a spokeswoman for the agency, said in an e-mail. NHTSA wants “to determine if a safety defect investigation is warranted, as is standard procedure with all complaints.” The inquiry, which was reported earlier by Automotive News, may add to troubles for Toyota, which is recalling 437,000 hybrid cars globally on top of the almost 8 million vehicles the company is repairing for separate defects. “We have not received any official communication regarding an evaluation of Corolla,” Ed Lewis , a Toyota spokesman in Washington, said in an e-mail. “We will cooperate, of course, with any inquiry the agency has.” Consumers have complained that they have had difficulty keeping the Corolla going straight on highways, according to the NHTSA database. “The first time my wife drove it on the highway her arms were tired after 25 miles trying to keep it straight,” according to one of the complaints, which said the failure occurred Sept. 20 on a 2010 Corolla. A 2010 Corolla “drives all over the road,” one owner told NHTSA after an incident last month. “It feels like I’m driving on black ice, constantly, trying to compensate for the oversteer.” To contact the reporters on this story: John Hughes in Washington at jhughes5@bloomberg.net .

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Toyota Halts Lexus, SAI Hybrid Shipments on Same Brake Problems as Prius

February 8, 2010

By Makiko Kitamura and Tetsuya Komatsu Feb. 9 (Bloomberg) — Toyota Motor Corp. stopped shipments of its Lexus HS250h and SAI hybrids from a factory in southern Japan due to possible brake problems with the models, which use the same system as Prius hybrid cars. Shipments from the factory in Kyushu were stopped yesterday to inspect the models, Norifumi Wakikawa , a spokesman at Toyota Motor Kyushu, said by phone today. Toyota, the world’s biggest carmaker, is expected to recall the 2010 version of the Prius in Japan this week to repair a problem with the braking system. Scrutiny of the vehicles may further tarnish Toyota’s reputation after the Toyota City, Japan-based company recalled almost 8 million cars globally to repair separate defects linked to unintended acceleration. Those recalls have yet to include any cars in Japan, where the Prius was last year’s top-selling model. Toyota has been investigating reports that Prius owners driving at low speeds on bumpy or icy roads may experience moments where the car continues to coast for about a second after the brakes are applied because of the anti-lock brake system. The company plans to recall at least 270,000 Priuses in Japan and the U.S., a person familiar with the matter said, declining to be identified as the information isn’t yet public. Japan, U.S. Recalls Ririko Takeuchi , a Toyota spokeswoman in Tokyo, declined to say whether the company will recall the Prius. The carmaker may notify Japan’s Transport Ministry of plans to recall the model as early as today, followed by a similar action in the U.S., Nikkei English News said, without citing anyone. Juergen Stolze , a Toyota spokesman in Cologne, Germany, said yesterday the carmaker will decide by Feb. 10 whether to recall Prius cars in Europe. Toyota rose 1.8 percent to 3,340 yen as of 9:57 a.m. on the Tokyo Stock Exchange. The company has lost about $33 billion in market value since Jan. 21, when it announced a recall of 2.3 million U.S. vehicles for defects linked to unintended acceleration. To contact the reporter on this story: Makiko Kitamura in Tokyo at mkitamura1@bloomberg.net

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