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Toyota to suffer $4.3 billion in losses from Iran War

Toyota, the world's largest automobile manufacturer, warned on Friday that the fallout of the Iran War would cost the company $4.3 billion in this fiscal year. This is one of the most serious warnings to date about the impact of the crisis.

Toyota has reported a nearly 50% decline in quarterly earnings, and expects to see a full-year loss of 5% in the just-started year. This is due to rising costs from the war and supply problems. These factors outweighed the surge in demand for hybrid cars.

This year, the automaker anticipates hybrid sales to surpass 5 million for the first ever time. The results show the uneven impact of the Middle East Crisis, as higher energy prices are driving customers towards fuel-efficient vehicles but not in sufficient numbers to offset the cost pressures.

Toyota reported an operating loss of 1.1 trillion yen for the period ending March 31. This compares to a profit of 569.4 yen (3.6 billion dollars) a year ago. It expects to make an operating profit in the current fiscal period of 3 trillion yen.

This was a far lower forecast than the median of 4,59 trillion yen in a LSEG survey of 23 analysts. Toyota shares declined after the report, and ended at a low of?around 2,2%.

Kenta Kon told a press briefing that it was not necessary to stop completely but rather identify waste and change structures one-by-one, implementing reform.

Kon praised Toyota for its ability to produce nearly 3.8 trillion in operating profit during the fiscal year just ended despite major changes in the operating environments.

MIDDLE EST IMPACT

Toyota stated that the Middle East Crisis will have an impact totaling 670 billion yen (4.3 billion dollars) on the year ending March 2027. This was higher than the estimates of'many major companies, including airlines.

Toyota estimates a full-year cost of 400 billion yen due to higher fuel and material costs and around 270 billion from lower volumes.

Energy prices are on the rise again, adding to the pain for an industry that is already struggling with U.S. Tariffs and Chinese automakers. Volkswagen CEO Oliver Blume stated this week that tariffs are a burden on the German Group's operating profits of $5.9 billion a year.

Toyota announced last week that its sales in?the Middle East? fell sharply in?March after?shipments into the region were disrupted.

This is the first outlook issued by Toyota since Kon took over. He faces the challenge to steer the automaker around the impact of U.S. president Donald Trump's tariffs that cut operating profits in the just-ended year by 1.4 trillion Japanese yen.

(source: Reuters)