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benyl
11-25-2005, 08:31 AM
Automaker reportedly plans to build 100,000 vehicles in Indiana, readies new pickup plant in Texas

By Hans Greimel / AP Business Writer

TOKYO -- Toyota Motor Corp. is quickening its quest to unseat ailing rival General Motors Corp. as the world's biggest automaker with reported plans to start manufacturing up to 100,000 Toyota vehicles at a Subaru factory in Indiana.

Word of Toyota's ramped-up production schedule comes just days after money-losing GM said it will close 12 facilities by 2008 in a move that will slash the number of vehicles it is able to build in North America by about 1 million a year.

The combined developments could help Toyota surpass GM in worldwide production, although it's unclear if that would happen because Detroit-based GM is growing rapidly in Asia.

Toyota expects to produce 8.1 million vehicles this year, while GM expects 9 million, according to Greg Gardner of Harbour Consulting, a manufacturing consulting firm.

Toyota will also chip away at GM's lead with a new pickup truck plant scheduled to open next year in San Antonio that will add an additional 200,000 vehicles to Toyota's annual capacity. The Japanese company's output will be boosted by another 100,000 vehicles in 2008, when Toyota's new RAV 4 plant comes online in Canada.

Under the latest expansion plans, the world's No. 2 automaker has asked Fuji Heavy Industries, maker of Subaru autos, to start building Toyotas in 2007 at a Lafayette, Indiana, factory operated by Fuji's wholly owned subsidiary, Subaru of Indiana Automotive, the Asahi newspaper reported Wednesday, without citing sources.

Company representatives were not available for comment Wednesday, a national holiday in Japan.

Ann McConnell, a spokeswoman for Subaru of Indiana, said Fuji Heavy Industries and Toyota Motor Corp. have been in discussions, but that there has been no word of a decision yet.

There are five to six candidate models for production, the newspaper said, with the number manufactured annually to gradually increase to 100,000 vehicles. Earlier reports have suggested that Toyota might produce hybrid vehicles at the Fuji plant.

The Indiana plant produced nearly 120,000 Subaru models last year.

It wasn't immediately clear if Subaru production would be reduced or what the factory's total vehicle output would be.

Fuji teamed up with Toyota in October after ending a five-year tie-up with GM, which sold its 20 percent in the Japanese company. Toyota, based in Toyota City in central Japan, bought a 8.7 percent stake from GM for about $315 million to become Fuji's top shareholder.

Overall, GM lost almost $4 billion in the first nine months of this year, hit by falling sales and rising health care costs. Its share of the U.S. market has shrunk to 26.2 percent from 33 percent a decade ago.

The plant closings, which will entail 30,000 job cuts, are meant to chop $7 billion off its $42 billion annual bill for operations by the end of next year, including a $3 billion cut in health care costs.

Toyota, by contrast, is on pace to set a fourth straight year of record profits.

Both GM and Ford Motor Co., the world's third-biggest automaker, are seeing their U.S. market share because of Toyota and other Asian competitors. Toyota, Nissan Motor Co. and Honda Motor Co. are all reporting healthy earnings bolstered by their reputation for well-built, fuel-efficient cars at a time of surging gas prices.

GM's tie-up with Fuji was largely deemed a flop. But access to Fuji's plants could help Toyota boost production at a time of soaring sales, analysts say, although Fuji has only the one plant in North America, so additional capacity will be limited.

Completed in 1988, the Indiana factory was built under a joint-venture agreement between Fuji and Isuzu Motors Ltd. Fuji bought out Isuzu's share in the venture and became sole operator of the plant in 2003.

After GM's latest cost cuts, the company will be able to build about 4.2 million vehicles a year in North America, down 30 percent from 2002. Toyota is expected to have North American capacity of about 1.81 million cars by then, up from 1.44 million vehicles last year, Toyota spokesman Dan Sieger said Monday.

China is one bright spot for GM, which said last month that sales there rose 27.8 percent in the first three quarters of the year to 472,468 vehicles. Growth was fueled partly by a mini-vehicle joint venture with Shanghai Automotive Industrial Corp. (SAIC) and Wuling Automotive.

GM and Toyota have a long-standing partnership to share environmental technology, and they run a car assembly plant in California together, although the ties do not involve holding stakes in each other.

Out of concern for GM's plight -- and possibly to stave off an anti-Japanese backlash by American consumers -- Toyota Chairman Hiroshi Okuda suggested earlier this year that Toyota should raise the price of car models in the United States to level the playing field.

Toyota raised prices soon after, but denied the move was to placate U.S. automakers.

U.S. shares of Toyota, each representing two common shares, rose $1.46 to close at $100.80 Wednesday on the New York Stock Exchange. GM shares rose 25 cents, or 1.1 percent, to close at $23.52.

http://www.detnews.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20051124/AUTO01/511240325/1148

Rockski
11-25-2005, 03:53 PM
"Toyota will also chip away at GM's lead with a new pickup truck plant scheduled to open next year in San Antonio that will add an additional 200,000 vehicles to Toyota's annual capacity. The Japanese company's output will be boosted by another 100,000 vehicles in 2008, when Toyota's new RAV 4 plant comes online in Canada."


no matter how much they try, a japaneese truck will never be up to the same level as an american truck

CelicaST-162
11-27-2005, 01:51 AM
[i]
no matter how much they try, a japaneese truck will never be up to the same level as an american truck [/B]

What kind of level is an american truck at?

lol

Rav4Guy
11-27-2005, 02:18 AM
^ so true. What kind of level do you think american trucks are at? luxurious? heck no. stylish? uhhh no. so where does it leave them at? dull + primitive.

philipoo
11-27-2005, 06:07 AM
toyota trucks are up to par with it's own class, heck they can even be better

JordanEG6
11-27-2005, 09:58 AM
Originally posted by Rockski


no matter how much they try, a japaneese truck will never be up to the same level as an american truck

i fail to see why not. japanese trucks are just as good IMO. i may be biased on that, however though, i also do like the quality of a good GM sierra or an F 150, but trucks like the tacoma, titan and ridgeline should be right up there too. as a matter of fact, the Ridgeline was rated number one in car and driver earlier this year.

CelicaST-162
11-27-2005, 10:41 AM
Not to mention they have better resale value, more sought after than an american truck, and how often do you see in commericials or in general people say "my truck has 500,000 kilometers and still going strong...I havent heard that in a domestic truck......

Mazstyle
11-27-2005, 12:09 PM
Originally posted by Rockski

no matter how much they try, a japaneese truck will never be up to the same level as an american truck

:nut: ^^ Any japanese vehicle compared to an equivalent domestic is FAR superior in every way. I'd rather have an old toyota truck then an old S10 thats for sure. And the new japanese trucks are way better looking IMO ex: titan, ridgeline, tacoma etc

Zephyr
11-28-2005, 12:39 AM
Originally posted by Rockski
no matter how much they try, a japaneese truck will never be up to the same level as an american truck

yeeeehawww! I tell you wut them Japoonese Takomahs, Toondras, Titans can't tow my home around as well as my good ol' American Ford lifted truck. Plus dem Japoonese dont git them Hemis I tell you wut. yeeehaawww!

lastprodigy
11-28-2005, 12:48 AM
Originally posted by JordanEG6


i fail to see why not. japanese trucks are just as good IMO. i may be biased on that, however though, i also do like the quality of a good GM sierra or an F 150, but trucks like the tacoma, titan and ridgeline should be right up there too. as a matter of fact, the Ridgeline was rated number one in car and driver earlier this year.

Definately agree with you. One little nitpicky thign, the ridgeline won in a midsize test, vs colorado and such, not full size, but its still awesome. The titan shoudl be up there though with the big 3.

Xtrema
11-28-2005, 10:17 AM
The saving grace for Domestic trucks is the aftermarket and limitless out of factory configurations.

Titan is basically another American truck since is mostly built by defected Ford engineers and has just as much problems.

JordanEG6
11-28-2005, 10:54 AM
Originally posted by lastprodigy


Definately agree with you. One little nitpicky thign, the ridgeline won in a midsize test, vs colorado and such, not full size, but its still awesome. The titan shoudl be up there though with the big 3.


ahh do-ly noted :thumbsup:

Nissanaddict
11-28-2005, 11:12 AM
Well a lot of domestic trucks do last long...but I'd buy a Titan before I buy anything they're releasing now. Second would be Ford, then Chev, and at the end Dodge. What a joke. If I didn't need to haul anything big (which I don't, hence why I dont' drive a truck) the Tundra would be up there, but it's not strong enough just yet. They need at least a 5 liter, then Toyota can get the power to compete better.