Toyota braces for 1.4 trillion yen hit from US tariff turmoil

The world’s biggest carmaker now sees 3.2 trillion yen in operating income for the fiscal year ending in March 2026

    • Toyota’s estimate dwarfs recent forecasts from global heavyweights as the auto industry contends with fast-changing policies that are seeing costs balloon.
    • Toyota’s estimate dwarfs recent forecasts from global heavyweights as the auto industry contends with fast-changing policies that are seeing costs balloon. PHOTO: BLOOMBERG
    Published Thu, Aug 7, 2025 · 02:54 PM

    [TOKYO]Toyota Motor lowered its annual guidance as it warned of a 1.4 trillion yen (S$12 billion) hit to its bottomline from US tariffs that have rattled the global automotive industry.

    The world’s biggest carmaker now sees 3.2 trillion yen in operating income for the fiscal year ending in March 2026, it said on Thursday (Aug 7). That is down from its initial forecast of 3.8 trillion yen, and also missed analyst expectations.

    The carmaker reported operating income of 1.17 trillion yen in the first quarter, down 11 per cent from a year earlier, though beating analysts’ predictions for 890 billion yen. While price hikes in some regions helped that metric, the tariff impact was 450 billion yen for the period.

    The outlook, which coincides with the start of US President Donald Trump’s sweeping new tariffs, marks the carmaker’s most comprehensive account of its likely impact beyond a previous estimate that it faced a 180 yen billion hit in April and May alone.

    Toyota’s estimate dwarfs recent forecasts from global heavyweights as the auto industry contends with fast-changing policies that are seeing costs balloon. Ford Motor said last week that it sees a net tariff impact of US$2 billion, about US$500 million more than the company expected previously. Meanwhile, Stellantis sees tariffs setting back earnings by about 1.5 billion euros (S$2.3 billion), and General Motors said its exposure is US$4 billion to US$5 billion.

    Toyota’s Japanese peers are also facing less of a hit. Subaru pegs the tariff impact at 210 billion yen, Nissan Motor forecasts 300 billion yen and Honda Motor anticipates 450 billion yen. Toyota’s shares fell as much as 2.4 per cent in Tokyo, before paring losses to 1.9 per cent.

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    Japanese carmakers now face a 15 per cent tariff on vehicles they send to the US after the two countries reached a trade pact last month that also includes plans for Japan to create a US$550 billion American investment plan.

    While the rate is lower than the additional 25 per cent anticipated by the industry, uncertainties linger over the finer details of its implementation – auto tariff discounts for the EU, Japan and South Korea have yet to be codified and until they do, cars will face the higher charge.

    Toyota said in July, in response to the deal, that it hopes for improved ties between the US and Japan, and called for further tariff reductions.

    Despite the turmoil, Toyota logged record global sales during the first half of 2025, thanks to strong demand for its gas-electric hybrids in core markets. It sold 5.5 million units between January and June, a 7.4 per cent bump from the previous year, mostly due to robust sales in the US, Japan and China.

    The carmaker expects group sales of 11.2 million this year. Toyota also plans to build a new vehicle manufacturing plant in Japan’s Aichi, with operations slated to start in the early 2030s and aimed at maintaining domestic production at three million vehicles. BLOOMBERG

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