National Post

Even Toyota can’t escape component shortage impact

- RIVER DAVIS Craig Trudell and

Toyota Motor Corp.’s efforts to stockpile enough chips and other key components to ride out supply disruption­s only protected the company so long before it too succumbed to the shortages eviscerati­ng automakers.

The manufactur­er will suspend output at 14 plants across Japan for various lengths of time through next month. The impact of these cuts will be harshest in September, with Toyota slashing its production plan by 40 per cent, though risks will carry forward beyond next month.

It’s the latest sign even the best supply-chain planning is proving no match for a pandemic that virtually ground the auto industry to a halt a year ago and has since plagued efforts to restore production.

Toyota and BMW AG — two manufactur­ers least scathed by the semiconduc­tor shortage in the first half — have now warned of significan­t blows to their operations in the coming months.

“This isn’t a Toyota-only problem,” said Tetsuo Seshimo, a fund manager at Saison Asset Management Co. “But the fact that this is happening at Toyota means that recent worries about the supply chain in Asia being disrupted by the spread of the coronaviru­s are materializ­ing. There are a lot of companies manufactur­ing goods in Asia that could be impacted.”

Toyota said 27 production lines in Japan will be impacted, affecting models including the RAV4, Corolla, Prius, Camry and Lexus RX. The news — first reported by the Nikkei newspaper — took the market by surprise, with investors sending Toyota shares down 4.4 per cent, their biggest daily drop since December 2018.

“Especially in Southeast Asia, the spread of COVID and lockdowns are impacting our local suppliers,” Kazunari Kumakura, the chief officer of Toyota’s purchasing group, said Thursday. Going forward, the company will look at ways to further diversify its supply chains and is attempting to find replacemen­t parts from suppliers in other regions.

Production cuts had been factored into earlier forecasts, so Toyota is maintainin­g its plan to produce 9.3 million vehicles for the fiscal year ending in March. The company maintained its annual operating profit projection earlier this month at 2.5 trillion yen (US$22.7 billion) for the fiscal year through March, below analysts’ average projection for 2.95 trillion yen.

In the early months of the chip shortage that began late last year, Toyota faced limited damage due to its supply-chain savvy. The firm has an intricate system in place to monitor its vast network of suppliers and an early-warning system for shortages.

But that may be no match for a pandemic that’s confoundin­g scientists, government­s and public-health officials, sparking fresh lockdowns around the world and wreaking more havoc on a vast array of industries.

“This is far beyond just microchips, although microchips are the centre of most of this activity,” Bob Carter, executive vice-president of sales for Toyota North America, said on Bloomberg Television. “But we’re seeing a wide range of supplier disruption­s due largely to continued outbreak of COVID.”

BMW recently warned of uncertain months ahead as the global chip shortage worsens. After saying early this year it had ordered enough semiconduc­tors and expected its suppliers to deliver, the luxury-car maker now expects production restrictio­ns in the second half.

Volkswagen AG also has flagged worsening supply woes, while Daimler AG dialed back its delivery expectatio­ns due to the shortage.

“Consumer demand is going to far exceed supply for the auto industry over the next 60 to 90 days,” Toyota’s Carter said.

According to research by Susquehann­a Financial Group, the amount of time it’s taking for chip-starved companies to get orders filled has stretched to more than 20 weeks, indicating the shortages that have held back automakers and computer manufactur­ers are getting worse.

“Companies were saying it was a problem for the first half, but it’s astonishin­g what kind of strong figures they reached,” said Frank Schwope, an autos analyst at Nordlb in Hannover, Germany. “But now, the chip shortage is coming in dramatical­ly, showing that there must be some serious problems.”

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