Business World

Toyota, Mazda invite US states to compete for assembly plant

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WASHINGTON — Toyota Motor Corp. opened the door to a bidding war among Midwestern and southern states seeking to land jobs and investment when it announced on Friday it would build a $1.6-billion US assembly plant with Mazda Motor Corp.

Toyota North America chief Jim Lentz told Reuters in an interview the automaker has not started searching for sites for the plant, expected to employ 4,000 workers, but would locate the factory near Toyota’s existing supply chain.

Toyota has 10 US plants in eight states in an arc that runs from West Virginia through Kentucky, Indiana, Alabama, Mississipp­i and Texas.

For Toyota, the investment is a push to expand US vehicle-making capacity and market share and intensify its attack on the Detroit automakers’ lucrative truck business.

The announceme­nt also comes as US President Donald Trump has threatened tariffs to curb auto imports and is working with Republican officials to woo investment in domestic production.

States covet auto assembly plants because they typically pay above- average wages and spin off jobs at suppliers and service companies.

Southern states have advantages including rail and highway infrastruc­ture, proximity to major ports and business- friendly labor and regulatory environmen­ts, said Foster Finley, head of consulting firm AlixPartne­rs operations practice.

Midwestern states such as Ohio or Michigan can counter those strengths with incentives such as tax breaks or publicly funded worker training programs.

“All of it boils down to an economic arrangemen­t,” he said.

Michigan Governor Rick Snyder said in a statement on Friday that legislatio­n approved last week to reduce taxes on business investment “is likely something that would make Michigan competitiv­e over other states for this project.”

The Toyota announceme­nt came after Wisconsin last week said it will award Taiwanese manufactur­er Foxconn a record $3 billion in refundable tax incentives to build a $10-billion LCD panel factory that will initially employ 3,000 people.

Still, Finley cautioned that the knock-on economic benefits of the new auto plant may be limited as much of the value of vehicles built there will likely still come from parts made in Mexico or Asia.

PRODUCTION SHIFT

Toyota has already invested $23.4 billion in its US operations, and has planned another $11.6 billion in investment over the next five years, fueled by robust profits.

Trump earlier this year warned Toyota it would be subject to tariffs if it imported Corolla small cars from a factory planned in Mexico.

Lentz said he could not say what impact Trump’s comments had on a decision that was under considerat­ion for some time with Mazda because it was a decision made by executives at both car companies in Japan.

“We understand the direction that we are getting from the administra­tion and that is to build more in the US,” Lentz said. “Pressure from the White House would be the wrong word.”

Under its new plan, Toyota’s forthcomin­g factory in Guanajuato, Mexico will not build Corollas that are currently assembled in Canada and instead build the medium-sized Tacoma pickup. It will continue to build Corollas in Mississipp­i as well.

Lentz said the shift will allow Toyota to build more pickup trucks overall by adding more Tundra production in Texas and shifting Tacoma production to Mexico.

“This is the fastest way to additional pickup truck supply,” Lentz said, saying he expected to boost truck capacity by late 2019 or early 2020. That will help Toyota compete for a bigger share of the US truck market, which has benefited from a shift in consumer tastes towards larger vehicles.

Toyota’s US Corolla sales are down nearly 9% this year.

ADDING CAPACITY

States will be competing to add a plant in a market that is already awash with production capacity and experienci­ng a slowdown in domestic auto sales.

Toyota, along with German and Asian automakers, have during the past 30 years built a second auto industry in the United States, rivaling the US operations of the Detroit Three automakers in size and employment, but with newer, and far less unionized, plants.

The Detroit Three closed several US factories during the 20082009 financial crisis. But since then US automaking capacity has grown.

Volkswagen AG opened the last new US assembly plant in 2011 in Tennessee to build new cars after getting nearly $600 million in tax incentives. But the automaker in 2013 opted to build a plant for its luxury Audi unit in Mexico instead of in the United States.

Volvo Cars, a Swedish brand owned by China’s Geely Automobile Holdings Ltd will open a $500-million US assembly plant next year in South Carolina.

US auto plants produced about 12 million vehicles, with capacity utilizatio­n in 2016 at 94%. Overall US capacity is expected to grow by nearly 11% between 2016 and 2023, from about 12.5 million to just over 14 million, according to LMC Automotive.

US auto sales have weakened so far this year, and already two US factories operated by General Motors Co. have indefinite­ly laid off work shifts, while others have scaled back production. —

 ??  ?? A TOYOTA AUTOMAKER employee works at the Toyota engine assembly line plant in Huntsville, Alabama, US on Nov. 13, 2009.
A TOYOTA AUTOMAKER employee works at the Toyota engine assembly line plant in Huntsville, Alabama, US on Nov. 13, 2009.

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