Toyota Motor Corp.—the world’s largest automaker—announced that U.S. tariffs on cars and parts may cost it ¥1.4 trillion (approximately $9.5 billion) over the fiscal year ending March 2026. As a result, the company downgraded its operating income forecast from ¥3.8 trillion to ¥3.2 trillion, a substantial 16% decline.
Key Details
- Quarterly Impact: In Q1, Toyota’s North American operations swung to a loss of ¥63.6 billion, heavily influenced by ¥450 billion in tariff-related costs.
- Comparative Influence: Toyota’s projected tariff burden is nearly double that of GM ($4–5 billion) and more than triple Ford’s estimate ($3 billion), signaling the severity of its global exposure.
- Industry Context: The broader auto industry is grappling with nearly $12 billion in cumulative trade war losses, touching giants like Toyota, Honda, Hyundai, and Nissan.
- Strategic Response: Despite the heightened costs, Toyota plans to continue serving U.S. customers and revealed plans to build a new production plant in Japan to offset domestic sales challenges.Reuters
What It Means
Toyota’s warning highlights the fragility of global supply chains and rising trade tensions. The steep tariff projected could significantly dent profitability as the automaker balances cost pressures with ongoing investments in production and capacity.
Summary Table
Metric | Value |
---|---|
Estimated Tariff Impact | ¥1.4 trillion ($9.5B) |
Revised Operating Income Forecast | ¥3.2 trillion (FY26) |
Prior Forecasted Income | ¥3.8 trillion |
Q1 North America Loss | ¥63.6 billion |
Industry Context | $12B in total auto losses |