Toyota Production up 9 Percent in January, Chip Pain Still Lingers

Toyota Production up 9 Percent in January, Chip Pain Still Lingers
The Toyota logo at the 43rd Bangkok International Motor Show, in Bangkok on March 22, 2022. (Athit Perawongmetha/Reuters)
Reuters
2/27/2023
Updated:
2/27/2023

TOKYO—Toyota Motor Corp. boosted global vehicle production by 9 percent in January, it said on Monday, its first increase in two months even as the carmaker continued to feel the strain from global chip shortages.

The company, which is the world’s largest automaker by volume, and other car manufacturers are still grappling with tight supplies of chips, although the constraint has eased from a year earlier, when pandemic-related lockdowns sharply hit supplies of semiconductors.

Toyota said it produced 689,090 vehicles globally in January, an 8.8 percent increase from the same month last year and just short of the 700,000 vehicles it previously said it expected to produce for the month.

That does not include production from its Daihatsu Motor Co. and Hino Motors Ltd units.

Global sales slipped 5.6 percent to 709,870 vehicles, Toyota said, reflecting the continued impact of the chip shortage.

Smaller rival Nissan Motor Co. Ltd said its January production fell by a quarter to 224,236 vehicles.

Honda Motor Co. Ltd said output fell 21.7 percent in January to 280,757 vehicles.