TOKYO – With Toyota Motor Corp. back on top as the worlds largest automaker, President Akio Toyoda isnt looking to a relative youngster like the Prius hybrid to defend that lead. Instead, hes counting on a middle-aged veteran: the 47-year-old Corolla.
This year – the company hasnt said when or where – Toyota plans to introduce a revamped version of its global best-seller, which last underwent a redesign in 2008. No launch is more consequential for Toyota this year as the Prius isnt due for a major change until 2014 and a new Camry sedan came out only about a year ago.
For Toyoda, the compact will be a chance to build on pledges to make cars that are more fun to drive and shed some of the companys reputation for blandness. More relevant for investors, the success of the top-selling car in history will help determine Toyotas ability to return to the profitability it enjoyed before the global financial crisis and the recall of millions of vehicles.
The Corolla might be viewed as boring by some, but for others its bulletproof, said Kurt Sanger, an auto analyst at Deutsche Bank in Tokyo. The profit per unit might be lower than other models, but if you sell that many, youre going to make money.
Sanger is optimistic over Toyotas money-making prospects.
Hes among a dozen analysts tracked by Bloomberg whove raised earnings estimates for the automaker in the past month as the tumbling yen raises the value of Japanese exports.
Toyotas annual operating profit gains by $384 million for every 1-yen drop in the value of the Japanese currency against the dollar, according to the carmaker.
Toyota has sold almost 40 million Corollas over the years, Tokyo-based spokesman Jiecheng Fang said. Though the car remained Toyotas top-seller in 2012 – estimated by the company at 1.21 million deliveries worldwide – Corolla sales have fallen from a peak of 1.42 million units in 2006 as Hondas Civic and Hyundais Elantra won customers with fuel economy and lower prices.
The Civic overtook the Corolla as the best-selling compact sedan in the United States last year, according to researcher Autodata Corp. This year, global sales of the Corolla will probably increase 7 percent to 1.3 million units, according to Takeshi Miyao, an analyst with researcher Carnorama Japan in Tokyo.
The declining popularity of the Corolla – described as bland by Consumer Reports magazine in 2012 – has been mirrored in the companys earnings and share price, which have fallen since their peaks after the yen appreciated and recalls for defects associated with unintended acceleration dented Toyotas reputation for quality.
Toyotas profit forecast for the fiscal year ending March 31 is less than half the amount five years ago. The stock is trading at about half its level in 2007, when its market value ranked fourth worldwide, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.