TOKYO (AP) — Sales of Toyota and Honda vehicles nosedived in China during September
as anti-Japanese sentiment flared over a territorial dispute that threatens to
hobble what was a booming business relationship between Japan and its biggest
export market.
Toyota Motor Corp. said Tuesday
that sales of new vehicles in China dropped 48.9 percent in September from a
year earlier to 44,100 vehicles. Honda Motor Co. said September sales plunged
40.5 percent to 33,931 vehicles. China sales for Nissan Motor Co. slid 35.3
percent last month to 76,100 vehicles.
The stunning plunge in sales
comes after Japan last month nationalized tiny islands in the East China Sea,
called Senkaku in Japan and Diaoyu in China, which had already been controlled
by Tokyo but also claimed by Beijing.
The move set off violent protests
in China, and a widespread call to boycott Japanese goods. Toyota and Honda
dealerships were burned down in one city, and crowds shouting anti-Japanese
slogans have gathered and smashed Japanese cars.
Although the flare-ups have
calmed in recent weeks, it would still require courage to be seen in a Japanese
car in some Chinese cities.
Japanese automakers temporarily
closed some of their China factories. Production is back up this week — but
reduced to lower levels as demand has collapsed.
Last week, Mitsubishi Motors
Corp. reported that China sales dived 63 percent to 2,340 vehicles in
September. Mazda Motor Corp. said its sales in China sank 36 percent to 13,258
vehicles for the month.
A study by J.P. Morgan, released
Tuesday, projected Japanese auto exports to China to crash 70 percent during
the October-December period. It said that the export of auto parts will slip by
40 percent — about the same drop estimated for exports of other consumer
products such as electronics.
Combined, the aftermath of the
territorial spat with China will shave 0.8 percentage point off Japan gross
domestic product growth for the fourth quarter, sending Japan’s overall economy
slightly downward, instead of the initial forecast for flat growth, according
to J.P. Morgan.
China, with its growing middle
class, had been one of the emerging markets that Japanese automakers were
counting on to boost sales amid a long stagnation in the domestic auto market.
Toyota, Japan’s No. 1 auto
company, which makes the Prius hybrid, Camry sedan and Lexus luxury models, had
planned to sell 1 million vehicles in China this calendar year.
“But that may be very difficult
to achieve,” company spokesman Dion Corbett said.
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