The Manila Times

Honda’s earnings slip on semiconductor crunch

TOKYO: Honda Motor Co.’s fiscal firstquarter profit dropped 33 percent year on year as a global computer chip shortage, a coronavirus pandemic-prompted lockdown in China and the rising costs of raw materials hurt the Japanese automobile maker.

Tokyo-based Honda reported on Wednesday that its profit totaled 149.2 billion yen ($1.1 billion) in April to June, down from 222.5 billion yen ($1.7 billion) a year earlier. Quarterly sales slipped 7 percent to 3.8 trillion yen ($28 billion).

Honda kept its earnings forecast for the full fiscal year through March 2023 unchanged at 710 billion yen ($5.3 billion).

The semiconductor shortage has hurt all the world’s automakers, including Honda, despite strong demand, and they have been scrambling to secure alternative suppliers.

Honda, which makes the Accord sedan, Odyssey minivan and Civic compact, sold about 815,000 vehicles last quarter, lower than the 998,000 vehicles the same period a year earlier. Auto sales dropped in almost all regions around the world, including Japan, the United States and Europe.

“I ask for the understanding from all those who are still waiting for their vehicles and vow that our whole company is doing its utmost to make the deliveries even a day sooner,” Chief Financial Officer Kohei Takeuchi said.

According to him, the semiconductor shortage curtailed motorcycle production, as well as car output, adding to uncertainty about future prospects.

Honda said the recent lockdown in Shanghai was among the causes of the shortage in computer chips supply, but declined to give specifics.

Although US sales are potentially facing a dent from recession worries and other economic hardships, Takeuchi acknowledged he was more worried about the shortage problem and producing the cars customers were waiting for.

He noted that motorcycle sales for the quarter, which grew to 4.25 million motorcycles from 3.88 million a year earlier, were going strong, especially in India. The cheaper yen and cost cuts helped maintain profitability overall, he said.

The yen has been at a two-decade low against the US dollar. A cheap yen has historically worked as a boon for exporters like Honda by boosting the value of their overseas earnings when converted into yen. But it also increases costs for imported components and materials.

Japan’s top automaker Toyota Motor Corp. reported recently that its fiscal first-quarter profit fell nearly 18 percent. Nissan Motor Co. saw its quarterly profit plunge to less than half of what it was a year earlier. Both were hit by the chip shortage.

Like the rest of the industry, Honda has aggressive ambitions in electric vehicles. Earlier this year, it announced an investment of 5 trillion yen ($37 billion) in it over the next decade. That includes a collaboration with General Motors Co. in North America to develop models going on sale in 2024.

To beef up its capital base and keep a flexible capital strategy, Honda said it was buying back its own company common shares of up to 100 billion yen ($740 million), starting Friday through March 2023.

Foreign Business

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2022-08-11T07:00:00.0000000Z

2022-08-11T07:00:00.0000000Z

https://digitaledition.manilatimes.net/article/281904481952065

The Manila Times