FINWIRES · TerminalLIVE
FINWIRES

Research Alert: Toyota Reports Decline In Fy 26 Profit As Tariffs Weigh

By

-- CFRA, an independent research provider, has providedwith the following research alert. Analysts at CFRA have summarized their opinion as follows:

Toyota Motor posted 5.5% revenue growth to JPY50.7T in FY 26 (Mar.) with 2.5% higher vehicle sales to 9.6M units, but operating income fell 21.5% to JPY3.77T as a JPY1.38T U.S. tariff impact overwhelmed volume gains. North America swung to a JPY192.5B loss while Japan profit contracted 26.3%, though financial services provided a bright spot with 24.6% income growth to JPY851.7B. The company forecasts another steep profit decline for FY 27 to JPY3.0T operating income on JPY51.0T revenue, as JPY670B in new Middle East headwinds cannot be fully absorbed. Despite compressed earnings, Toyota raised the FY 26 dividend to JPY95 per share and plans JPY100 for FY 27, with flexible share repurchases without pre-set limits. CFO Miyazaki acknowledged three consecutive years of declining operating profit and emphasized accelerating business transformation into a mobility company through production reorganization, cost reduction, and expanding value-chain revenues, targeting ultimately a 20% ROE.

Related Articles

Asia

SML Isuzu's Total Commercial Vehicle Sales Rise in April

SML Isuzu's (NSE:SMLMAH, BOM:505192) total commercial vehicle sales in April rose to 1,711 units from 1,492 units sold a year ago, according to a Friday filing to the Indian stock exchanges.Exports in the month grew to 30 units from 20 units in the previous year, while production was up at 1,588 units from 1,529 units.The company's shares were down over 1% in recent trade.

$BOM:505192$NSE:SMLMAH
Asia

Market Chatter: Paraguayan President Urges Taiwan Firms to Expand Investment

Paraguayan President Santiago Peña has urged Taiwan's private sector to increase investment in Paraguay, saying the country offers political stability, strong economic growth, and access to wider Latin American markets, Focus Taiwan reported Thursday.He said Paraguay, Taiwan's only diplomatic ally in South America, is outperforming regional peers, with the IMF projecting about 4.2% GDP growth in 2026 and Moody's recently upgrading its credit rating to investment grade, according to the report.Peña also pitched deeper cooperation in AI and high-tech industries, highlighting Paraguay's hydropower capacity and Taiwan's semiconductor strength as a "perfect match" for joint development, the news outlet said.(Market Chatter news is derived from conversations with market professionals globally. This information is believed to be from reliable sources but may include rumor and speculation. Accuracy is not guaranteed.)

$^TWII
Commodities

Asia Biofuels Update: Malaysian Palm Oil Down; 2nd Weekly Loss Expected

Malaysian palm oil futures edged lower on Friday and were on track for a second weekly loss, as crude oil prices logged sharp declines amid peace deal hopes and as weakening demand continued to weigh on sentiment.The Bursa Malaysia Derivatives' June crude palm oil contract slipped 0.04 % to 4,505 Malaysian ringgit ($1,152.83) per metric ton. The July contract eased by the same extent to 4,539 ringgit/mt. The contracts were set to lose more than 0.6% over the week.Malaysia has seen softer exports in the first 25 days of April, with cargo surveyors estimating a 15.7% to 16.8% month-over-month decline in shipments, largely due to logistical disruptions in the Middle East and as buyers exercised caution with buying due to high prices.Palm oil discounts to rival edible oils have eroded due to the recent price uptrend, resulting in a demand shift in India. Dealer estimates cited by Reuters showed a month-over-month drop in the country's palm oil purchases in April, and a rise in soybean oil and sunflower oil imports.S&P Global said that price spreads between Asian crude palm oil and South American soybean oil have shifted from negative to positive territory. From discounts of $50/mt to $100/mt earlier in the year, palm oil has traded at premiums to soybean oil of $80/mt to $100/mt in March and April.India typically buys soybean oil from Argentina and Brazil, and imports palm oil from Indonesia and Malaysia.High freight rates, however, limit arrival of South American soybean oil to Asia, with costs surging by about $130/mt in recent weeks, according to S&P Global.Over the week, the local currency has strengthened 1.3% versus the US dollar, raising purchase costs to international buyers and further weighing on export demand.A potential increase in production in April, following a seasonal low in Q1, may also pressure prices. Toward the end of the year, output trend could reverse as the El Nino weather phenomenon develops.Nonetheless, expected increases in domestic consumption in Indonesia and Malaysia, with the implementation of higher biodiesel blending mandates, could provide an upside.The release of Malaysia's April palm oil data on May 11 is expected to influence price movement.