Beijing, Jan 15 : Toyota Motor Corp is still dogged by a sales crisis Japanese
carmakers are suffering in China as a result of a territorial row between the
two countries but December sales proved "surprisingly resilient", a senior
Toyota executive said.
The executive said customer traffic in Toyota's
showrooms was recovering to levels seen before the crisis over the disputed
islands in the East China Sea broke out last September.
Toyota sold
"almost" 90,000 vehicles in China in December, compared with 108,000 cars the
company and its two Chinese partners sold in December 2011.
Toyota is
expected to announce its China sales data for December, according to a
Beijing-based company spokesman. He did not respond to calls seeking comment on
November sales.
The pace of last month's decline -- roughly 17 percent
from a year earlier -- eased from the previous three months.
"Sales
rebounded faster than we had expected," said the Toyota executive, who declined
to be identified because the sales information has not been made public
yet.
He attributed the recovery in part to discounts and other sales
incentives the Japanese company provided during the month.
Toyota's
December sales fall followed a decline of 22 percent in November, 44 percent in
October, and almost 50 percent in September.
Signs in the marketplace
across China -- including a recovery in customer traffic in dealer showrooms --
were "encouraging", the Toyota executive said.
Sales patterns showed
consumers were no longer as spooked as they were before a surge of anti-Japan
sentiment that affected sales at auto stores and other Japanese-branded
companies such as electronics firms.
Violent anti-Japan protests swept
China from mid-September after Japan bought two East China Sea islands, known as
the Diaoyu in Chinese and Senkaku in Japanese, from their private owner. China
claims the islands as its own territory.
Demand slumped in September and
October, reducing the market share of Japanese firms in China's passenger car
market to about 17 percent from 19 percent at the end of August, according to
the China Association of Automotive Manufacturers.
Some Chinese consumers
have since avoided Japanese cars. In a widely reported incident during the
height of the anti-Japanese sentiment, a Chinese man was attacked by angry
protesters for driving a Toyota Corolla.
December sales showed Chinese
consumers were "not as fearful of buying and driving Japanese cars as before",
the Toyota executive said.
Ends
SA/EN
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» Pace of slide in Toyota China sales slows in December
Pace of slide in Toyota China sales slows in December
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