Japan Automakers' China Sales Dive in Islands Row

Oct. 9, 2012
Toyota saw the biggest drop, with monthly sales slumping 48.9% year on year while Nissan tumbled 35.3% and Honda dropped 40.5%.

Japan's top three automakers said Tuesday their sales in China plunged last month, a sign that a bitter territorial spat between Tokyo and Beijing is hitting trade between the economic giants.

Toyota  (IW 1000/5)saw the biggest drop, with monthly sales slumping 48.9% year on year to 44,100 vehicles, while Nissan (IW 1000/26) tumbled 35.3% to 76,066 and Honda (IW 1000/30) dropped 40.5% to 33,931 units.

The two countries have for weeks been locked in a festering row over the islands in the East China Sea controlled by Japan but claimed by China.

Japanese factories and businesses across China closed or scaled back operations in September over fears they or their workers could be targeted by mobs protesting against Tokyo's nationalisation of the islands, known in Japan as the Senkakus and in China as the Diaoyus.

Toyota -- the world's largest car firm by sales in the first half of the year -- and Honda both said Tuesday they would continue "adjusting" production in China as reports say automakers plan to roughly halve output at their facilities there.

Toyota has nine production sites in China -- three assembly plants each in Tianjin in the northeast, the southern city of Guangzhou and central Sichuan province.

A Nissan spokeswoman told Dow Jones Newswires on Tuesday: "Most of our business is back to normal now, but we are still assessing the situation."

Rival General Motors may have benefited from the diplomatic battle, with the  firm saying Monday that it sold a record 244,266 vehicles in China in September.

China's nationwide auto sales slowed last year from 2010 after the government rolled back purchasing incentives and some cities imposed limits on car numbers to ease traffic congestion and cut pollution.

 Copyright Agence France-Presse, 2012

Popular Sponsored Recommendations

Voice your opinion!

To join the conversation, and become an exclusive member of IndustryWeek, create an account today!