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Report: Toyota Picks San Antonio For New Plant
clickonsa ^

Posted on 11/01/2002 7:22:38 AM PST by chance33_98


Report: Toyota Picks S.A. For New Plant
Company To Announce Decision In December
Posted: 8:32 a.m. CST November 1, 2002
Updated: 8:37 a.m. CST November 1, 2002

TOKYO -- A Japanese business newspaper reported Friday that Toyota Motor Corp. has chosen San Antonio for the site of its next North American plant, but the company denied a decision had been made.

The top Japanese automaker is considering another plant in North America to expand its highly profitable business in the region.

"We are looking into it from various angles while keeping in mind market changes, but nothing has been decided," the company said in a statement.

Nikkan Kogyo Shimbun reported that Toyota will build pickup trucks and sport utility vehicles in San Antonio as early as 2005, producing 100,000 vehicles a year. The company will announce the plant next month at an event in the city, the paper said.

San Antonio officials said last month that Toyota has scouted the city as a possible location for a new plant.

Toyota has car assembly plants in Kentucky, Indiana, California and Canada and has broken ground on another plant in Mexico, which will start producing pickup trucks in 2005.

Toyota has said it will build another auto plant after North American sales hit 2 million cars a year. The car maker sold 1.9 million new cars in North America last year. Toyota has been reporting booming profits, largely on growing sales in North America.


TOPICS: Front Page News; News/Current Events; US: Texas
KEYWORDS:

1 posted on 11/01/2002 7:22:38 AM PST by chance33_98
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To: chance33_98
Wow - they picked a low tax, non union, pro business state. Who would have thunk it!
2 posted on 11/01/2002 7:37:38 AM PST by 2banana
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To: 2banana
Gee, seems like they would have built in CA or NY....
3 posted on 11/01/2002 7:43:45 AM PST by cynicom
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To: chance33_98
This is excellent news for not only Texas, but for the citizens of San Antonio. For so many years the city has aimed it's base soley on tourism. With the exception of USAA and SBA, there are no other major employers in the city. This will finally help joe six pack. Maybe more will be able to attend a Spurs game.
4 posted on 11/01/2002 7:52:37 AM PST by shadeaud
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To: shadeaud
The largest single employer in San Antonio is HEB foodstores with 17,805 employees.
5 posted on 11/01/2002 8:03:14 AM PST by Between the Lines
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To: Between the Lines
Gee, I thought it was Big Willy.
6 posted on 11/01/2002 8:15:13 AM PST by secret garden
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To: shadeaud
Combined with constant threats of military base closures, this would be exactly what San Antonio needs. Plus, the economic spinoff effect of an auto manufacturing plant is much greater than tourism or a grocery operation (although HEB rocks).
7 posted on 11/01/2002 8:23:07 AM PST by DeRATted
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To: secret garden
Gee, I thought it was Big Willy.

What the huh?

8 posted on 11/01/2002 8:28:12 AM PST by Between the Lines
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To: Between the Lines
Free Willy.

There is a Sea World in San Antonio.

Someone's just being funny. ;)
9 posted on 11/01/2002 10:57:08 AM PST by I_Publius
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To: chance33_98
Another account from Reuters:

TOKYO (Reuters) - Toyota Motor Corp., Japan's largest automaker, plans to build a new truck and sports utility vehicle plant in San Antonio, Texas as it looks to boost its growing U.S. market share, the Nikkan Kogyo Shimbun said on Friday.

The industry paper said the plant, which would be Toyota's sixth in North America, would have an annual output capacity of 100,000 vehicles and could go online as early as 2005.

Toyota's truck unit, Hino Motors Ltd., may also take part in production at the new plant, it said.

The move could help Toyota -- which has been making big gains in the U.S. market at the expense of local rivals -- meet its near-term target of selling two million vehicles a year in North America by boosting the region's output capacity from the current 1.25 million.

Toyota will put its official stamp on the move at a board meeting this month, with an announcement to be made in Texas in December, the Nikkan Kogyo said.

A Toyota spokesman would not confirm the report.

"We are in the process of a feasability study for expanding our North American output capacity," Toyota spokesman Tetsuo Kitagawa said.

"Nothing definite has been decided yet," he said.

The auto giant had announced in September it would invest $140 million in a new manufacturing plant in Mexico just south of San Diego to produce 20,000 small pickup trucks annually.

The Mexico plant is expected to help Toyota boost its North American output capacity to 1.5 million vehicles by 2005.

Toyota also said in September it planned to build another plant in North America as part of efforts to boost its global vehicle market share to 15 percent from 10 percent over the next decade. Much of that growth is targeted for North America.

Toyota, the world's third-largest automaker, already sells a full range of vehicles, including pickup trucks, minivans and sport utilities, in the United States, but executives have said there is room for further expansion.

Eight states had been cited as possible locations for the new Toyota factory: Texas, Arkansas, North Carolina, Alabama, Georgia, Mississippi, Tennessee and Virginia.

All of Toyota's proposed plant sites were away from the Midwest, the stronghold of the United Auto Workers union.

Many foreign automakers, including Honda Motor Co Ltd. , Hyundai Motor Co. Ltd., Nissan Motor Co. Ltd. and BMW AG, have built or are planning to build vehicle assembly plants in southern U.S. states.

Many of the new plants build trucks, specifically sport utility vehicles, the fastest-growing and most profitable part of the U.S. market.

American automakers still sell the majority of trucks and SUVs, but have been losing market share to foreign firms such as Toyota.

The newspaper said the Texas plant would produce large pick-up trucks and SUVs, with San Antonio's proximity to Mexico being a factor in the decision as it would help Toyota procure parts at a cheaper price.

Toyota on Wednesday said a 17 percent rise in new vehicle sales in the United States had helped power it to record profits in the half year to September 30.

It also forecast the robust performance would continue in North America, raising its group sales forecast in the region by 30,000 vehicles to 1.97 million for 2002/03.

Shares in Toyota closed morning trade up 3.36 percent at 3,080 yen, while the Nikkei average was up 0.39 percent.

10 posted on 11/01/2002 4:21:05 PM PST by Skibane
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To: cynicom
The real stunner is that they decided to build it just north of the Rio Grande in San Antonio rather than just south of it in Matamoros.
11 posted on 11/01/2002 4:31:03 PM PST by FreedomCalls
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To: FreedomCalls
Japanese strive for quality not just cheapness.
12 posted on 11/01/2002 4:35:10 PM PST by FITZ
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To: Between the Lines
Big Willy is the local name for Wilford Hall, the USAF hospital in S.A., not a joke.
13 posted on 11/02/2002 7:12:12 PM PST by secret garden
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