By on November 14, 2008

According to the AP, “Toyota Motor Corp. said Friday that for now it is sticking with plans to open its new Mississippi plant in 2010 despite media reports that Japan’s top automaker is mulling a delay.” Mississippi was originally supposed to get Highlander production.. Those plans ran aground on $4 a gallon gas. In a fit of hybrid mania, Toyota Mississippi jumped off the Highlander horse and onto the Prius this past July… just in time to see crude oil prices peak and roll over. Remember all that talk of building a Scion-like separate Prius brand? You have to think that plan is on hold. “Earlier this month, Toyota said its net profit for the July-September quarter plunged 69 percent. The car maker also downgraded its full-year profit forecast to 550 billion yen ($5.5 billion) — about a third of last year’s result. Executive Vice President Mitsuo Kinoshita said after the earnings release that the company had convened an ‘Emergency Profit Improvement Committee’ to cut costs and maximize revenues. Toyota is also assessing its manufacturing operations by ‘re-examining aspects such as the timing and scale of new projects.'”

The case for ramping-up Prius production– which looked brilliant only a few months ago– now seems extraordinarily high-risk. Honda is launching an overdue frontal attack on the Prius with the new Insight, fuel prices are falling like a rock, feel-good by buying green posturing has been replaced by feel-good by buying nothing pragmatism and a new administration less friendly to buying Japaneso is coming to power. With money tight and buyers on strike, is there any need for more Toyota production capacity of any kind? What if one or more of The Big 2.8 packs it in? What if they don’t? Times like these drive even the most sober-minded long-range strategic planners to binge drinking. More saké!

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5 Comments on “Toyota’s New Mississippi Plant Still a Go. For Now…...”


  • avatar

    feel-good by buying green posturing has been replaced by feel-good by buying nothing pragmatism

    Best. Consumer. Statement. Ever.

  • avatar
    RedStapler

    To quote Dickens:

    “It was the best of times, it was the worst of times; it was the age of wisdom, it was the age of foolishness; it was the epoch of belief, it was the epoch of incredulity; it was the season of Light, it was the season of Darkness; it was the spring of hope, it was the winter of despair;”

    We just need a Reign of Terror at the Executive Suite.

    I vote for sending the careers Red Ink Rick and Nardelli of to the Guillotine.

  • avatar
    Usta Bee

    Why does it look like they’re doing the Hitler salute in the photo ?.

  • avatar
    M1EK

    The only way fuel prices stay this low for very long is if we enter another global depression (odds of this are non-trivial but still low). The same math about oil production holds now – the difference is that the demand curve lurched a bit; the supply curve is still not going to get any bigger (vertically) going forward.

  • avatar
    jnik

    My God!!! Mississippi has ELECTRICITY now??
    They’re moving up in the world!!!

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