Toyota Drops Most in Seven Years, Slipping Behind VW (Update1)
By Naoko Fujimura

Oct. 7 (Bloomberg) -- Toyota Motor Corp. had the biggest intraday drop
in seven years in Tokyo, losing its spot as the world's largest
automaker by value to Volkswagen AG amid rising concerns that global
growth is slowing following the collapse of the U.S. mortgage market.
Toyota dropped as much as 8.2 percent to 3,580 yen and traded at 3,660
yen as of 10:15 a.m. on the Tokyo Stock Exchange, giving it a market
capitalization was $124.7 billion. Volkswagen's value was $135.5
billion as of yesterday.
Toyota's sales in the U.S., the world's largest auto market, have
plunged this year as higher fuel costs have cut demand for Tundra
pickups and Sequoia sport-utility vehicles. Wolfsburg, Germany-based
Volkswagen's shares have gained as Porsche SE has bid for a majority
stake and it benefited from hedge-fund trading strategies.
``The auto industry is in a difficult situation right now,'' said
Edwin Merner, president of Atlantis Investment Research Corp. in
Tokyo, whose parent company manages about $3.1 billion. ``Toyota is
well positioned to survive, but it will suffer like all the others.''
Toyota has fallen 56 percent since its peak at 8,340 yen in February
2007. In contrast, Volkswagen rose to all-time high at 304 euros on
Sept. 18.
Industrywide sales of cars and light trucks in the U.S. fell for the
11th month in a row, the longest slide in 17 years, as the financial
crisis caused lenders to toughen loan standards and consumers curbed
spending.
U.S. sales at Toyota plummeted 32 percent in September, the biggest
such decline since 1987. Toyota is halting production of Tundras and
Sequoias for three months from August. The carmaker reduced its North
American sales forecast for 2009 to 2.7 million vehicles from 3
million, it said on Aug. 28.
About 15 percent of Volkswagen's common shares as of last month were
shorted, or borrowed and sold on expectations they can be repurchased
later at a lower price, according to London- based research firm Data
Explorers. That was the most in Germany's 30-stock DAX Index.
Traders who shorted the shares on expectations they would decline on
were forced to close their positions, according to three people in the
securities-lending business who declined to be identified.
To contact the reporter on this story: Naoko Fujimura in Tokyo at
[EMAIL PROTECTED]


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