Friday August 10, 11:02 AM
Toyota, Subaru to co-develop sports car -paper
TOKYO, Aug 10 (Reuters) - Toyota Motor Corp. and
Subaru-maker Fuji Heavy Industries Ltd. are finalising
plans to co-develop a sports car under the Toyota brand as part
of their recently formed alliance, the Asahi newspaper reported
on Friday.
The new car, to be priced under 2 million yen ($16,900) with
an engine displacement of less than 2 litres, may use Subaru's
signature symmetrical all-wheel-drive powertrain, the paper said,
without citing sources.
The partners aim to sell the car in 2010, and finalise
details of the joint development by autumn.
Both companies said they could not discuss future product
plans.
Toyota, the world's biggest automaker, took an 8.7 percent
stake in Fuji Heavy in late 2005, aiming to tap the latter's
unused production capacity in the United States and find areas of
joint development.
Industry watchers had been especially keen to see whether
Toyota would make use of Fuji Heavy's flat-four engine, a
trademark technology found only in Subaru and Porsche
cars.
Executives at both companies have been cagey about the
possibility but have indicated that doing so made little sense
since it could dilute Subaru's niche brand.
Toyota ended production of its last sports car, the MR-S,
last month due to weak sales.
The Asahi also said Toyota's minivehicle unit, Daihatsu Motor
Co. , would supply Fuji Heavy with its Coo compact car,
sold as the bB under the Toyota badge, under an original
equipment manufacturing (OEM) deal. Subaru would sell the car as
early as next summer, aiming for sales of about 6,000 units a
year in Japan.
A Daihatsu spokesman said no such decision had been made.
Fuji Heavy, the maker of the Legacy, Impreza and other
all-wheel-drive cars, has seen its sales slide as demand shifts
to smaller, fuel-efficient cars in many markets.
Daihatsu and Fuji Heavy already have an OEM deal in Europe,
where Subaru will begin selling Daihatsu's Boon model as its own
under the name Justy this autumn, thereby saving money to fully
develop its own compact car.
Toyota also has a capital tie-up with truck maker Isuzu
Motors Ltd. to cooperate in the development of
low-emission diesel and other engines.
($1=118.37 Yen)
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