Robert Besser
02 May 2025, 21:31 GMT+10
TOKYO, Japan: Toyota Motor is weighing a potential investment in a primary buyout of one of its key suppliers, Toyota Industries, the company confirmed in a Tokyo stock exchange filing.
The automaker said it is "currently exploring various possibilities, including partial investment," following media reports that suggested a buyout could cost around US$42 billion. Bloomberg News had reported that Toyota Chairman Akio Toyoda and his founding family were proposing a 6 trillion yen ($42 billion) deal to acquire Toyota Industries.
Toyota Industries, valued at 4 trillion yen, issued a statement confirming it had received proposals regarding going private via a special purpose company but denied any direct buyout offer from Akio Toyoda or the Toyota group.
Two sources familiar with the situation, speaking on condition of anonymity, said Toyota Industries is considering tapping Toyota, its group companies, and major banks for funding. They clarified that Toyoda or the Toyota group had not initiated the proposal.
The sources also said that taking Toyota Industries private could improve corporate governance across the Toyota group by unwinding cross-shareholdings. However, both companies stressed that no decisions have been made yet.
As of September last year, Toyota owned 24 percent of Toyota Industries, which in turn held 9.07 percent of Toyota shares and 5.41 percent of Denso, another critical Toyota supplier.
Facing increasing shareholder pressure, Toyota Industries has already sold some of its cross-shareholdings, including its stake in Aisin, a key group supplier. Reducing cross-shareholdings has become a broader priority in Japan, where regulators and shareholders have criticized the practice for insulating management from shareholder accountability.
One source noted that going private would allow Toyota Industries to focus more freely on long-term growth strategies rather than short-term shareholder returns.
Toyota Industries, founded in 1926 by Sakichi Toyoda as Toyoda Automatic Loom Works, played a historic role in the company's evolution. It later spun off its automotive division, now known as Toyota Motor. Today, Toyota Industries manufactures forklifts, produces the RAV4 SUV for Toyota, and supplies engines.
Get a daily dose of London Mercury news through our daily email, its complimentary and keeps you fully up to date with world and business news as well.
Publish news of your business, community or sports group, personnel appointments, major event and more by submitting a news release to London Mercury.
More InformationOmaha Today! Tulip Festival is in Full Bloom! - Omaha Magazine
500 firearms are recovered from Palisades fire zone. LAPD wants to reunite them with their owners
Vector Solutions acquires Frontline Public Safety Solutions to expand critical agency software
What Trumps executive order on law enforcement signals for the future of AI in policing
NYPD sees spike in hiring following eligibility rule changes, targets 35,000 officers by 2026
Officer killed in gunman's Pa. hospital siege was struck by police fire
TOKYO, Japan: Toyota Motor is weighing a potential investment in a primary buyout of one of its key suppliers, Toyota Industries, the...
LONDON, U.K.: Britons' outlook on the economy has hit an all-time low, with public confidence plunging to its weakest point since records...
BEIJING, China: China's Huawei Technologies is stepping up efforts to challenge U.S. dominance in artificial intelligence hardware,...
NEW YORK, New York - U.S. stocks forged higher and the U.S. dollar regained ground Thursday as investors shrugged off concerns about...
NEW YORK CITY, New York: Colgate-Palmolive posted stronger-than-expected quarterly results and raised its annual sales outlook last...
WASHINGTON, D.C.: President Donald Trump's administration warned over the weekend that it might limit livestock imports from Mexico...