Ford, Toyota both claim to have top-selling car
For the second time in seven
months, Toyota Motor Corp. and Ford Motor Co. both claim to produce the
world's top-selling car. The clash shows how counting in the global
automotive industry is complicated.
Ford said Tuesday that its Focus compact was the leading global
nameplate with 1.02 million sales last year, citing R.L. Polk & Co.
data that pegged Toyota's Corolla deliveries at 872,774. Toyota replied
with a statement later the same day that claimed it sold 1.16 million
Corollas.
Determining which company is correct isn't clear-cut. Tuesday's
dispute followed a similar spat in August, when Ford claimed a six-month
global sales lead for the Focus and cited IHS Automotive data that
excluded some derivatives of the Corolla - such as the Matrix in the
U.S., the Auris in Europe and the Verso in Japan. Analysts also
calculate global sales differently on the basis of autos sold by
joint-venture partners.
Toyota's global sales of hybrids top 5 mil
Japan's Toyota Motor says global sales of
its hybrid vehicles topped 5-million units. That's in cumulative terms
since its first hybrid model, the Prius, was launched back in 1997.
Toyota executives said on Wednesday that the company had sold 5.12 million hybrids through the end of March.
Last year, it enjoyed a surge in demand and sold a total of 1.21-million units of 20 models worldwide.
Toyota says Japanese government subsidies for buyers of
eco-friendly cars, and stricter environmental standards in the US and
Europe, helped boost sales.
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