A Toyota Motor financial services unit has applied for about $2 billion in loans backed by the Japanese government, as the financial crisis threatens funding at the world's top automaker, state TV broadcaster NHK said today.
With credit markets worldwide in turmoil, Toyota may be the first of a string of Japanese companies with high credit ratings to turn to state-backed loans prior to the closing of books for the business year at the end of March.
Credit default swaps on auto makers in Asia and Europe are at steep discounts as investors worry about liquidity and short-term debt maturities at carmakers' financial services operations.
Moody's implied ratings for Toyota and American Honda Finance, based on credit default swaps, are both many notches lower than the agency's actual ratings for the two companies.
Wholly owned car-loan financing firm Toyota Financial Services has asked the state-backed Japan Bank for International Cooperation for a 200 billion yen ($2.1 billion) loan to help cover rising credit costs in the United States, NHK said without citing sources.
Toyota spokesmen said they were checking on the report.
Carmakers worldwide are reeling from a collapse in consumer demand since last year that has forced them to cut production and shed jobs.
Finance company GMAC, the main lender to struggling automaker General Motors, has been hit by losses in its auto and mortgage units, but won a $6 billion government bailout in December and a ticket to tap lower-cost funding.
Toyota faces an operating loss of 450 billion yen for the year to March, as sales tumble in its biggest markets of Japan, North America and Europe.
Toyota Financial Services, whose assets totalled 14.3 trillion yen ($147 billion) as of the end of September, provides car leases around the world and home loans and asset management services in Japan.
Among other Japanese firms, heavily indebted companies such as chipmaker Elpida Memory Inc have said they are considering seeking emergency government funds under a separate scheme aimed at bolstering nonfinancial companies.
Shares of Toyota fell 0.3 per cent to 3,060 yen, compared with a 1 per cent fall in the Nikkei average.