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Daniel Leussink
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TOKYO
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Japan’s Honda Motor HMC-N forecast a 59-per-cent profit decrease in the current financial year and said it would put on hold a plan to build an EV supply chain in Canada, amid the uncertainty stemming from U.S. President Donald Trump’s tariffs.
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Japan’s second-biggest automaker expects operating income to total 500 billion yen (US$3.38-billion) in the year to March 31, 2026, versus 1.21 trillion yen in the year that just ended.
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Honda’s forecast is the latest signal of the difficulty car makers are having navigating Trump’s tariffs on foreign-made automobiles at the same time the industry is being hit by the rise of Chinese EV producers.
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Honda also said it would put on hold for “approximately two years” a plan announced in April, 2024 to build an EV supply chain in Ontario, Canada. That decision was taken due to the current slowdown in EV demand, it said.
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Talks between Honda and Nissan to merge broke off earlier this year, although the two still have an agreement to co-operate on technology. Such tie-ups are seen as increasingly important for automakers to counter the threat from fast-moving EV companies, particularly in China.
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