Toyota Motor Corporation said on Tuesday the compact car that it plans to roll out in India in 2010 will be its own and not from the stable of Daihatsu Motor Co.
"No. This (the small car) is very much Toyota's. . .," Toyota Kirloskar Motor (TKM) Managing Director Hiroshi Nakagawa said.
He denied reports that the small car was proposed to be launched in association with Daihatsu, in which Toyota holds 51 per cent stake.
Toyota Kirloskar Motor -- a joint venture with the Kirloskar Group -- is the Indian arm of Toyota Motor Corporation.
Nakagawa said the compact car project is on track and that TKM plans to produce 100,000 units in the first phase, after which it may be doubled.
TKM had announced an investment of nearly Rs 1,400 crore (Rs 14 billion) for its second unit at Bidadi near here, for which a foundation stone was laid in July this year.
Asked if the proposed car would carry a price tag of around $5,000, Nakagawa said, "That's a tough question for me". "(Tata's) Nano is a different type of car compared to our line-up," he added.
Nakagawa and TKM's deputy managing director (marketing) Sandeep Singh said there would be no layoffs at its Bidadi plant. Even though it faced "some difficulty" now, it has to maintain its business, capacity and employees as the company expects things to improve in the future.
TKM's sales in the first half of the calendar year was good, and the slow-down in the rest of the year would be offset by strong sales of New Corolla, company officials said.
Nakagawa said the company would achieve its sales target for 2008.
Singh said the company has already pilot-tested CNG-variant of Innova and such models would be rolled out in 'big numbers' from early next year.
On global economic meltdown impact on Toyota, Nakagawa said the Indian market is expected be affected but in the near future it would go up again. "Fundamentally, Indian country is very much strong. Bright future is there".
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