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-   -   Toyota is Moving its Head Quarters to Texas (https://www.ft86club.com/forums/showthread.php?t=64568)

iff2mastamatt 04-28-2014 06:13 PM

Toyota is Moving its Head Quarters to Texas
 
More businesses seem to be fleeing California for the south. More detail in this Bloomberg article:

Quote:

Toyota Motor Corp. (7203) is moving substantial parts of its U.S. headquarters in Torrance, California, to suburban Dallas as the world’s largest automaker seeks savings from its U.S. sales unit, people familiar with the matter said.

Employees will be informed of the plan today, said the people, who asked not to be identified disclosing private conversations. Steve Curtis, a Toyota spokesman, didn’t return a call on the matter.

The surprise move is a blow to the Golden State, the biggest U.S. auto market and proponent of the strictest clean-air rules. Toyota’s Prius hybrid has been California’s top-selling model for the past two years and helped secure a leading 22 percent market share. It also represents a victory for Texas Governor Rick Perry, who’s made repeated visits to California to lure businesses to his state with promises of lower taxes and easier regulations.

“It would be very consequential for Southern California,” said Jack Nerad, executive market analyst for vehicle-price data service Kelley Blue Book in Irvine, California. “There might be some brain drain and tumult for employees, though it should be largely seamless to the consumer. This kind of thing can create some disruption of momentum.”


Photographer: Tomohiro Ohsumi/Bloomberg
Toyota Motor Corp., the Toyota City, Japan-based automaker, has more than 5,300... Read More
Toyota fell 0.4 percent to 5,473 yen in Tokyo trading. The Toyota City, Japan-based company’s shares have dropped 15 percent this year. The automaker’s American depositary receipts rose 0.2 percent to $106.72 at 11:27 a.m. in New York.

Destination Texas

Toyota has more than 5,300 California employees, most at its Torrance campus in sales, finance, marketing, engineering and product planning. Details on which functions will move and when may be announced as soon as today, after the employee meeting. When Nissan Motor Co. (7201) moved its North American headquarters to lower-cost Tennessee in 2006, only 42 percent of employees initially chose to relocate.

Toyota’s former joint-venture plant in Fremont, operated for 25 years with the predecessor of General Motors Co. (GM), closed in 2010 and was sold to electric-car maker Tesla Motors Inc. Toyota also operates a small parts factory in Long Beach and has a large design studio, Calty, in Newport Beach.

The company’s new regional sales headquarters may be in or near Plano, Texas, said three of the people who asked not to be named as the plan isn’t yet public. The majority of Toyota’s Torrance operations may move to Texas over a two-year period, the people said.

Lucy Nashed and Felix Browne, spokesmen for Perry, didn’t respond to e-mails on the matter.

Perry’s Commercials

Perry, in his final year as governor, began airing radio commercials in California during his March swing through the state that highlighted its high taxes.

“A year ago, I was here, in California, encouraging companies to look to Texas for expansion and relocation,” he said in the ad, paid for by a group called Americans for Economic Freedom. “Over the past year and a half, more than 50 California companies have announced plans to expand or relocate in Texas, creating more than 14,000 jobs.”

In February, Occidental Petroleum Corp. (OXY) said it was splitting its operations, keeping a portion in California and setting up a new unit in Houston. Raytheon Co. (RTN), a technology company that specializes in defense, last year moved its space and airborne systems unit to McKinney, Texas, from southern California.

Toyota Marketing

While Texas is home to Toyota’s pickup truck plant in San Antonio and a General Motors Co. factory in Arlington, the state traditionally hasn’t been a center of auto industry activity.

Separately, Toyota said it’s restructuring the Torrance-based U.S. marketing organization as part of an efficiency push without detailing how many jobs may be eliminated. Some employees are being reassigned to other parts of the company and there is a “voluntary exit program” for people who choose to leave, Toyota said yesterday in a statement. The revamped marketing unit will begin operating from May 1.

Toyota’s decision to scale back in California, where it established operations in 1957, comes as the company expects to report a record 1.87 trillion ($18.3 billion) of net income when it releases fiscal year results next month. Along with rising sales in North America and other international markets, Toyota’s earnings this year are benefiting from a decline in the value of the yen, which surged in 2011.

Earnings Outlook

Since the company made that forecast, it agreed to a $1.2 billion fine to settle a U.S. Justice Department investigation into how it delayed recalling popular models after complaints of unintended acceleration.

U.S. sales for Toyota last year totaled 2.24 million cars and light trucks, off a record 2.62 million in 2007. Combined sales for the carmaker’s three brands fell 1.6 percent to 520,997 in the year’s first three months.

Toyota Motor Sales USA and Toyota Financial Services, based in Torrance, in suburban Los Angeles, have more than 9,400 U.S. employees. Torrance is home to Toyota’s Lexus and Scion lines, as well as its namesake brand.

Additional Toyota units in Torrance include parts and logistics operations to support dealers. The company’s Toyota University training center is nearby.

Auto Center

Southern California rivals Michigan as a U.S. automotive center. While it lacks large-scale vehicle manufacturing, the region has U.S. sales and marketing headquarters for Honda Motor Co. (7267), Hyundai Motor Co., Kia Motors Corp., Mazda Motor Corp. and Mitsubishi Motors Corp., along with Toyota. It is also the nation’s top automotive design center with 14 major studios, the largest concentration in the U.S.

Toyota Financial Services, the biggest auto finance company in the U.S., and Honda’s American Honda Finance Co. also in Torrance, makes the region a hub of lending and loans for dealers and car buyers.
http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2014-0...-to-texas.html

SirBrass 04-28-2014 06:26 PM

And the concept of reaping what you sow is being proven yet again here.

Congrats, Texans. Y'all are doing quite well for businesses.

jeffwoos 04-28-2014 06:30 PM

Makes sense to me!

torqdork 04-28-2014 06:56 PM

Toyota leaving California for Texas
 
Not a surprise to anyone paying attention to Japan and American senior management statements over the past year, Toyota has had enough of a one-party politics state that pushed taxation and regulation too far.

This won't be the last shoe to drop. Expect something similar to happen with California port operations and their overpaid, strike prone workforce.

Sorry for all the Californians here. Having lived there, it was once my favorite state but their self-inflicted decline driven by ideological, politically driven economic and social decisions are accelerating the state's troubles and this is yet another example.

http://pressroom.toyota.com/article_...rticle_id=4447

strat61caster 04-28-2014 07:07 PM

If you ever dreamed of working for Toyota now's the time to apply, whenever companies leave California there's always a good number of employees who refuse to relocate.

Edit: There's a handful of members on this board who work for Toyota in Torrance, wonder what their take is...

strat61caster 04-28-2014 07:18 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by torqdork (Post 1703025)
Toyota has had enough of a one-party politics state that pushed taxation and regulation too far.

If we were a one party politics state we would actually have gotten something done in the past five years other than a minor tax increase.

FiRStsc10n 04-28-2014 07:29 PM

Why choose Plano, Texas? Is there already a factory there?

Why not move it all to Ann Arbor, Michigan if they are already expanding the Toyota Technical Center to accommodate some of the moves. With Detroit being bankrupt I'm sure they could build up at a good price.

fitcious 04-28-2014 07:36 PM

i'm going to TX!

DAEMANO 04-28-2014 07:42 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by SirBrass (Post 1702970)
And the concept of reaping what you sow is being proven yet again here.

Congrats, Texans. Y'all are doing quite well for businesses.

If by "Texans" you mean "Texas business owners" then yes congratulations. Because the majority of the those business friendly low corporate tax rates are being made up with astronomic property taxes. Texas now has the 3rd highest median property taxes in nation at 1.81%. California the 32nd (at .74%). The money has to come from someplace and it is, from homeowners (old and new).

These low corporate taxes and are no less than a transfer of tax expenses (and therefore wealth) from the middle class to the wealthy. Politicians spin it to sound good to the average job seeker, but it's a raw deal.

So yeah, before congratulating "Texans" on this, understand that your average Texas homeowner is getting stuck with the bill that your average corporation in a less "tax friendly" state would normally take up.

For Toyota, this is a move to keep increasing profit. Year after year, the profit % must improve. Don't be fooled into thinking this is about survival either. It's about more profit this year, than last, at the expense of homeowners in both Texas and California it stinks.

Source, I perform business analytics for the mortgage industry.

thill 04-28-2014 08:00 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by FiRStsc10n (Post 1703095)
Why choose Plano, Texas? Is there already a factory there?

Why not move it all to Ann Arbor, Michigan if they are already expanding the Toyota Technical Center to accommodate some of the moves. With Detroit being bankrupt I'm sure they could build up at a good price.

Because there is politics involved. I am sure there was some sort of a deal struck between that particular city/state that we are not privy to.

And it is a very business friendly State.

Crazy Drew 04-28-2014 08:32 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by thill (Post 1703146)
Because there is politics involved. I am sure there was some sort of a deal struck between that particular city/state that we are not privy to.

And it is a very business friendly State.

Yep, this is exactly what happens when one state has hostile policies towards businesses. Plano houses quite a few corporate headquarters for various companies and has the infrastructure and demograph deemed desireable to many of these corporations.

funwheeldrive 04-28-2014 09:43 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by torqdork (Post 1703025)
Sorry for all the Californians here. Having lived there, it was once my favorite state but their self-inflicted decline driven by ideological, politically driven economic and social decisions are accelerating the state's troubles and this is yet another example.

http://pressroom.toyota.com/article_...rticle_id=4447

At least I can pump my own gas.

torqdork 04-28-2014 09:43 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by FiRStsc10n (Post 1703095)
Why choose Plano, Texas? Is there already a factory there?

Why not move it all to Ann Arbor, Michigan if they are already expanding the Toyota Technical Center to accommodate some of the moves. With Detroit being bankrupt I'm sure they could build up at a good price.

Texas = balanced budget, zero income tax, in-migration (legal), business friendly, production facilities (Tundra, Tacoma) in place, Port of Houston.

Plus, maybe most importantly, Japan staff likes Texans.

torqdork 04-28-2014 09:50 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by funwheeldrive (Post 1703379)
At least I can pump my own gas.

Living in one of two states where full service is mandated (i.e., no self-serve allowed), I'm grateful not to smell like unleaded after a fill.

Plus, our gas is cheaper than two miles North (as the crow flies) in Washington where they have self-serve. But then, you don't have to stand in cold rain and wind pumping your own gas six months of the year.


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