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Japan's vehicle market expands by 4% in May

Japan's vehicle market expands by 4% in May

Yahoo5 hours ago

Japan's new vehicle market expanded by 4% year-on-year to 324,064 units in May 2025 from 312,406 units in the same month last year, according to registration data released by the Japan Automobile Manufacturers Association.
The country's vehicle market last month continued to recover from weak year-earlier levels, when Daihatsu Motor - Toyota Motor's small car subsidiary - was forced to halt production of a number of key models following its widely covered safety test rigging scandal. This also affected other affiliated brands, including Mazda and Subaru.
In the first five months of 2025, the market expanded by 11% to 1,952,294 units after falling by 15% to 1,753,891 in the same period last year, with sales of passenger cars rising by 12% to 1,660,261 units and truck sales increasing by 10% to 287,068 units, while sales of medium and large buses and coaches surged by 15% to 4,965 units.
Toyota's domestic sales rose by 16% to 604,919 units year-to-date, while Daihatsu's sales surged by 150% to 211,866 units from very depressed year-earlier levels, and Mazda's volumes rebounded by 18% to 69,865 units. Brands not affected by last year's production stoppages did not perform as well in this period, including Suzuki which saw its sales fall slightly to 315,124 units, while Honda's sales were down by 4% to 270,440 units, and Nissan's sales declined by over 11% to 185,449 units.
Overseas brands account for just 4% of total vehicle sales in Japan year-to-date, led by German automakers including Mercedes-Benz, BMW-Mini, Audi and Volkswagen.
"Japan's vehicle market expands by 4% in May" was originally created and published by Just Auto, a GlobalData owned brand.
The information on this site has been included in good faith for general informational purposes only. It is not intended to amount to advice on which you should rely, and we give no representation, warranty or guarantee, whether express or implied as to its accuracy or completeness. You must obtain professional or specialist advice before taking, or refraining from, any action on the basis of the content on our site.

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Breaking up is hard to do, and even harder if you are a billionaire who decides to break up with another billionaire on the two social media platforms you own, while the world watches in real time. Here are the key moments as the relationship between the US president, Donald Trump, and his former senior adviser Elon Musk unravelled in spectacular fashion, precipitated by a dispute over a colossal spending bill that could have major consequences for years to come. Tuesday 27 May 2025 Musk criticises Trump's tax and spending bill CBS previewed an interview, scheduled for that weekend, in which Musk said Trump's proposed tax and spending bill 'undermines' the cost-cutting efforts of the 'department of government efficiency' (Doge), which he led. Wednesday 28 May 2025 Musk out of White House Musk announced on social media that he was leaving his role in the Trump administration, a departure that the White House confirmed was in process on the same evening. 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