The car business isn't easy! Toyota chief’s warning to Apple

The highly-anticipated 2020 Toyota Supra debuted at the North American International Auto Show today.

The highly-anticipated 2020 Toyota Supra debuted at the North American International Auto Show today.

Published Mar 12, 2021

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TOKYO - Toyota President Akio Toyoda offered a warning to Apple, which is plotting a foray into the motor industry: There's more to the business of selling cars than just having the technology to produce them.

The automotive industry welcomes new entrants, "but after making a vehicle, I'd like them to be prepared to deal with customers and various changes for some 40 years," Toyoda said at a news conference held Thursday by the Japan Automobile Manufacturers Association, where he is the chairman.

Although it will probably take Apple at least half a decade to launch its planned autonomous, electric vehicle, the technology giant has been creating waves within the car industry recently as it approaches a wide range of carmakers that are seen as potential contenders for a vehicle partnership.

The Cupertino, California-based company's entry into the car market has sparked fear among some legacy carmakers concerned about the potential disruptiveness of an Apple-branded vehicle. These concerns may be one of the reasons that discussions between Apple and some firms have apparently fizzled in recent months, with Hyundai and others backtracking after saying they were in talks.

The world's largest and second-largest carmakers, Toyota and Volkswagen, appear less concerned.

Volkswagen chief Herbert Diess said that he wasn't afraid of Apple's entry in an interview with German newspaper Frankfurter Allgemeine Sonntagszeitung in February. The car sector is different from the technology industry, and Apple "won't manage to take it over overnight," he said.

New tech firms joining "has the potential to breathe new life into the auto industry and give customers a wider range of choices," Toyoda said. But their entry needs to be "fair" to consumers, in that they need to be prepared to take responsibility for the entire life cycle of their vehicles, from maintenance to eventual scrapping, he said.

This isn't the first time Toyoda has been dismissive of new entrants. In a briefing in November, Toyoda said that Tesla isn't making "real products." Tesla, which overtook Toyota as the world's most valuable carmaker last year, may be winning in terms of market value, Toyoda said. But Toyota has what the Fremont, California-based carmaker doesn't: experience making more than 100 million cars.

Bloomberg

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