Beleaguered Takata unlikely to seek automaker assistance
Sun, Feb 22 2015Honda for one has little interest in lending further support to the beleaguered supplier, according to The Wall Street Journal. The Japanese automaker recently dropped its annual sales targets to put a larger emphasis on vehicle quality, partially in response to the inflator recall. It also struck a deal with another company for replacement parts and was rumored to abandon Takata for some future business.
Honda CEO Takanobu Ito did leave the door barely cracked for possible aid. "Takata itself needs to figure out how to fulfill its duties, but if it makes any request to automakers, then we would think about that," he said, according to The Wall Street Journal.
There isn't much likelihood of Takata needing a bailout, though. According to The Wall Street Journal, analysts aren't concerned about the company's short-term fortunes, and the supplier had about $728 million in cash as of last September.
- News Source: The Wall Street Journal - sub. req.
- Image Credit: Toru Yamanaka / AFP / Getty Images
- Earnings/Financials
- Recalls
- Honda
- Safety
- Takata airbag recall
By Chris Bruce
See also: Honda slowing US production due to ports dispute, Honda trademarks 'CDX' nameplate, West Coast labor dispute hampers Japanese automakers' US plants.