Takata Shares Plunge 25%
November 05 2015 - 9:10AM
Dow Jones News
TOKYO—Air bag maker Takata Corp. lost a quarter of its value in
a single day Thursday, as more Japanese auto makers followed Honda
Motor Co.'s footsteps and signaled they may also avoid using
certain air-bag inflaters made by Takata in their new vehicles.
Mazda Motor Corp. said it won't use Takata-made air bag
inflaters with ammonium-nitrate based propellant in vehicles
currently under development. Fuji Heavy Industries, the maker of
Subaru cars, said it is considering not using Takata's inflaters
for new models, while Mitsubishi Motors said it is considering
whether to switch to other suppliers in its new models.
The flurry of announcements came after Honda said earlier this
week it will no longer use Takata-made front driver or passenger
air-bag inflaters in new vehicles under development, alleging the
supplier misrepresented and manipulated test data.
On Thursday, Takata shares plunged 25% to ¥ 889, the lowest
level in more than six years. The company supplied tens of millions
of explosive air bags that are being recalled world-wide. Takata is
set to announce its second-quarter results Friday.
The move by auto makers underscores how they increasingly don't
deem Takata inflaters necessary in future vehicles, raising
questions about the viability of its inflater manufacturing
operations in the long-run.
An inflater is a component inside an air bag module. Inside its
metal casing are propellant tablets or wafers, which burn and emit
gas to fill the air bag. Some of the air bags that Takata makes
contain inflaters also made by Takata, while others contain
inflaters made by non-Takata suppliers such as Daicel Corp.
The air bags under recall contain Takata-made inflaters that are
at risk of exploding and shooting shrapnel, a problem linked to
eight deaths.
Other inflater makers including Daicel and Autoliv Inc. have
been or are considering ramping up production capacity to help
Takata manufacture replacement air bags for recalled vehicles.
Such suppliers would be able to supply inflaters for new
vehicles, because they will have extra capacity after they finish
producing replacement parts for recalled vehicles, said Yasuyuki
Yoshinaga, CEO of Fuji Heavy Industries.
"If suppliers invest in equipment and plants and if auto makers
are going to continue buying components, then there would be no
problem," he said.
Shares in Daicel rose 7.2% Thursday.
But for the time being, auto makers still need Takata to
continue making replacement inflaters for many of the 19 million
vehicles in the U.S., and millions elsewhere in the world, that
have yet to be fixed. For certain types of air bag modules, other
suppliers cannot easily offer a matching type of inflater due to
differences in shapes, auto makers and officials said.
Takata also makes other automotive safety devices such as seat
belts and child seats.
Takata spokesman Hideyuki Matsumoto said he can't comment on
moves by Mazda, Subaru and Mitsubishi Motors because Takata hasn't
communicated directly with those auto makers on the matter. "Our
priority is to supply replacement parts quickly and to assure the
safety of consumers," he said. "We want to do our best to win back
the trust of auto makers for future inflaters."
The rejections of Takata-made inflaters come after U.S.
auto-safety regulators ordered Takata this week to eventually stop
using ammonium-nitrate based propellant in the safety devices.
One exception was Toyota Motor Corp., which kept its stance
vague. "We will use inflaters that are safer and more reliable,"
Senior Managing Officer Shigeru Hayakawa said during an earnings
briefing. He declined to comment in detail, saying the cause of the
inflater explosions has yet to the identified.
Write to Yoko Kubota at yoko.kubota@wsj.com
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(END) Dow Jones Newswires
November 05, 2015 08:55 ET (13:55 GMT)
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