That was only because they took a huge loan out just a few months before the financial crisis. It was pure luck, not savvy business. If they hadn't done that they'd have been asking for a bailout also, or going under.
Toyota is way ahead of everyone by being way behind... they design an engine for instance, really well designed, and then use it for 20 years across most/all models. Example: that 22E (or whatever the designation is, sorry if it's wrong) four cylinder. Or their V6. They stick with proven tech that doesn't break. Contrast that with GM's bats#it crazy V8 cylinder deactivation tech that is once again causing recalls in the hundreds of thousands of units. They've been putzing with this cylinder deactivation crap since around the 1990s. I might be a little off, but it's been an on-off circus for decades.Vova585 wrote: ↑30 Jun 2025, 19:55I agree that most of the society has no need for big truck/suv , however now toyota cant keep up their corolla and camry and rav 4 hybrids in stock. Last year had to pre-order and wait 5 month for corolla for my dad. Same story with prius and slightly better with camry. Americans are not willing to buy crap and big 3 are seeing it(tariffs or not). Lets be honest here, how many of us would nowadays buy new volvo over lexus? My vote would be for lexus.
I think the next new car I buy might be Mazda. They make distinctive, quality, beautiful cars and SUVs. Dependable too. They also have the best red paint of any car on the road. Take a good look next time you see one. It's like looking at a galaxy through the Hubble space telescope. It's gorgeous.







