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Toyota increases sales forecast, logs big quarterly profit

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Despite a recession in Europe and a shaky economy in North America, Toyota Motor Corp. is having a good year. So good that it raised its estimate for the number of cars the Japanese automaker will sell globally this year to a record 9.76 million, up 23% from last year.

That would guarantee that Toyota would surpass General Motors Co. to regain its spot as the world’s largest automaker.

A host of new models and a rebound from the production and inventory problems caused by the Japanese earthquake and tsunami last year are responsible for Toyota’s gains.

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The improvement was evident in the latest U.S. sales numbers. Through the first seven months of the year, Toyota sales have risen 28% to more than 1.2 million vehicles. Its share of the U.S. market has climbed to 14.4% from 12.8% during the same period a year ago.

The redesigned Toyota Camry is a big reason why. With sales up 40% to almost 244,000 vehicles, it is the best selling passenger car in America by a wide margin.

Sales like this helped Toyota post a fiscal year first-quarter profit of 290.3 billion yen ($3.7 billion,) up from 1.1 billion yen in the same period a year earlier. Its revenue jumped nearly 60% to 5.5 trillion yen ($70.5 billion.)

“Toyota’s recovery has been a remarkable one this year. The automaker not only regained all of the lost market share they suffered in 2011 but they also brought their average transaction prices to over $28,000 [in the U.S.] for the first time ever,” said Jesse Toprak, an analyst for auto price information company TrueCar.com

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