-
Recent Posts
- UAW Files Unfair Labor Practice Against American Axle
- Stellantis FaSTLAne 2030 Financial Reform Revealed
- Memorial Day Weekend Gas Prices Highest in Four Years
- Chinese Dongfeng Voyah Vehicles Coming to EU Via Stellantis
- Stellantis, Jaguar Land Rover Sign MOU on Tech Development
- Volvo Cars and Google Gemini Add AI Tech
- HondaJet APMG S Upgrade Expands to Mexico
- May 2026 Light Vehicle Production Forecast is Down Again
- Chrysler Recalls Jeep Cherokee Models for PTU Failures
- Coming Soon Chinese-Built Jeeps?
- BMW N.A. Starts Preferred Pricing at IONNA Charging Sites
- Trumped – National Average for Fuel Prices Climbing Yet Again
- First Glance – Acura Hybrid SUV
- BMW Group to Convert Preferred Shares to Common
- California Starts $1 Billion Rebate Program for Electric Trucks
Recent Comments
- Magna International on Magna International Posts Q1 2026 EPS Loss of $0.04
- Council on Foreign Relations on Iran and Strait of Hormuz on AAA – Pump Gasoline Prices Still Soaring
- Autocrat on Stellantis Subordinated Perpetual Hybrid Bonds on Stellantis Posts Full Year 2025 Loss of €22.3B
- Michigan Governor Whitmer on Pew – Confidence in Trump Dips, Fewer Support His Policies
- Porsche Motorsport Daytona Victory on Daytona 24 Hours – Old and New Stars Getting Ready to Run
Archives
Meta
Tag Archives: Toyota sienna exports
Toyota to Export U.S. Built Camry to South Korea
The Camry mid-size sedans will be made at Toyota’s manufacturing plant in Georgetown, Kentucky, which is Toyota’s largest manufacturing facility outside of Japan. The strong Japanese Yen is causing Toyota to increase production out of its home country. Whether a U.S. made Camry is any more suited for the Korean market given Japan’s troubled relations with Korea is debatable. Continue reading
Toyota to Export U.S.-Built Sienna to South Korea. FTA that UAW Supported, Also Helps Non-Union Plant Exports
The Korea FTA is opposed by all organized labor groups, except the United Auto Workers Union, which in the view of critics sold out organized labor for the promise that 75,000 UAW-built vehicles would be exported to Korea. Thus far Ford and General Motors, all with new four-year UAW contracts, have not announced plans to export to Korea. Continue reading
