Yahoo – AFP,
October 13, 2017
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| The embarrassing scandal at Kobe Steel, a venerable firm that once employed Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, has already hit wide sections of Japanese industry (AFP Photo/STR) |
Tokyo (AFP)
- Japan's Kobe Steel admitted Friday that a snowballing falsified data scandal
had affected around 500 customers, more than twice as many as initially
thought.
More than
30 foreign customers were affected, including Boeing, Airbus, General Motors,
Tesla, German automaker Daimler and PSA of France, according to Japan's leading
Nikkei business daily.
The new
estimate comes as Kobe Steel's battered stock fell almost nine percent to
finish at 805 yen ($7.20), down more than 40 percent since the start of the
week after it admitted falsifying strength and quality data for a string of
products -- a practice it said may have started a decade ago.
The
embarrassing scandal for a venerable firm that once employed Prime Minister
Shinzo Abe has already hit wide sections of Japanese industry, including
automakers Toyota, Nissan and Honda which used the materials in their vehicles.
The company
had previously admitted to falsifying quality data for products sold to some
200 clients.
"Combined
with previously announced clients, it will total about 500 firms,"
Yoshihiko Katsukawa, a senior Kobe Steel executive, told a press conference.
"Please
let us refrain from naming specific clients that have been affected. We have
communicated with our customers and have discussed ways to confirm the
safety" of our products, he added.
In the
United States, General Motors said that it did use aluminum from Kobe Steel
"in certain models and we are working with Kobe to understand the
potential impact".
The CEO of
Japan's number-three steelmaker insisted Friday that the affected products did
not appear to pose a safety risk.
The company
and its clients agreed on certain quality specifications, which it did not meet
in many cases.
"So
far, our review and investigation has shown there has not been any problem that
raises concrete doubts about the safety of our products that did not meet
specifications," Hiroya Kawasaki told a press briefing.
"We
are resolved to take swift and appropriate actions when and if we see cases
that raise safety doubts in our products."
On
Thursday, Kawasaki acknowledged that trust in his firm has "fallen to
zero".
"The
crisis is ongoing so it's tough to know at this point how big the impact on the
company will be and which industries it will affect," Hideyuki Suzuki,
head of the investment information section at SBI Securities, told AFP.
"Kobe
Steel's share price will hit bottom once the financial impact on the company
becomes clear," he added.
About 66
percent of the company's sales are in Japan with the rest going to China and
other overseas markets.
The crisis
marks the latest in a string of quality control and governance scandals to hit
major Japanese businesses in recent years, undermining the country's reputation
for quality.
The
affected products include steel wires used in car engines and tyres -- a key
company product -- as well as aluminium found in Japan's bullet trains and
materials in high-speed trains in Britain.
"If it
was found that there are safety problems (with steel wires) it could shake the
foundation of Kobe Steel," Takayuki Atake, manager of credit research at
SMBC Nikko Securities, said in a report.

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