By Michael Elkins
LG Energy (KS:373220) CEO Kwon Young Soo announced Friday that the South Korean battery giant has entered into talks with Toyota Motors (NYSE:TM) in the hopes of supplying the automaker with EV batteries.
When asked about the negotiation progress with Toyota, the CEO said that it has been going well. "We are discussing the way of cooperation," Kwon told reporters after an annual shareholders meeting.
LG also announced Friday that the company would resume a stalled U.S. battery project with a $5.6 billion investment in Arizona to qualify for U.S. federal incentives rolled out under the Inflation Reduction Act.
The company currently has joint battery plants with General Motors (NYSE:GM), Stellantis NV (NYSE:STLA) and Honda (NYSE:HMC) in North America, with production sites in South Korea, China, Poland and Indonesia.
In October, LG, which supplies batteries to Tesla Inc (NASDAQ:TSLA), General Motors and other automakers, announced it was building a joint venture $4.4B battery plant with Honda in Ohio.
Shares of GM, STLA, HMC and TSLA are down 0.56%, 0.95%, 0.15% and 1.46% respectively in afternoon trading on Friday, while shares of TM are up 0.20%.