Toyota Motor Corp

(7203.T) said it planned to build pickup trucks and possibly SUVs at a new plant in Mexico , a move that followed threats by U.S. President Donald Trump to penalize the company if it built small cars south of the border.

Toyota initially planned to produce Corolla sedans at the plant it is building in the central state of Guanajuato but will now switch production of the small cars and a new Mazda SUV crossover to a new assembly plant planned for the United States .

Trump in January threatened to impose a hefty fee on the world's largest automaker if it built Corollas for the US market in Mexico.

Toyota de Mexico spokesman Luis Lozano said the global auto maker would study producing SUVs in Guanajuato, in addition to the Tacoma truck model.

"We're going to concentrate only on pickups at the beginning and are studying the potential for SUVs in the future," he said, adding that trucks and SUVs represented some 65 percent of the North American market.

The decision came as Toyota planned to take a 5 percent share of smaller Japanese rival Mazda Motor Corp (7261.T) as part of an alliance that will see the two build a $1.6 billion U.S. assembly plant and work together on electric vehicles.

A move to produce SUVs in Guanajuato would mark a continuation of a "burgeoning trend" of Mexican manufacturing meeting quality standards needed to produce more expensive vehicles, said Christopher Wilson of the Woodrow Wilson International Center.

"Instead of building lower value cars that generally offer smaller margins in Mexico and keeping high value SUV and luxury model production in the U.S., they are moving in the opposite direction," said Wilson, deputy director of the think tank's Mexico Institute.

"The moves by Toyota seem to be designed to reduce political pressure on the company from President Trump," he added.

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