Toyota Motor Corp. became the latest automaker to feel the wrath of President-elect Donald Trump's Twitter account on Thursday afternoon, as the incoming commander-in-chief warned against its building of a Mexican manufacturing plant.

During a week in which Trump appeared to be particularly focused on the automotive industry – also tweeting about the supply chain operations of Ford Motor Co. and General Motors in the past few days – he lashed out at Toyota for the company's plans to build Corolla cars at a new facility in Mexico.

Toyota Motor said will build a new plant in Baja, Mexico, to build Corolla cars for U.S. NO WAY! Build plant in U.S. or pay big border tax. — Donald J. Trump (@realDonaldTrump) January 5, 2017

The tweet, however, was inaccurate, or imprecise at best. Toyota announced in a news release last year that it would invest $150 million in its existing Baja California, Mexico, facility, creating 400 jobs in Mexico and increasing the factory's output by 60,000 Tacoma trucks. In November, the company broke ground on a separate $1 billion facility in the state of Guanajuato, Mexico, that will produce Corollas.

Toyota representatives told U.S. News Thursday that the company has no plans to build a new Baja facility, also stating that its U.S. payrolls "will not decrease as a result of our new plant in Guanajuato" and outlining a series of recent investments in operations in Alabama, Indiana and Kentucky.

"Toyota looks forward to collaborating with the Trump administration to serve in the best interests of consumers and the automotive industry," a statement from the company said.

Trump previously criticized Ford and GM for making investments in Mexico and has suggested, as he did in the Toyota tweet, that their products would face steep tariffs should the companies try to import foreign-made cars into the U.S.

Ford earlier this week announced that it would abandon a planned $1.6 billion investment in a Mexican factory and instead throw $700 million at its American operations, in the process creating 700 jobs. Ford CEO Mark Fields described the move as a "vote of confidence" in the president-elect, although the company is still expected to shift much of its small-car production efforts to Mexico.

Analysts have argued that Trump's tariff threat, if realized, could violate the North American Free Trade Agreement, though Trump has expressed interest in retooling or scrapping America's commitment to the pact with Canada and Mexico.

General Motors is sending Mexican made model of Chevy Cruze to U.S. car dealers-tax free across border. Make in U.S.A.or pay big border tax! — Donald J. Trump (@realDonaldTrump) January 3, 2017

While Trump's Toyota tweet was in many ways similar to his apparent threat to GM earlier in the week, a key difference is that Toyota, unlike Ford and GM, isn't an American company. The automaker – one of the largest in the world with a sizable market share in the U.S. – is headquartered in the Aichi prefecture of Japan.

Trump's tweet also came the same day Toyota President Akio Toyoda said in Tokyo that the company will be paying close attention to the president-elect's trade approach.

"We will consider our option as we see what policies the incoming president adopts," Toyoda said regarding the plant his company is building in Mexico, according to Reuters.

According to The Wall Street Journal, Toyoda on Thursday also said of the Trump administration that "if you look over the long term, we are oriented in the same direction."