While the automaker expects the impact of the shortage to continue into the next fiscal year, which begins on Apr. 1, it is unclear how many vehicles will be affected, Chief Financial Officer Toshiaki Okada said.

"We are making efforts day and night to procure semiconductor parts as much as possible and to minimise production cuts," he added.

The automaker could suspend or adjust plant operations in the future if it cannot procure enough chips, Okada said in an earnings call. He added Subaru would maintain employment levels at its plant in Gunma, Japan, while reducing overtime work and holiday shifts.

The roughly 58,000 vehicles represents a reduction of about 6.6% of its production plan for this fiscal year, which it revised to 823,400 from 881,300 in the previous quarter.

In addition to a 48,000 production cut caused by the chip shortage, Subaru said it had reduced its output by another 10,000 vehicles due to a global shortage of shipping containers.

Subaru on Friday revised its operating profit forecast for the year to end-March down to 100 billion yen ($948 million) from an earlier estimate of 110 billion yen due to the global shortage of chip supplies.

That compares with an average 132.11 billion yen from a Refinitiv consensus forecast from 17 analysts.

Subaru reported a 17% jump in its operating profit in the Oct-Dec period as its global vehicle sales continued to recover since the previous quarter.

It posted an operating profit of 67.6 billion yen in the third quarter compared with a 57.8 billion yen profit a year ago, and exceeding an estimated average of 34.99 billion yen profit from seven analysts surveyed by Refinitiv.

($1 = 105.52 yen)

(Reporting by Eimi Yamamitsu; Editing by Kim Coghill, Karishma Singh and Pravin Char)