Business Standard

General Motors shrinks to grow

After shutting down local sales, auto giant rides on exports to make profit

- AJAY MODI

American auto major General Motors’ (GM) India unit is now leaner and fitter after more than two decades of loss-making operations.

Having shutdown the local sales business in India last year in May, the carma keri snow inching close to a profitable operation, driven exclusivel­y by exports. The company is already said to have made some profit in the current financial year.

The amount earned as profit is not known. But a person familiar with the developmen­ts said the India arm of the Detroit-headquarte­red company was in the process of making provisions for expenditur­e on corporate social responsibi­lity in 2018-19.

GM India employees a real sole arnt to have received a 100 percent bonus in the current financial year, a decision linked to improved performanc­e.

GM entered India in 1996 but struggled to mark a significan­t presence in a market dominated by companies including Ma ru ti Suzuki and Hyundai. In the last full year (2016-17) of sales in the Indian market, it had a market share below 1 percent. Needless to say, the company’ s Indian operation remained saddled with losses.

At the last count, the carmaker’s accumulate­d loss in India is estimated at over ~80 billion. Losses were a function of the small sales volume, which also meant a low-capacity utilisatio­n.

Take the case of 2015-16, forexample. The company sold fewer than 70,000 vehicles from the two plants with a combined capacity of 287,000 units. Overhead sand the cost of operations remained high and products could hardly generate any money.

Things appear to be better now, after the company stopped local sales and decided to focus solely on exports from the Tale ga on plant in Maharashtr­a, while selling the Halo lu nit in Gujarat to Chinese auto maker S AI C last year. The consolidat­ion of operations brought down the head count by 1,500 and reduced costs.

“The business transforma­tion decision taken in 2017 was the best pathway towards improved financial performanc­e and profitabil­ity. GM is already towards the journey of being profitable and we hope to build on this momentum as we progress further in 2018,” a company spokespers­on said.

Exports rose 19 percent to 76,644 units in the 11 months ended February 2018, making GM the fifth-largest passenger vehicle exporter from India. The company exports Beat hatchback and sedan to Latin American markets.

There was a one-time gain that came from the sale of the Halol plant, though the amount at which the transactio­n took place was not disclosed.

The company spent heavily in retrenchme­nt of employees associated with the plant and in making its dealer partners exit dealership­s.

However, it is understood that the profitabil­ity is operationa­l in nature and not linked to the one-time gain.

“It made sense for GM to focus primarily on exports from India as it struggled to sell products in a crowded car market. We need to wait and see if the company can sustain the improvemen­t in performanc­e. If it is sustained, it should set a good precedent for some other global automakers who are struggling in the domestic market,” said an executive with a leading carmaker.

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