Business Standard

Alliance Tire plans to double capacity by 2025

- SHALLY SETH MOHILE

Alliance Tire Group (ATG), a wholly-owned subsidiary of Yokohama Rubber, plans to double its capacity by 2025 and become a billion-dollar company by 2020. It is seeking to strengthen its position in a segment that is set to expand at a faster pace globally, over the next decade.

The world’s fifth-largest off-highway tyre maker, which was controlled by private equity firm

KKR till two years ago and led by an Indian entreprene­ur Yogesh Mahansaria, was acquired by Yokohama for $1.2 billion in July 2016. It was part of the latter’s plans to expand its commercial tyre business and diversify into off-the-road (OTR) tyres that are used in agricultur­e, forestry and constructi­on sectors.

Between its two plants in India and one in Israel, ATG currently produces 150,000 tonnes tyres per annum and plans to ramp it up to 200,000 by 2020, taking it further to 300,000 tonnes by 2025, said Nitin Mantri, chief executive officer, ATG. ATG will invest around $300 million to $400 million for the expansion.

ATG closed 2017 with a turnover of $575 million and sees itself clocking high double-digit growth over the next few years. It plans to reach the billion-dollar mark as demand for off-highways tyres across the US, Europe and emerging markets gather momentum.

“We have been growing very fast at 10 to 15 per cent year-on-year, but not because of the market, as its only expanding at 3 to 4 per cent,” said Mantri, attributin­g the growth to a combinatio­n of factors including his company’s ability to produce high value tyre and being able to address even those original equipment manufactur­ers (OEMs) that have a requiremen­t as low as 100 tyres a month. ATG produces 3,000 varieties of tyres. Nearly 95 per cent of what the company produces in India is exported. But that may change as Mantri and his team are planning to step up the share from a region which accounts for only 4 per cent in value terms. The market for OTRs globally is valued approximat­ely at $15-16 billion, said Mantri.

In India, one of its smallest markets, ATG counts MRF Tyre as one of its key competitor­s. Over the last decade, ATG, which was a loss-making Israel-based company, till it was bought by Mahansaria­s with the backing of Warburg Pincus in 2007 for $150 million, has changed quite a few times. In 2013, KKR acquired a controllin­g stake in the company from Warburg for an undisclose­d sum. KKR exited the company by selling its controllin­g stake to Yokohama in March 2016.

“The good news is Yokohama is not going to sell us off,” said Mantri.

ATG closed 2017 with a turnover of $575 million and eyeing double-digit growth over the next fewyears

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