Business Standard

Tyremakers line up aggressive expansion plans

- SHALLY SETH MOHILE

Tyremakers in India have lined up an aggressive capacity expansion plan to meet the growing demand from automobile manufactur­ers and replacemen­t market after recovering from demonetisa­tion and the GST (goods and services tax).

Tyremakers are expected to invest ~136.4 billion in the next 7-10 years. A substantia­l portion of this expansion, the first in the past five to seven years, would be used for creating greenfield facilities.

RPG Group’s Ceat Tyres plans to increase its existing output by 35-40 per cent. Besides ramping up its capacity for bus and truck radials at its Halol plant in Gujarat, it plans to set up a greenfield unit for passenger car radials, said Anant Goenka, managing director at Ceat. Ceat has earmarked an investment of ~12-15 billion. “The demand from replacemen­t segment as well as the original equipment manufactur­ers (OEMs) has been quite strong,” Goenka said.

Fuelled by record twowheeler­s and truck volumes, automobile sales in India have been expanding at a brisk pace month-on-month. The industry produced 29 million vehicles, (including all segments) a growth rate of 14.78 per cent over the same period last year, according to Society of Indian Automobile Manufactur­ers (Siam).

A strong order book from the export and domestic markets, government’s stance on anti-dumping regulation­s and a relatively stable natural rubber price have boded well for the tyremakers. But a soaring crude oil price is set to mount pressure on profitabil­ity from the current quarter itself for most companies. Crude oil-based raw materials such as carbon black, account for close to 45 per cent costs for tyre firms. Crude oil prices have risen from an average $62 to $75, Goenka said.

But with robust demand from across all segments, most tyremakers have been passing on the incrementa­l costs through price hikes, analysts said. “We expect raw material costs to increase by 3-4 per cent over the next two quarters due to recent increase in crude prices, which will require price increase of 2-2.5 per cent,” Nishit Jalan and Hitesh Goel, analysts at Kotak Institutio­nal Equities, said in a report.

Ceat’s rivals MRF and Apollo Tyres, too, have been stepping on the gas with expansion with their facilities. In its first big expansion outside Tamil Nadu, MRF, a leader in bus, truck radial and two-wheeler tyres, has earmarked an investment of ~45 billion in Gujarat over the next decade. It will be firm’s ninth unit. Varghese Koshy, executive vice-president, MRF, could not be reached for a comment.

In January, Apollo Tyres said it was pumping in ~18 billion in a new factory in Chittoor, Andhra Pradesh. With a capacity to make 5.5 million tyres a year, the unit will feed domestic and export markets and will go on stream in the next two years.

The investment in AP was part of a ~45-billion capex outlined for 2017-18 and 201819. “The expansion in Chennai, is almost through,” said Apollo Tyres spokespers­on. The Chennai unit can now make 120,00 radials.

Rajiv Budhraja, director general at Automotive Tyre Manufactur­ers Associatio­n, said the expansion was overdue on two counts. First, the 5-6-year-old facilities had become saturated. Second, since the last couple of years, the demand from auto firms was weak and the demand in the replacemen­t market was affected due to the GST and note ban, he said.

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