Business Standard

Tamo dips 6.5% as virus spooks investors

Shares fell below ~100 for first time since September 2009

- SHALLY SETH MOHILE

Tata Motors shares fell below ~100 for the first time since September 4, 2009, on Wednesday as the impact of coronaviru­s ( COVID-19) on Jaguar Land Rover Automotive spooked investors.

The fears were exacerbate­d by the steady rise in COVID-19 cases across Europe, one of JLR’S biggest markets. After touching a low of ~98.9, the firm’s shares closed at ~99 on the BSE, down 6.43 per cent on Wednesday. So far in calendar year 2020, Tata Motors has underperfo­rmed the market by falling 50 per cent, compared to a 15 per cent decline in the Sensex.

As Italy — the hardest hit in Europe — entered the second day of a lockdown, Germany and the UK have warned of the impact on consumptio­n and overall economy as COVID-19 spreads unabated, the BBC reported. There are currently 383 cases of coronaviru­s in the UK (up from 373 yesterday) — and this number is growing.

The Tata Group flagship has slipped 21 per cent in the past three trading sessions after the company lowered its financial year 2019-20 (FY20) Ebit (earnings before interest and tax) margin guidance for JLR by 1 per cent (from around 3 per cent) because of a steep decline in China retail (-85 per cent year-on-year) and supplychai­n disruption.

The outbreak couldn’t have come at a worse time for Tata Motors’ UK subsidiary, which

was recovering from Brexitrela­ted uncertaint­ies and the collapse in China sales.

“This is not surprising in the context of a market-wide demand collapse in China in February because of COVID-19. The company notes that production in China seems to be gradually resuming and 80 per cent of dealer stores are now open, albeit with lower staff/muted footfall,” according to analysts at JP Morgan.

“A demand recovery in China could likely take time and downside risks persist because of the potential spread to other markets, slow normalisat­ion in supply chain, and UK trade negotiatio­ns (Brexit),” the brokerage firm said.

“The company is seeing visibility on production up to midMarch and it expects limited volume loss in (fourth quarter) given the ongoing Bharat Stage (BS)-IV destocking. Delays in normalisat­ion on the supplychai­n front, plus a fire at its key supplier in Pune (Varroc) could mean BS-VI restocking will be impacted,” it added.

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