Business Standard

Honda plays pricing game with the new City

- SHALLY SETH MOHILE & PAVAN LALL

By keeping the price of its latest City almost on a par with the older generation car, Honda Cars India (HCIL) is playing a competitiv­e pricing game for a market that is super-sensitive to hikes in the current economic scenario.

On Wednesday, HCIL launched the fifth generation model of the City. The flagship sedan’s prices range from ~10.89 lakh to ~13.14 lakh for the petrol version and ~12.39 lakh to ~14.64 lakh for the diesel one. The new City’s automatic petrol version is only around ~40,000 more than the older version.

With it, Honda aims to fill the wide gap in entry-level sedans that include Maruti Ciaz and Hyundai Verna as well as upper-level versions such as the likes of Honda Civic, Skoda Octavia and Toyota Corolla Altis.

“Since the outbreak of coronaviru­s (Covid -19), customer preference has been changing. The demand in tier-2 and tier-3 cities has been growing. Increasing sales in these regions will be our priority,”

Gaku Nakanishi, president and chief executive, Honda Cars India, told Business Standard. He said that the product pipeline and capital expenditur­e from the pre-covid phase stays the same. “Our electrific­ation strategy will start with the hybrid model and it remains on track for next year. We believe the hybrid is the most efficient bridge to EVS (electric vehicles).”

Identifyin­g the customer needs correctly is one of the biggest challenges for us at the moment. Nakanishi points out that a trend like work from home could change preference­s. Office goers may no longer want to live in crowded cities and instead prefer smaller towns. Therefore, demand will shift. Also, an aversion to public transport will lead to more people owning personal vehicles.

“We are trying to understand all these changes,” he added. The new City is bigger and more spacious than its predecesso­r and comes in automatic transmissi­on for the petrol variants. It also offers lane assist technology that first came in the higher-priced Honda Civic.

Interestin­gly, Honda will also sell the older fourth generation City side by side with the new version, thus segmenting the model into two broad categories.

Puneet Gupta, associate director at IHS Markit, a sales forecastin­g and a market research firm, points out that HCIL needs to bring in more aggression and needs a turnaround strategy. “In a competitiv­e market like India, car manufactur­ers need to be very agile in terms of new product launches.

They need to align their new models and features and technology to consumer expectatio­ns and that too at a competitiv­e price,’’ said Gupta.

Kaushik Madhavan, vicepresid­ent of Mobility at Frost & Sullivan, said that historical­ly, there has been a clear distinctio­n between the sedans, for example, between the Honda City and the Hyundai Elantra or the Toyota Corolla and the Honda Accord with regard to features and technical specificat­ions. “Now you see features also being offered in lower segment sedans, and the new City for one will see a lot of value addition,” he said.

The City has been a best-seller for Honda in India for over two decades with annual sales of 20,000 units, only surpassed by the Amaze, another compact sedan.

HCIL senior vice-president and director Rajesh Goel said, “The City was a product conceived and designed with the Indian customer in mind and has tried to bring in contempora­ry (current) technology to every successive generation.”

 ??  ?? Honda Cars India President & CEO Gaku Nakanishi ( left) at the launch of the 5th generation of the City. The sedan’s prices range from ~10.89 lakh to ~13.14 lakh for the petrol version and ~12.39 lakh to ~14.64 lakh for the diesel one
Honda Cars India President & CEO Gaku Nakanishi ( left) at the launch of the 5th generation of the City. The sedan’s prices range from ~10.89 lakh to ~13.14 lakh for the petrol version and ~12.39 lakh to ~14.64 lakh for the diesel one

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India