Hindustan Times (Amritsar)

Maruti defers plan to sell 5 million cars a year in India

The automaker defers its ambitious plan to sell 5 mn cars a year in India by 2030

- Malyaban Ghosh malyaban.g@livemint.com

Suzuki Motor Corp. has deferred its ambitious plan to sell at least

5 million cars a year in India by 2030 in an admission that the domestic automotive market will see more pain before a full recovery from the coronaviru­s-induced turmoil. Suzuki’s largest unit, Maruti Suzuki, has already trimmed capital expenditur­e plans for this fiscal, underscori­ng a squeeze on household incomes and job losses in an economy that contracted the most in four decades in the June quarter.

NEW DELHI: Suzuki Motor Corp. has deferred its ambitious plan to sell at least 5 million cars a year in India by 2030 in a grim admission that the domestic automotive market will see more pain before a full recovery from the coronaviru­s-induced turmoil.

Suzuki’s largest unit, Maruti Suzuki India Ltd, has already trimmed capital expenditur­e plans for this fiscal, underscori­ng a squeeze on household incomes and job losses in an economy that contracted the most in four decades in the June quarter.

“Earlier, it was establishe­d that the Indian market may grow to a scale of 10 million units by 2030. We believe these are achievable numbers. The only thing is that it may need a few more years. Compared to now, it is a huge increase,” said Toshihiro Suzuki, president and chief operating officer, Suzuki Motor Corp., said at the 60th annual convention of the Automotive Component Manufactur­ers Associatio­n of India (Acma) on Saturday. Enthused by the potential of the Indian market, Osamu Suzuki, chairman, Suzuki Motor, announced in 2018 that the company expects annual sales in India to grow to 10 million vehicles by 2030, with Suzuki controllin­g half of the market. This led the automaker to invest in a new plant in Gujarat with a capacity of 750,000 vehicles a year. A second plant with a similar capacity was also planned in Gujarat, to grow Maruti Suzuki’s total capacity in India to 5 million vehicles a year by the end of the decade.

Mint reported in July that Maruti Suzuki has suspended building the second plant in Gujarat, which was earlier slated to open by 2021-22. The carmaker has also cut its capex plan for FY21 to ₹2,700 crore from ₹3,248 crore last year.

Lower sales and profits at Maruti Suzuki are a cause for worry at its Japanese parent as it contribute­s more than half of Suzuki’s sales and profits.

Analysts attributed Maruti Suzuki’s revision of sales targets to diminishin­g hopes of an immediate V-shaped recovery in automobile demand in India.

“Regulatory environmen­t became quite volatile in 2017, and the affordabil­ity of customers took a hit due to the new norms and economic slowdown. Going forward, the number of first-time customers will reduce since car prices have gone up while incomes have remained stagnant,” said Puneet Gupta, associate director, IHS Markit. The data and analytics firm has also lowered its annual sales projection for the Indian light vehicle market to 8 million by 2034, given the prevailing economic conditions.

 ?? SONU MEHTA/HT PHOTO ??
SONU MEHTA/HT PHOTO
 ?? PTI ?? The carmaker has also cut its capex plan for FY21 to ₹2,700 crore from ₹3,248 crore last year.
PTI The carmaker has also cut its capex plan for FY21 to ₹2,700 crore from ₹3,248 crore last year.
 ??  ?? READ: Scan the QR code for Union minister Piyush Goyal’s views on the auto industry
READ: Scan the QR code for Union minister Piyush Goyal’s views on the auto industry

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