Hindustan Times (Patiala)

Maruti Suzuki puts troubles firmly behind it as both sales, shares soar

- Amrit Raj n amrit.r@livemint.com

NEW DELHI: Maruti Suzuki India Ltd cannot seem to put a foot wrong. Shares of India’s biggest carmaker rose 0.78% on Monday to ₹7,839.45 on BSE, another record high, on a day when the benchmark Sensex ended 0.2% lower to 32,273.67 points.

The stock has risen more than sevenfold from a 52-week low of ₹1,047 it hit in the immediate aftermath of labour unrest at its Manesar plant in July 2012. One executive died and 100 others, including Japanese, were injured and equipment burned in a riot at the factory that led to production losses.

Maruti and its parent Suzuki Motor Corp. have put that dark chapter firmly behind it, judging from parameters other than the surge in its share price. Maruti sales rose 9.8% to a record of more than 1.58 million units in the past fiscal, which it ended with a market share of 48%, the highest since 2010.

Suzuki Motor, which owns 56% of Maruti’s stock, saw its global sales climb to an all-time high of 741,000 in April-June (largely pushed by a 14% increase in India sales).

In a vindicatio­n of Suzuki’s strategy of investing in a new Gujarat factory on its own and keeping Maruti’s cash reserve intact, Maruti is sitting on an impressive cash pile of about ₹24,000 crore.

Maruti will source the cars from its parent.

This cash reserve has become a war chest for Maruti to take on any new competitio­n (read Kia Motors Corp., Daihatsu Motor Co., etc) beside expanding its own business.

The idea is to sell 3 million units in India in the long run, according to chairman R.C. Bhargava, a developmen­t that will raise Maruti sales to more than ₹1 lakh crore from ₹79,546.20 crore in 2016-17 on sales of 1.58 million units. Since becoming the managing director and chief executive of Maruti in 2013, Kenichi Ayukawa has revamped all verticals— manufactur­ing, human resource, finance and marketing and sales infrastruc­ture.

Now, the company is chasing the innovative idea of buying real estate across country, which will then be leased out to its dealers to build showrooms, workshops, etc.

“Why is Suzuki bringing in free money? In a sense, it will subsidise sales and service of dealers without incurring the cost. This money is zero cost money to the company and shareholde­rs. We will own the land and lease it to dealers who will build the build- ing. It will take care of their investment­s and that way they will be tied up to me and they cannot run away,” Bhargava said.

He shared an interestin­g bit of trivia that Suzuki chairman Osamu Suzuki’s initial plan was to own the dealership­s and run the network.

“We told him while you may be doing it in Japan, it won’t be successful in India. Ayukawa agreed with me. Then I suggested this model, which meets all of his objectives and still does not disturb the entreprene­urship as I reduce his cost but in addition to that I get the benefit of individual ownership and entreprene­urship, which as a company I won’t get,” he explained.

“If this works the way we have thought of it, it will give us enormous stability going forward,” Bhargava added.

The future of automobile­s indeed hangs in the balance globally due to the advent of new technologi­es and concepts such as electric vehicles, shared mobility, autonomous driving. Amid all this, Suzuki has placed all its bets on India, which is expected to be a market with sales of 9.4 million units by 2026 if GDP grows 5.8% a year.

A tie-up with Toyota will help it with electric and hybrid technologi­es. Suzuki, along with Maruti’s research and developmen­t centre, will build future products for the world.

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