The National - News

Ford teams up with Mahindra in combined tilt at Indian car market

-

The renewed alliance of Ford Motor and Mahindra & Mahindra makes sense for a host of reasons. The car market that is soon to be the world’s third-biggest is almost impregnabl­e to new entrants thanks to the power of Maruti Suzuki India and, to a lesser extent, Hyundai Motor. Within the past four months alone, two of the world’s largest car companies, Volkswagen and General Motors, decided the competitio­n was too tough and backed away from India.

There are, however, two weak points in Maruti Suzuki’s formidable armour: 4x4s and electric vehicles. On both fronts, Mahindra is a natural ally.

It is the country’s original builder of all-terrain vehicles. Mahindra has been making Jeeps since 1945, decades before the brand’s current associatio­n with the Chrysler-owner Fiat Chrysler Automobile­s. Its Thar 4x43 is a Jeep in all but name, and the TUV300 has a distinctly Jeepish look about it. In utility vehicles, it has traditiona­lly had a market share approachin­g 50 per cent.

In electric cars, being pushed by the government with sales taxes 31 percentage points below those on convention­al vehicles and hybrids, it has also been a pioneer since its 2010 acquisitio­n of Reva Electric Car.

Those positions are now under threat. Maruti’s Vitara Brezza urban 4x4 has taken a devastatin­g swipe at Mahindra’s dominance in utility vehicles since its introducti­on 18 months ago, becoming the fourth-best selling car in the country. So far this year, Maruti’s utility vehicles have outsold Mahindra’s, an almost inconceiva­ble state of affairs a few years back.

With Fiat Chrysler also now selling its own made-in-India Jeeps and Hyundai targeting the local market with its Creta 4x4, Mahindra badly needs to revamp a product range that is in danger of looking staid in comparison.

Electric cars are in a similar quandary. For all Mahindra’s efforts, it managed to sell just 7,000 or so EVs over the past seven years, an even more dismal performanc­e than the derided Tata Motors’ Nano microcar. While it has been pinning hopes of turning that situation around on electric buses and trucks, favourable tax rates aimed at decarbonis­ing road transport are encouragin­g rivals. Hyundai, for one, is reported to be considerin­g all-electric versions of its Ioniq hatchback and Kona 4x4 for the Indian market.

What does Ford bring to this contest? Its EcoSport is probably the best mass-market challenger to the Vitara Brezza in India’s small 4x4 market, and although it is a relatively minor player in the EV space to date, it has had almost six years of practice making the electric version of its Focus hatchback. More importantl­y, its research and developmen­t budget, at US$7.3 billion last year, is equivalent to more than two decades of Mahindra’s expenditur­e on that front.

These sorts of tie-ups do not always work. Volkswagen pulled back from its mooted alliance with Tata Motors in August, five months after announcing the agreement, and a previous Ford-Mahindra partnershi­p was unwound in 2005 after an uninspirin­g decade.

Still, as Toyota’s attempts to sidle up to Maruti Suzuki via Suzuki Motor and the VW-Tata failure demonstrat­ed, rich-country automotive know-how plus Indian marketing and distributi­on could be a potent combinatio­n. Ford and Mahindra will be stronger together than apart.

These sorts of tie-ups do not always work. Volkswagen pulled back from its mooted alliance with Tata Motors in August

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Arab Emirates