Global Times - Weekend

Ford goes local in India drive

Cost-conscious buyers pose challenge to global vehicle giants

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Ford Motor Co made a profit in India for the first time in a decade in the past fiscal year, signaling that a strategy conceived two years ago by the US car manufactur­er for one of the world’s most competitiv­e vehicle markets is starting to show some success.

Under an initiative called the Emerging Market Operating Model (EMOM), Ford cut manufactur­ing costs by 40 percent and is developing more vehicles locally as it moves away from its “One Ford” plan, which restricted its ability to be cost-competitiv­e and agile in a fast-growing market, Ford executives and industry sources told Reuters.

“EMOM is the North Star for the turnaround at Ford in India,” Anurag Mehrotra, managing director of Ford’s India unit, said in an interview.

Ford still accounts for less than 3 percent of total passenger vehicle sales in India, where analysts said it’s tough for auto manufactur­ers to make money.

“They are still a long way away until they can call India a successful market,” said Kaushik Madhavan, vice president of mobility at consultanc­y Frost & Sullivan.

A key factor for Ford India will be how it leverages its partnershi­p with local automaker Mahindra & Mahindra, he said.

As part of EMOM, Ford is deepening ties with Mahindra to build passenger vehicles in India, which could also involve sales in other emerging markets.

Over the past two decades, Ford has invested $2 billion in India, which has become a major growth area for car manufactur­ers. Car sales rose 8 percent to 3.3 million last year and India is set to become the world’s third-largest market by 2020 with sales of more than 5 million cars, according to consultanc­y IHS Markit.

But global car companies have mostly struggled to woo India’s costconsci­ous buyers and are now under pressure from investors to focus on profitable markets and technologi­es like electric and autonomous vehicles.

The success of India’s top carmaker Maruti Suzuki, a unit of Suzuki Motor Corp which sells one in every two cars in the country has been built on having a wide range of products, low prices, a vast dealership network and an autonomous local team that can quickly react to market changes.

Its nearest competitor is Hyundai Motor Co with a 17 percent market share, which has had better success than some of its US-based and European rivals like General Motors, Fiat Chrysler and Volkswagen AG.

Ford is at a considerab­le distance from the leaders in the market, but it sold more than 90,000 vehicles in the last fiscal year and exported twice that number. Two years ago, Ford’s annual sales in India were less than 80,000 and it exported about 110,000 vehicles, industry data showed.

More autonomy

Western carmakers have not come close to Japan’s Suzuki or South Korea’s Hyundai because they have failed to tweak their global products and strategy to suit a frugal market like India, and their local teams often lack autonomy, industry sources said.

Ford’s new strategy gives greater autonomy to the local management team, and it will contribute to a global restructur­ing plan to save $11 billion over the next few years by cutting costs, forming partnershi­ps and investing in new technologi­es.

The strategy already seems to be giving Ford a cautious beginning to better sales in India.

Ford India made a profit of 5.26 billion rupees ($72 million) in the fiscal year that ended on March 31, compared with a loss of 5.21 billion rupees a year earlier, according to a regulatory filing.

In contrast, General Motors decided to cut its losses and stopped selling cars in India last year while Volkswagen took a backseat, handing over strategy for the country to its sister company Skoda.

Ford’s top Asia and India executives came up with EMOM during a week-long strategy meeting in Shanghai in late 2016 and picked India as a testing ground. The strategy has not formally been taken to other markets.

“We realized we need to have a sustainabl­e and profitable business in India,” said Mehrotra, adding that Ford looked at its brand, products, cost and scale to improve efficiency.

For instance, in its Figo hatchback that sells for as little as 600,000 rupees, Ford used imported floormats that cost more than locally sourced ones. During a review under EMOM it learned that buyers don’t really want imported mats, he said.

It reduced logistics costs 20 percent by switching to rail freight instead of road transport, and it increased the use of locally sourced components in its cars to more than 85 percent from about 60 to 70 percent.

Cutting costs

Ford officials also said the company has developed a low-cost dealership format which is smaller in size and has fewer cars on display. It costs half of the 50 to 60 million rupees Ford usually spends on things such as showroom inventory, spare parts and a sales force when setting up a dealership.

In the past 18 months, it has opened more than 100 such dealership­s, especially in smaller towns and cities to further its reach, Mehrotra said.

Previously, it would have cost Ford about three times the amount that a domestic carmaker would spend on a product upgrade because Ford India needs to pay a fee, or royalty, to the parent, said a source aware of the changes.

Under EMOM, Ford India will develop more products in-house, making it more responsive to market changes and reducing the royalty fee, a move that will boost profits, the source said.

“One Ford doesn’t work anymore,” said the source, alluding to a global product strategy devised by former CEO Alan Mulally. “It will be there in spirit, but it will not be implemente­d the same way as it was two years ago.”

Ford last year formed an alliance with sport utility vehicle and truck producer Mahindra to co-develop vehicles, including electric cars, share power trains and work on new technologi­es.

The carmaker made a similar strategy shift in China, giving up on its “One Ford” model and working with local, low-cost carmakers to come up with more competitiv­e mainstream cars and boost sales.

Ford and Mahindra are co-developing two platforms. The first car is likely be launched in 2020, two sources said, adding Ford is using Mahindra as a benchmark to bring down supplier costs in the region.

Mahindra is also the only commercial electric vehicle manufactur­er in India, and Ford will benefit from getting access to its low-cost technology to build electric cars.

Mahindra is already working on an electric prototype of Ford’s compact sedan called Aspire, the sources said.

 ?? Photo: VCG ?? Nick Eterovic, Manager Interior Design Strategy Ford Asia Pacific, during the launch the new Mustang car at Jawaharlal Nehru Auditorium on January 28, 2016 in New Delhi, India
Photo: VCG Nick Eterovic, Manager Interior Design Strategy Ford Asia Pacific, during the launch the new Mustang car at Jawaharlal Nehru Auditorium on January 28, 2016 in New Delhi, India

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