Business Standard

TVS Motor upbeat on coming year

Aiming at 10% operating profit margin by end of next year

- T E NARASIMHAN

Though aiming to improve its profitabil­ity and narrow the margin gap with larger peers, TVS Motor has had a 147-basis point year-on-year fall in its operating profit margin to 5.7 per cent in the March quarter (Q4).

However, this performanc­e might not be representa­tive. Though the two-wheeler major reported a net profit of ~127 crore in Q4, as against ~137 crore a year before, this was after a one-time provision of ~57 crore for discounts towards products sold which met the BS-III emission standard, banned for sale from April 1.

Analysts at HDFC Securities said, “Adjusted for the discounts, the Ebitda (earnings before interest, taxes, depreciati­on and amortisati­on) margin was higher at 7.7 per cent (up 54 bps, year-on-year) owing to the benefit of operating leverage.” Adjusted profit after tax was ~140 crore (up four per cent year-on-year, seven per cent sequential­ly), they add. Total income rose to ~3,139 crore, from ~3,091 crore in the year-ago period.

The slower revenue growth in Q4 was restricted by external factors. TVS reported 19 per cent growth in volumes during the first half of 2016-17 but around four per cent in the second half, while the industry reported negative growth. K N Radhakrish­nan, managing director, attributed this to demonetisa­tion. The year’s growth was 11 per cent.

“Though delayed by two-three quarters due to demonetisa­tion, we will achieve the 10 per cent Ebitda margin target by 2018-19,” said Radhakrish­nan.

S G Murali, the finance head, said that increasing of turnover, while bringing down cost, leveraging the complete portfolio and bringing down total overhead as a percentage of sales were key strategies to achieve the target. “Overall volumes will go up and the proportion of fixed cost will come down significan­tly. So, that will help to improve our Ebitda margin and profitabil­ity,” he said.

TVS is in the process of creating mega brands and upon the success of this, the marketing cost as a percentage of sales would automatica­lly come down, Murali added.

The company expects the industry to grow by six to eight per cent in 2017-18 and Radhakrish­nan says their growth would be faster. TVS is aiming to increase its market share to 15.5-16 per cent in 2017-18 from the current 14.3 per cent, and 18 per cent by the end of 2018-19, backed by a new motorcycle and scooter launch, beside upgrades of existing vehicles. The company also plans to invest around ~500 crore in 2017-18 on capacity and product developmen­t.

On increasing commodity prices, Murali said they'd raised their product prices during January-April by ~500-1,500 to offset this. “We will protect our margin by increasing prices in the coming months if needed,” he said.

Improving of margins is important, with the TVS share's run-up in the past year, as also the fact that it is quoting at a huge premium to peers, at over 30 times the price to earnings ratio, based on FY18 estimates.

On export, TVS expects this to be subdued, due to currency depreciati­on in key markets. Around half its export goes to Africa, which has taken a hit due to currency issues after the oil crisis.

It has started exporting twowheeler­s to BMW, with which it has a strategic tie-up, whereby the companies will develop products jointly and manufactur­e at TVS' factory at Hosur.

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