Business Standard

Tyre companies expect margin pressure ahead TYRE PRODUCTION

MRF says raw material cost escalation, especially of natural rubber, will have impact

- T E NARASIMHAN

Tyre majors expect more market competitio­n, with an expected hardening of input prices, coupled with excess capacity in the industry.

The Automotive Tyre Manufactur­ers Associatio­n (Atma) says there has been about ~42,000 crore of investment over the past four years in additional capacity creation. This has come at a time when import of tyres from China has surged.

K M Mammen, chairman of tyre major MRF, recently said the industry had gone through a turbulent year, with economic volatility compounded by demonetisa­tion and the change to higher vehicle emission norms.

The company believes raw material cost escalation, especially of natural rubber, is here to stay for a while, impacting operationa­l margins. However, it is optimistic on demand, with a good monsoon and investment­s in the core and infrastruc­ture segments.

“However, the days of higher industry profit margins are most likely behind us,” it said.

Satish Sharma, chairman of Atma, says natural rubber prices are looking up. Raw material is about 60 per cent of revenues and rose about 25 per cent between December and April.

Companies tried passing this on to customers by way of price increase but these have not been fully absorbed. Cheaper Chinese import continues to affect the domestic industry in the truck and bus radial segment. Industry capacity utilisatio­n, he said, was 65-70 per cent.

 ??  ?? Cheaper Chinese import continues to affect the domestic industry in the truck and bus radial segment
Cheaper Chinese import continues to affect the domestic industry in the truck and bus radial segment

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