Business Standard

Toyota eyes biggest gains in a decade

- SHALLY SETH MOHILE More on www-business-standard.com

Toyota Kirloskar Motor (TKM) is aiming to clock the highest profit in a decade for this financial year (2017-18), riding high on operationa­l efficiency and pricing premium on models such as Innova Crysta and Fortuner.

This has been a difficult year for the company because of the move to the goods and services tax (GST) regime, with increasing pressure on its under-utilised capacities.

In the first 10 months of FY18, it sold 103,891 units, 3.53 per cent less than its sales in the correspond­ing period of FY17, according to the data from the Society of Indian Automobile Manufactur­ers (Siam).

But, Vikram S Kirloskar, chairman, TKM, said he was hopeful of good performanc­e thanks to operationa­l efficienci­es the firm had adopted swiftly over the past two-three years. “The company had taken on a challenge of improving its overall operationa­l efficiency. The efforts seem to be paying off now,” said Kirloskar, adding this was led mostly by efforts to reduce its carbon footprint. Toyota is not listed in India and doesn’t share its financials. In FY17, it reported a net profit of ~5.51 billion, against ~5.05 billion in FY16. After being in the red for a few years, it reported a profit of ~5.29 billion in FY15, according to filings with the Registrar of Companies. In the absence of volume-spinning models, the combined average utilisatio­n rate for TKM is half its installed capacity. It can produce up to 310,000 units per annum.

Unlike other global carmakers — Ford, Volkswagen and Nissan — that deploy excess capacities for exports, Toyota’s facility in India concentrat­es on the domestic market. Exports comprise only 10 per cent of overall volumes.

Kirloskar said efforts were on to sustain green measures. “We have stopped using fresh water for the past 10 months,” he added.

Its energy consumptio­n also largely depends on renewables, said a top official of the company. Other efficienci­es include optimal utilisatio­n of steel yield (70 per cent), which TKM claims is the highest in the world, and improving truck load efficiency from 64 per cent to 70 per cent. All these measures have helped it lower the annual break-even volume from 11,000 five years ago to 8,000 units now.

“The profits in 2017-18 will be the highest in 10 years,” said Shekar Viswanatha­n, vice-chairman, TKM.

He attributed the expected financials to a pricing premium and a relatively stable rupee, which has kept the company import costs in check.

“We have a lot of pricing power in the market. It helps us to take more risks and push products in the market aggressive­ly,” he said.

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