Business Standard

COMPANY TO EXIT LOSS-MAKING ENTITIES IN A YEAR

Shuts two-wheeler biz in US; open to selling Ssangyong

- SHALLY SETH MOHILE

Mahindra & Mahindra will be exiting its lossmaking internatio­nal subsidiari­es and entities over the next 12 months, following stringent capital allocation norms, even as it seeks to lend a sharper focus on its core auto and farm equipment businesses, the firm’s management said. SHALLY SETH MOHILE reports

Mahindra & Mahindra will exit loss-making internatio­nal subsidiari­es and entities over the next 12 months and follow stringent capital allocation norms as it seeks to lend a sharper focus on its core auto and farm equipment businesses, the company’s management said after reporting a pre-tax loss of ~1,761 crore for the March quarter.

The move is prompted by the steep impairment loss reported by the consolidat­ed entity as Ssangyong Motor (SYMC), its Korean subsidiary, and Genzee, its two-wheeler entity in the US, turned in losses. It marks a change in tack by the Anand Mahindra-led firm, which over the past decade has spread itself thin through a raft of acquisitio­ns in India and abroad in the auto and farm equipment sector.

In a post-earnings web-conference with investors, Anand Mahindra, chairman of the tractor-to-technology conglomera­te, said the firm is re-calibratin­g its globalisat­ion strategy and looking to sharpen focus on getting returns on investment­s quickly. “We are going to be far more calibrated in our globalisat­ion. I want to make it very clear that we are not a company that would suddenly become like a turtle and go inwards… That is the knee-jerk reaction the whole world would see. We are going to calibrate our growth opportunit­ies globally and focus on getting returns as quickly as possible and exit much faster if we find we are not on track. We will also follow a principle of a much more stringent oversight.”

Defending the capital allocation plan, Mahindra said the firm had never “starved the core business (auto and farm equipment) of capital and there was never any diversion of the capital requiremen­t from the core businesses”. Analysts are confounded by the sheer size of the conglomera­te and the challenges it poses on the capital allocation and execution fronts. The group comprises 179 subsidiari­es, 30 joint ventures, and 28 associates.

They said the write-off on SYMC does assuage the investor concern but they were unsure how much more the group could consolidat­e and re-calibrate under the current circumstan­ces. “The impairment charge taken on SYMC is a bold step and shows the group is ready to sell it off. But there is only so much it can do,” said Mahantesh Sabarad, head-retail research, SBICAPS.

Mitul Shah, vice-president research, Reliance Securities, said: “M&M’S valuation has been taking a hit due to a lower return ratio and its capital allocation policy. The capital allocation strategy with clear quantifiab­le targets on return on equity gives confidence to investors and will lead to a continuati­on in its re-rating.”

M&M’S strategy of re-crafting and revisiting its subsidiari­es comes amid the Covid19 pandemic and anaemic economic growth in India and other markets. Mahindra assured investors the path it embarked upon is not a shortterm one and the company plans to remain steadfast on it even after the tide turns.

As part of its re-calibrated globalisat­ion plan, M&M announced the winding up of its US two-wheeler business. The company is in talks with investors for SYMC and is open to ceding control if it gets a buyer, Pawan Goenka, managing director, M&M.

“OUR TWO-WHEELER BUSINESS IN THE US HAS BEEN STRUGGLING. WE ARE SHUTTING IT DOWN AND WILL LIQUIDATE THE STOCK”

PAWAN GOENKA, Managing director, M&M

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India