Mint Hyderabad

Can Maruti Suzuki avoid speed bumps?

- Abhishek Mukherjee feedback@livemint.com

If someone told you a couple of years ago that Mahindra’s SUV Scorpio would one day outsell Maruti Suzuki’s entry-level hatchback Alto, you may have questioned their sanity. But the unthinkabl­e actually happened in FY24, when 141,462 Scorpios (both the N and classic models) were sold, compared to 111,955 Altos, revealing a tectonic shift in the Indian automotive market.

Does this mean Maruti Suzuki has handed over its crown to the competitio­n? Far from it. India’s largest carmaker ended FY24 with its highest-ever unit sales and net profit, both for the fourth-quarter and the financial year. It also led India’s passenger-vehicle exports in FY24 for the third year on the trot.

But as car enthusiast­s know only too well, a gleaming machine can sometimes be hiding several niggles under the hood. The company’s Q4 numbers were a case in point. Its earnings before interest, taxes, depreciati­on, and amortisati­on (Ebitda) grew 40% year-on-year to ₹4,685 crore but missed analysts’ estimates. More importantl­y, the Ebitda margin of 12.3% trailed consensus estimates of 12.8%. The margin miss was led by a one-off 60-basis-points impact related to CSR and material costs, coupled with reduced CNG vehicle production owing to a shortage of components.

The lower CNG mix (26.9% in Q4 from 30.8% in

Q3) and higher share of entry-level vehicles also weighed on the company’s average selling price (ASP), which dropped 1.5% sequential­ly to ₹6,54,672.

CNG forms a key component of Maruti’s operationa­l flywheel. CNG vehicles have higher selling prices and margins than Maruti’s mainstay, mini and compact vehicles (which account for 52.4% of its total sales). The company commands a 70% share of the CNG vehicle market and around 20% of its overall sales come from CNG models.

While analysts are confident that the lower CNG mix will reverse this quarter, the more crucial factor to the company is the raging trend in SUVs, which shows no signs of cooling. From less than 30% in FY18, SUVs now account for the biggest portion of the domestic car market at 50.4%. Robust demand for SUVs made India the world’s third-largest passenger-vehicle market in FY24, with sales

MARUTI’S Q4FY24 Ebitda grew 40% y-o-y to ₹4,685 crore but missed analysts’ estimates

THE lower CNG mix and higher share of entry-level vehicles weighed on the co’s average selling price

Maruti overtook Mahindra to become the country’s largest SUV maker in the first half of FY24. Its current SUV market share stands at about 22%, and the company is targeting 50% in the next few years.

Hyundai, Tata Motors, M&M and other carmakers are aggressive­ly expanding their SUV lineups. At the premium end, high-tech EVs from global brands are luring buyers.

Maruti is no stranger to the effects of increased competitio­n, having seen its market share erode to 41% from a peak of 51% in FY19. On the operationa­l front, commodity prices are likely to increase marginally in FY25, particular­ly steel (10-11% of Maruti’s net sales), aluminium (3%) and copper (1%).

Small-car sales face headwinds The company is also facing headwinds in its bread-and-butter mass-market segment. First-time buyers stood at 40-43% in FY24. The company management said it was not seeing any recovery in this segment, and thus the FY25 and FY26 outlook for small cars seems stressed.

And after a 24% run-up so far in 2024, analysts are advising investors to temper their near-term expectatio­ns from Maruti Suzuki shares. The number of ‘buy’ calls on the stock has dropped from 38 at the start of the year to 34, according to Bloomberg data.

That said, it would be foolhardy to write off a company with the pedigree of Maruti Suzuki.

“We feel the concerns over the car industry’s growth slowdown are short-term in nature as interest rates peak while the feel-good factor continues from strong returns generated by different asset classes,” analysts at InCred Equities said in a note.

“Maruti Suzuki is better placed in the short term to ride this slowdown by debottlene­cking CNG vehicle supply chain and meeting the long waiting period. The new EV launch in early 2025F should ease technology transition risk,” they added.

RISING competitiv­e intensity in SUVs and lacklustre demand for hatchbacks are the headwinds

crossing 4 million for the first time.

Maruti Suzuki, which ushered in the small-car revolution in India, was initially caught unawares by the SUV craze. As late as 2022 its share in the SUV market was a paltry 9.5%, even trailing South Korea’s Kia, which had entered the market only in 2019.

However, thanks to a slew of launches and its global partnershi­p with Toyota,

Mark to Market writers do not have positions in the companies they have discussed here

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