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This Article is From Oct 29, 2021

Chip Crisis to Prevent Double-Digit Growth at Top India Carmaker

Maruti Suzuki India Ltd. won't post double-digit sales growth this year as a semiconductor chip shortage and surge in raw material costs disrupt production at India's largest carmaker.

“We didn't expect to lose so much production in the second quarter due to chips or that the commodity prices would shoot up,” said Maruti Suzuki Chairman R.C. Bhargava in an earnings call Wednesday. “What we had expected in terms of volumes and profitability has changed substantially.”

Maruti was impacted more than other automakers, Bhargava said, as the carmaker sources a particular electronic component from a single German vendor whose factory in Malaysia was the hardest hit from the Covid flareup. Maruti is expecting its negotiations with the Haryana government for a new manufacturing plant to come to “some finality” in a few weeks as there's been a “considerable advance” in talks.

The carmaker will launch an electric vehicle possibly before 2025 and when it sees the potential for monthly sales of above 10,000 units, Bhargava said. “Volumes in hundreds or thousands leave us a bit unexcited,” he said.

Maruti's net income slipped 65% to 4.75 billion rupees ($63.3 million) in the three months ended Sept. 30, the unit of Japan's Suzuki Motor Corp. said in a statement. That fell short of the average analyst estimate of 6.9 billion rupees, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. Revenue climbed 9.6% to 205.4 billion rupees, beating estimates. 

Key Insights

  • Despite revenue being buoyed by a strong demand rebound in the broader Indian economy as pandemic-related movement curbs are eased, the carmaker flagged concerns around surging raw material prices. Total costs jumped 16%.
    • “This quarter was also marked by an unprecedented increase in the prices of commodities like steel, aluminum and precious metals,” the company said in the statement.
    • Maruti is increasing car prices to partially pass on these inflationary pressures. It's also making “maximum efforts” to absorb rising input costs, it said.
  • Shortage of electronic components decreased capacity utilization, according to Maruti, which said about 116,000 vehicles were not produced due to a dearth in electronic parts.

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