How two-wheeler makers are riding out the slowdown


Car sales are down 5 per cent and truck volumes have plummeted 27 per cent so far this fiscal, but two-wheelers sales are revving up amid the economic gloom.

Scooters, motorcycles and mopeds saw a volume growth of 5.7 per cent in April-November 2013. This is well above the 2.9 per cent recorded for the 12 months ended March 2013. So what’s driving this trend?

Scooters have, for one, clocked an impressive 19 per cent sales volume growth in the April-November period. Apart from crowded traffic conditions and poor public transport (which usually drive two-wheeler sales), scooters have benefited from their better luggage space, the increasing number of women drivers and their unisex appeal, which allows any member of the family to use them, say industry experts.

Gearless scooters, which make up most of the market here, have been much in demand with brands such as Pleasure, Maestro (Hero), Activa, Dio, Aviator (Honda), Ray (Yamaha) and the newly introduced Jupiter (TVS) figuring among the bestsellers.

In fact, slowdown or boom, scooters have witnessed good demand over the past few years, so much so that their share in total two-wheeler sales has moved up from about 15 per cent in 2007-08 to about 24 per cent now.

Strong rural demand

Entry-level motorcycles (75 to 110 cc) have been zipping off the showroom shelves too, especially in the past three months.

Here, rural demand resulting from a good monsoon has come to the aid of motorcycle sales.

Rural demand constitutes an important proportion of revenues for motorcycle makers, with companies such as Hero Moto Corp deriving almost half their volumes from villages. Hero says its rural sales are growing 9-10 per cent, compared to about 5 per cent in urban areas.

Hero’s HF dawn, HF Deluxe, Splendor and Passion, and newer bikes such as the Dream Yuga (Honda), Pantero and Centuro (Mahindra and Mahindra) have been the most popular in this segment.

The high interest rates of the past two years have also led to consumers seeking out less expensive executive bikes. Consumers have actually stepped down from premium bikes.

Launches targeted at this segment have helped two-wheeler makers reap handsome gains. The success of the Ignitor from Hero, Phoenix from TVS and Discover 125T from Bajaj Auto are proof.

Cash purchases

Then, industry experts say that two-wheeler buyers, unlike car buyers, usually fund much of their purchase with cash and don’t rely too much on loans. Therefore they aren’t interest rate-sensitive.

That’s a recent trend. “About eight years ago, the financed component of two-wheelers used to be 40-50 per cent. Today, it is more around 25 per cent,” says Anoop Mathur, President, Two-wheeler sector, Mahindra and Mahindra.

Speeding ahead


The final round of the Indian National Motorcycle Racing Championship culminates at the Irungattukottai race track, Sriperumbudur

Racing improves the breed,” so said Soichiro Honda, the Japanese engineer and industrialist who established Honda Motor in 1948. Since those times, Honda has played an important role in motorsports, believing it to be the springboard for technological advancement. This year has been particularly good for the company in the field of motorsports, with Repsol Honda—the official factory team of Repsol and the Honda Racing Corporation—winning the MotoGP World Championship. In fact, Marc Marquez of the Repsol Honda team became the youngest to win the title.

In India, the company’s arm, Honda Motorcycle & Scooter India (HMSI), has been taking part in the Indian National Motorcycle Racing Championship (INMRC) and also conducting the Honda One Make race since 2008.

Now, INMRC is a national championship for two-wheeler racing and is approved by the Federation of Motor Sports Clubs of India. The technical sponsors for the championship are HMSI, India Yamaha Motor, and TVS Motor. The INMRC 2013 consisted of five rounds that took place at the three fully-functional race tracks India has—Kari Motor Speedway (Coimbatore), Irungattukottai Race Track (Sriperumbudur), and Buddh International Circuit (Greater Noida). From December 13-15, the final round of INMRC took place at Irungattukottai.

Among the major races that took place were the YZF R15 novice & open categories; the CBR 150cc open category and CBF Stunner novice category; and the Apache RTR 180 novice & open categories. Coming to the famous names, it was K Rajni who won the Honda MMSC One Make Championship race with the CBR 250R bike, while Dinesh Kumar finished in second place with A Prabhu in third. In fact, the CBR 250R category was under a Team Championship and Honda leased 16 CBR 250R performance bikes to teams registered at FMSCI.

Prabhu Nagaraj, general manager, customer service, HMSI, said, “For six years, Honda has been successfully promoting motorsports in India. We are delighted to see the overwhelming response to Honda One Make Race 2013 by both participants and enthusiasts. With the CBR 250R under Team Championship, Honda will continue to provide global exposure and first-hand racing experience to biking enthusiasts.”

On its website, TVS Motor claims that racing can do wonders for the company as it has been proved that racing helps in both product development and building a long-term image of the company. HMSI claims that, globally, technologies from the track are, in various ways, incorporated in everyday vehicles. They are tested, refined and proven under the trying conditions in the races, and then adapted in the vehicles, so that even two-wheelers like Activa and Dio can benefit from such technologies. Racing, indeed, has a better future in India, just that we need more participants in events such as the INMRC.

Honda in pact with Gramin bank in Rajasthan


Honda Motorcycle & Scooter India has entered into a retail finance tie-up with Baroda Rajasthan Kshetriya Gramin Bank. As part of the deal, the two wheeler firm has announced slew of measures that include daily reducing interest, low EMI and a 6-month instalment scheme for farmers, among others to woo buyers, who can avail of loan up to 75 per cent of on-road price of Honda 2-wheelers. It now looks at tie-ups with co-operative and Gramin banks to attract buyers in semi-urban and rural areas.

Hero’s stock revs up on earnings growth prospects

Hero Motocorp Ltd is back on firm ground. The company has travelled quite a distance since December 2010, when challenges mounted as it severed ties with its Japanese joint venture partner Honda Motor Co. Ltd. The optimism is mirrored on the bourses. The stock has risen by 37.4% since April, clocking higher returns compared with its strong competitor Bajaj Auto Ltd, which has risen only 7.6%, while the benchmark Sensex index has moved up by 10.75%.

A combination of several factors has rekindled investor confidence. Most important, the company has gained momentum in the fastest growing segment of two-wheelers—scooters. Industry estimates point out that the scooter segment grew at a 26% compounded annual growth rate (CAGR) over fiscal years 2009-13, as opposed to 15% for motorcycles. A report by Espirito Santo Investment Bank Research forecasts the trend to continue with scooter sales growing at a faster 13.6% CAGR compared with 7.7% for motorcycles until fiscal year 2020. Hero is expanding scooter capacity by 25% even as its market share rose by 2 percentage points to 19%, amid competition by Honda. Bajaj Auto is not present in this segment.

Meanwhile, a key concern about competition from Honda Motorcycle and Scooter India Pvt. Ltd (HMSI) is on the ebb. Strong rural demand augurs well for Hero, what with nearly half its sales accruing from these markets. On the whole, it has regained lost market share (post-Honda). In fact, HMSI’s foray into the domestic motorcycle market led to a greater erosion of Bajaj Auto’s pie than that of Hero.

Analyst estimates says that HMSI’s gain of around 3.7 percentage points market share between April to November has seen a greater loss to Bajaj Auto than Hero, which still retains its leadership with a 51% share. One may recall that three years ago, there was a 25% erosion in its stock price as investors were worried whether Hero could sustain growth amidst strong competition.

That said, one must note that the forthcoming years would see only single-digit growth in the motorcycle segment, more so in domestic markets. Of course, Bajaj Auto could well offset the pain in domestic markets through growth in exports, an area where Hero is just making efforts. In fact, Bajaj’s strength in registering the highest profitability among peers comes from strong exports, where realizations are better, and from three-wheelers, which bring in higher operating margins.

The recent bump up in Hero’s stock price is partially due to a huge jump in earnings per share estimated in fiscal year 2015. Royalty payable to Honda, following the partnership break-up, ends in June 2014. A report by Prabhudas Lilladher Pvt. Ltd says that a Rs.450 crore saving on royalty, along with some margin expansion coming from cost savings, will translate into a 20% compounded growth rate between fiscal years 2013 and 2015.

Not surprisingly, the stock is rated among the top auto picks by most brokerage firms although the recent rally has priced in most of the positives. At Rs.2,120, the stock, which rose 3.1% on Wednesday, trades at 15 times one-year estimated earnings per share.

Hero weathers Honda's rise better than others

The board meeting held on a wintry December afternoon in New Delhi by Hero Honda was anything but regular. One of world's most fruitful manufacturing joint ventures spanning nearly three decades - Hero Honda - was due to end.

The Munjals, Hero's promoters, were set to acquire all of Honda's stake in Hero Honda Motors, go independent in operating the company and end its reliance on the Japanese company for technology and branding.

Shareholders and analysts who tracked the company feared Hero MotoCorp, which started by making bicycles, would struggle to survive without Honda, a brand which it helped make a household name after introducing it in India.

Albeit, Honda's stellar growth, punctuated with a flurry of launches backed by solid engineering, has helped it grab share from rivals. However, three years after the Hero-Honda split, a look at market share movements of the last three financial years and eight months of this year (please see table), reveals that Hero's loss in share is the least when compared to its peers like Bajaj Auto and TVS Motors in the motorcycle segment.

Honda which sells the Shine, Twister, Unicorn, has doubled its share to little more than 15 per cent by the end of November.

Hero has seen an erosion of 6 per cent in market share to 51.39 per cent by the end of November. That is less than the steep erosions seen by Bajaj and TVS of 22 per cent and 18 per cent, respectively.

Despite an aggressive entry of Honda in the less-than-110cc, which is the bread and butter segment of Hero generating 82 per cent of its total volumes, Hero has held on to its 50 per cent market share. Every second motorcycle sold is one by Hero.

Anil Dua, senior vice-president - sales, marketing & customer care, Hero MotoCorp, says, "We worked out the post-transition period. We rebranded the company. We built our own R&D and made new investments. Honda has grown rapidly in the scooter segment but we have entered that recently and seen good traction in. We have defended our motorcycle market quite well."

The rebranding was completed in mid-2011 when the 'Honda' name was dropped from all products and dealershipsand a changed font marked the Hero brand. It did not have a major negative impact on the company, as feared earlier.

What has helped Hero hold ground, say analysts, is its unparalleled reach and distribution. Hero's market penetration is more than double the size of Honda and generates about half its sales from the rural areas.

Honda has three models in the economy segment with prices starting from Rs 46,191 for the Dream Neo that is pitted against the Hero Splendor at Rs 44,814. Splendor remains the largest-selling two-wheeler brand in India.

While Hero's focus on the Splendor and the Passion, two of the largest-selling bikes, has helped it arrest a drastic slippage in market share, the company has lost traction in the 125-250cc segment. Despite several launches, Hero has not been able to replicate the entry-level's success in the premium segment.

Hero has more number of models in this segment than competition but has a share of just 10.6 per cent, as per the Society of Indian Automobile Manufacturers (SIAM). Four models, the Acheiver, Hunk, Xtreme and the Impulse in the 150cc category and the Karizma and Karizma ZMR make up Hero's premium segment.

Bajaj, the second-largest two-wheeler producer in the country saw its market share fall to 18 per cent in the April-November period this year as against 20 per cent recorded in the same period last year in the entry level segment. Nearly 55 per cent of Bajaj's sales come from the entry level and it has recently launched three models under the Discover brand.

The Chennai-based TVS attempted to gain lost ground with the launch of Jive, a motorcycle without a clutch, but met with a dull response. The company was forced to phase the bike out in less than three years after its launch.

"The motorcycle segment is a fiercely contested one. Despite the slowdown, the segment logged growth of 3.3 per cent this year at 7 million unit sales. Hero has done well to protect its share and Honda has done even better to gain share", says a Mumbai-based analyst.

For Vespa, the mantra is slow and steady

Italian two-wheeler maker Piaggio & C. SpA’s results for the first three quarters of this calendar year had a brief, but significant, reference to its iconic scooter in India. “Vespa run rate falls short of our expectations; we are stepping up efforts to increase sales,” the company said in its November presentation.

Ravi Chopra, Chairman and Managing Director of Piaggio’s Indian operations, would rather look at the bigger picture. “We are moving in the right direction and sales will step up. It is important to be patient,” he told Business Line over the phone from Pune.

Chopra reiterated that for a premium scooter like the Vespa, volumes are not top priority. “On the other hand, we are creating a segment which we can own. The brand is getting accepted and people are talking about it.” Clearly, the Vespa is not in the same mass product category as the Activa, Pleasure, Jupiter or Ray. With a higher price tag, its sales would be confined to a specific category of buyers keen on showing off this scooter. As a result, the numbers will be slow in coming which is precisely what Piaggio had anticipated. Earlier this year, the company had slashed Vespa prices by nearly Rs 6,000, which meant the ex-showroom price would begin at around Rs 60,000. According to Piaggio, this was a result of better “operational productivity in the plant and efficiency through systems”. Chopra had then said this price slash would not impact the Vespa’s premium positioning in the market.

The 125cc scooter was launched in April 2012, followed by the high-end VX version in July this year. Sales of the Vespa duo are reportedly averaging 5,000 units a month. The capacity at the Baramati plant near Pune is 1.5 lakh units a year and it was widely believed that it would be doubled by the end of this year. But then, market conditions have been difficult for automakers for a while now. It is this depressed sentiment, coupled with the Vespa’s higher price tag, that puts the sales numbers in perspective. Yet Chopra is not deterred. “People are noticing its distinctiveness and positioning strategy,” he said. Piaggio is also keen on spreading the network to other parts of India in course of time.

Buyer base

For the moment, men take up over two-thirds of the buyer base for the Vespa, but this could change.

Women prefer options like the TVS Scooty and the Hero Pleasure as well as the Honda Activa and the Yamaha Ray, which meet their style quotient as well as budgets. The Vespa is still in a premium league and its owners want to be associated with a scooter that is distinctly European and more upmarket.

Even before its India launch, Piaggio was clear about the positioning of the Vespa as a ‘lifestyle, iconic, timeless and ageless product'. The idea was to sustain the brand image through an appropriate positioning and communication strategy focusing on its heritage and unique values.

In an earlier interview to Business Line , Chopra had said: “Ours is not a scooter; it’s a Vespa and a way of life. The idea is to awaken a sleeping potential consumer who does not have such a product.”

Continental Shift!

 The thing with some cultures is that they never die. They may fade out for a while, and the followers may dwindle down to insignificant numbers, but they come back when someone makes a concerted effort to revive them. The Café Racing culture is one of them.

When it started off in the post-war era, it saw young English men and women clad in leather jackets, helmets with goggles over them and boots hunched over quick and fast motorcycles, racing each other. These young Brits, who called themselves Rockers, and rode machines called Café Racers, did exactly what the name suggested – raced from one café to another.

It gave the world two things – a new subculture and a new genre of motorcycling. Motorcycles from Triumph and Norton with low slung handlebars, long fuel tanks and big motors with quick acceleration became the to-have machines. Their amalgamations, the famed Tritons, also became very popular. Royal Enfield too had a 250cc machine called the Continental GT, which was also used by the manufacturer at racing events.

From that namesake, the new Royal Enfield Continental GT has arisen. Sure, it has a lot of history riding on its shoulders, but it also has two challenges to face. One, to make a motorcycle for the enthusiast with a touch of new-age practicality, and two, to introduce this product as not just a motorcycle, but as a lifestyle, to a country like India which has never seen much of leather-clad ton-up Rockers or the Café Racers.

Design and styling

The new Royal Enfield Continental GT has got everything in terms of styling to be called a proper Café Racer. And the designers have added their bits of practicality as well. Right out at the front is the round headlamp with a 55W lamp, sitting in front of low-slung clip-on handlebars. These handlebars are adjustable and can be fitted with optional bar-end rear-view mirrors, which not just add to the styling but are also way better than the stock mirrors (more on that in a bit).

The long tank is well sculpted to lean over as you shoot off the block, and has recesses to tuck your knees in. The footpegs and gear and brake levers too have been pushed back to give a proper sporty stance. And to accommodate that ride posture, the Continental GT has been fitted with a narrow, sculpted seat with a bum-rest. The seat actually looks very authentic, and the curved bit of plastic at the end adds a very sporty touch to the motorcycle. The Continental GT is mainly intended for solo riding, and if you need a pillion seat, you’ll have to shell out more money.

There’s a lot of chrome and brushed metal thrown around as well. The exhaust pipe, headlamp and the lining on the twin-pod analogue-digital console are bits that shine in the sunlight. The frame is a twin downtube-cradle unit, which is painted all black. The cropped fenders at the front are a nice touch, and come in shiny grey. The aluminium spoke wheels don’t just add the retro touch to the bike but also shed weight.

But the best part about the overall scheme of design is the paint-job. The gleaming red paint on the motorcycle is very well finished, and the overall styling makes the Continental GT a guaranteed head-turner. Moreover, it just feels good to ride around the city on a machine that is so well crafted.

Engine and specs

Royal Enfield has always received mixed responses for the Unit Construction Engine (UCE) block. Some fans like it and some don’t. It’s as simple as that. The UCE block has had its quirks, and is infamous for sending serious vibrations up to the rider on high speeds. Mostly, it is notoriously heavy, and many riders feel that the EFI system isn’t as refined as it should be.

Nevertheless, the Continental GT uses an air-cooled, fuel-injected 535cc motor which can churn out a maximum power of 29.1 bhp (21.4 kW) @ 5,100 rpm and manages a peak torque of 44 Nm which kicks in at a decent 4,000 rpm. The ECU has been remapped and for better performance, a Keihin Electronic Fuel Injector delivers smooth fuelling based on throttle input and other parameters.

This motor is mated to a 5-speed gearbox, which has good ratios for both city and a bit of cruising. But the gearbox has a few problems, mainly with slotting between 2{+n}{+d} and 3{+r}{+d} gears, and there’s the usual fumble with finding the neutral.

As for the exhaust note, yes, you can still hear underlying notes of the old sounds of the Bullet, but what the Continental GT sounds like can be best describes as a throaty, angry grunt. There is none of the good old thumping and thudding that Royal Enfields have always been associated with.

And though Royal Enfield’s claim about the Continental GT being their lightest and most powerful motorcycle in production is true by sheer numbers, this Café Racer is still a bit heavy. The Continental GT weighs 184 kilos at the kerb, with a near full tank of fuel and oil.

Ride and performance

But the thing with this motorcycle is that by the time you go over specs and admire the craftsmanship, you’re just a tad bit impatient to get on the bike and take it for a spin. And when you do, you won’t be disappointed, much. For one, the ride has a lot of drama to it.

When you lean over the tank, push your bottom to the seat’s end and gun the throttle, a grin comes automatically to your face. Because that’s when you leave everything behind in a blur. Quite literally. Because one, the motorcycle is quick, and two, the handlebar vibrations make the stock mirror absolutely useless. But, there is no transfer of vibes to the footpegs or the tail.

And it’s very nimble too. You could be going really fast and yet you’ll find enough footing around corners. The Pirelli Sport Demon tires and very centralised weight distribution make sure of that. But there’s one problem – once in a while downshifting can cause a slight drift. There’s massive stopping power with 300mm Brembo discs in the front and 240mm at the rear.

The Paioli Twin gas charged shock absorbers at the rear come with adjustable preload and have 80mm travel, and combined with the front 41mm telescopes, the bumps are taken care of. But it’s not the bumps that bother so much as the vibration from the machine itself. Although the Continental GT has a lighter flywheel and stronger valves and springs, the engine is still not as refined as you’d expect it to be. While riding in the city, where you’re already bothered by the traffic, these vibrations add to the agony. But they tend to disappear once you start cruising along. But don’t expect to do more than 120 kmph and not be thoroughly shaken. The vibration starts getting harsh once the needle is past the 4,000 rpm mark.

As you might have guessed, the ride posture is a bent-forward, foot-back type, so it’s not very ideal for very long rides. The seat is narrow but comfortable nonetheless. But heat dissipation is a matter of concern. Apart from giving your feet a heat massage, the bend at the exhaust pipe may also burn your shoes (or feet if you’re wearing open footwear).

Bottomline

The new Royal Enfield Continental GT, even with all of its quirks, is a fun motorcycle. It’s pure joy to ride, that’s what it is. It has its own set of problems, as with every Royal Enfield motorcycle. The engine needs more work on refinement, and the gearbox isn’t the best in town. But then again, if you’re a Royal Enfield loyalist, you’ll learn to live with these quirks.

But keeping the riding part aside, what Royal Enfield has done is introduce a lifestyle product in the form of a motorcycle. It offers some really authentic merchandise, such as Rocker jackets, boots, helmets and a lot of other accessories, which are of premium quality. Sure, at first you might look a bit out of place, as this side of motorcycling hasn’t caught up in India. But you’ll feel good nonetheless, as you soak up an iconic bit of motorcycling history. There are other motorcycles which offer more power, stability and finesse, but none that offer what the Continental GT does. Heritage. The Royal Enfield Continental GT is available for Rs 2.05 lakh (on-road, Delhi). 

The Hero's return.

Those who felt it was a downhill slide for Hero post the split with Honda considered themselves vindicated by the results of Most Trusted Brands 2012, where the brand was No 6 in its segment. While still the market leader by a wide margin, it's been trying times for Hero MotoCorp. Its market share is reportedly down to 42.85% from a near 49% in 2009. Erstwhile partner and current competitor Honda appears to have gained at Hero's expense with a reported share of near 19%.

 Earlier this year, however, Hero MotoCorp CEO Pawan Munjal stated his ambition to gain a 50% market share for the brand. It should come as good news to Hero then that its performance in 2013 marks the largest climb up a category table in the Most Trusted Brands survey this year, from 6 to No 1.

Anil Dua, senior VP - marketing and sales at Hero MotoCorp, explains: "Making tall claims is not in our nature. We believe in under-promising and over-delivering." So where competitive brands talk about wild mileage numbers, Hero offers a humble 'Thoda Extra,' thereby indicating it isn't an arrogant brand. Where most brands in the category would offer a 2-3 year warranty, Hero has recently announced a 5 year warranty on its entire portfolio. Given that a two-wheeler is a significant purchase, this lends a biker some peace of mind, Dua feels. On an ongoing basis, Hero tries to boost its CRM programme by being closer to its customer through a wide network and ensuring spare parts are available across multiple outlets. A sound CRM strategy encourages an ongoing relationship and creates loyal customers in the long run. "Many loyalty studies place Hero MotoCorp at a significantly high position," Dua mentions.

Hero has also improved its ground level response system by marrying the online and offline component. Dedicated online CRM teams with two or three people are a part of the coordination cell that connects aggrieved customers to offline support.

Post the split; the brand has released a couple of campaigns like Hum Mein Hai Hero and Vroom Vroom (celebrating 50 million bikes sold) that have helped seed a positive image. Says Aniruddha Banerjee, director of Brand Factor, "I thought Hero would do a great job if they didn't lose ground after the split." Hero has built its imagery over strong motivating campaigns and given enough products to substantiate its quality claims, he believes. Sukanya Kripalu, an independent marketing consultant, adds that the brand's saliency has helped it a great deal but that alone doesn't do the trick when it comes to trust. It's a combination of a fine delivery system, a great product line and a robust feedback mechanism. And Hero manages to check all the boxes.

With Hero's new bikes hitting the road, the brand has proved that it can be trusted for both its roots and its technology. And in doing so, hammered home the old Bollywood cliché: the Hero ought to win in the end. 

DSK Hyosung to make India export base for 125-150cc bikes

 Pune-based DSK Motowheels, the assembler and marketer of Hyosung superbikes in India, eyes 50 per cent growth in sales this fiscal.

The company, which has a technical agreement with Korean S&T Motors, the makers of Hyosung bikes, witnessed more than 40 per cent growth in sales during April-November period this fiscal to 1,100 units. It sold 775 units during the same period last year.

“We have sold nearly 1,100 units so far this year. We expect to see close to 50 per cent growth to about 1,800 units this fiscal against more than 1,200 in 2012-13,” Shivapada Ray, Chief Operating Officer, DSK Motowheels, told reporters here on Monday after launching a DSK Hyosung superbike showroom.

According to Ray, DSK Motowheels expects 60 per cent growth in turnover to Rs 80 crore this fiscal.

He added that the company would invest up to Rs 500 crore at a new facility over the next couple of years.

DSK Motowheels recently announced its plan to set up a new unit at Karad near Pune and to roll out 125cc mass market bikes from there. It now has an assembling unit at Wai in Maharashtra.

According to Ray, the Rs 400-Rs 500 crore investment at the proposed Karad facility is aimed to “tap the growing market in India for stylised 125-150cc bike segment”.

New models

The company’s plans are also afoot to bring in new models by February. “We hope to launch two new models by February. One of them will be a 250cc version of the GV650 Aquila Pro,” Ray said. DSK Motowheels now assembles five superbike models in the country, including a 250cc one. 

Steel firms struggle as auto makers turn to local parts

Mumbai: Indian steel companies are seeing high demand from auto makers owing to their indigenization drive and expect it to accelerate with economic growth seen to pick up pace after the general election next year.
Demand for automotive steel such as inner components and outer body parts comprises just 7-8 million tonnes (mt) a year out of India’s total production of about 78 mt, but is growing at 10-20% a year even as overall demand growth lags economic growth.

Little wonder then that top steel companies are increasing their manufacturing capacity to entrench themselves in this segment and several have roped in foreign partners for the high-technology products needed.

“Everybody has a programme to double the capacity,” said Nittin Johari, whole-time director, finance, Bhushan Steel Ltd, which has been making auto-grade steel for the past 15 years. “This sector has been growing for the last so many years… The growth will accelerate after one year.”

Johari said the outlook for 2014 is that the incoming government will spur economic growth and interest rates may drop, which could help recover demand for automobiles, and thus for auto steel as well.

Annual car sales in India, the second fastest expanding auto market after China, plunged to the lowest in a decade in April and is expected to remain depressed for the full fiscal year ending 31 March.

Car sales fell 8% to 142,849 units in November compared to a year ago, according to Society of Indian Automobile Manufacturers (Siam). Yet, demand for steel from auto companies rose fast as they choose to buy steel locally rather than import it to cut costs.

“Steel companies are aggressively targeting import substitution as it has become expensive to import steel owing to the weaker rupee,” said Goutam Chakraborty, an analyst at Emkay Global Financial Services Ltd. The rupee has depreciated by 12% against the US dollar this year.

“Many foreign auto companies are comfortable buying from steel companies from their own countries in the local market—so that is another factor driving localization,” Chakraborty added.

South Korean steel maker Posco sells steel imported from Korea but processed in India. Japan’s Nippon Steel and Sumitomo Metal Corp. has a joint venture with Tata Steel Ltd for manufacturing 600,000 tonnes of automotive cold-rolled sheets. Another Japanese company JFE Steel Corp. has a joint venture with JSW Steel Ltd to manufacture auto-grade steel.

Double targets

Leading steel companies are not just doubling capacities, they are also coming up with more products.
“Tata Steel sells around 1mt of flat products to the automotive industry and we expect it to double in next five years,” said a spokesperson from Tata Steel. “The company currently has a leading market share position and would like to maintain this position by enriching its product mix (skin or exposed auto body panels and high-tensile products).”

Tata Steel has invested in new technologies—for example, continuous annealing process line—to meet the growing needs of customers who were dependant on imports thus far.

Bhushan Steel sees its auto steel capacity rising to 4-4.5 mt in five-seven years from 2.2 mt now, Johari said.
Steel Authority of India Ltd (SAIL) supplies about 0.5 mt of steel to the auto sector and this is expected to double after modernization, its spokesperson said.

To get closer to their auto clients, companies are setting up processing plants in the auto plant hubs, top steel companies said.

“We are in the process of establishing more service centres near various auto hubs,” SAIL’s spokesperson said.

JSW Steel is setting up four processing centres to meet demand for flat steel across India, a company official said.

Local sourcing

As part of a larger strategy to pare costs, car market leader Maruti Suzuki India Ltd plans to reduce imports to $1.6 billion in fiscal 2015 from $2.5 billion in fiscal 2012, Mint reported in September 2012.
The key components targeted for localization are diesel engines and transmission components. Content sourced from local vendors makes up as much as 96% of Maruti Suzuki cars. But at least 30% of the content is imported by the vendors, who are compensated by Maruti for the adverse impact of any currency fluctuations.

Other firms, too, have set aggressive localization targets to pare costs.

Hero MotoCorp Ltd, India’s largest two-wheeler brand, has also launched a cost-saving drive, which, among other things, encourages vendors to source raw materials such as high-grade steel locally, according to a Pune-based supplier to the company, who did not want to be named.

To stave off the risk associated with currency fluctuation, car makers such as the local arm of Toyota Motor Corp., Honda Motor Co., and Nissan Motor Co. are also working on increased local sourcing.

Mahindra Two Wheelers to expand capacity, open to tie-ups: Goenka

Mahindra Two Wheelers, part of the $16.2-billion Mahindra Group, plans to expand output, in the backdrop of rising demand for its Centuro model and with six to eight vehicle launches over the next two years.

The company also says it is open for new tie-ups for branding and technology.

In October, the Group said it would shift management of the loss- making two-wheeler segment to its automotive and tractor businesses, which comes under Pawan Goenka, executive director and president of its 'automotive & farm equipment sector'.

Marginal growth
Goenka, here recently to participate in an automobile meet, said the two-wheeler industry showed marginal growth, unlike the fall in the four-wheeler segment. "Since we are an entry- level player (in the former segment) right now, the industry size is not important; our growth is. Our last offering has done extremely well and we have a waiting list," he said.

The company is selling about 24,000 vehicles a month and would expand to 45,000 a month, a good beginning, he added. Manufacturing capacity is up to 1,200 vehicles a day from the 500-600 when it started. By end-March 2014, it expects to increase to 1,700-1,800 vehicles a day.

November saw 127 per cent growth to 24,245 units as compared to 10,676 units a year before.
On coming vehicle launches, he said they were looking mainly at products for the volume segment. "We are going to launch a slew of new products in the next two years and hopefully the Centuro will give the momentum we need and make the company a significant two-wheeler player in India," said Goenka. In six weeks of the motorcycle launch, the company received a little over 30,000 bookings for the Centuro.

The plan is to have products in both the motorcycle and scooter categories; offerings will be balanced. A new scooter launch is scheduled for 2014-15. In motorcycles, the focus will be on the mass segment, of 100-125cc.

"If Mahindra is going to be in any business vertical, we will be a significant player," said Goenka, who refused to disclose their target for market share.

On whether they were open on joining hands or for acquisitions to boost the two-wheeler segment, he said: "Anything is open to us. We don't have a clearly defined boundary that we will not have a tie-up or will have. We always look at opportunities to tie-up for brand and technology; if we get the right opportunities, we will tie up. At any given point of time, we are in dialogue for all our businesses."

Segment Shredders: Scooter of the Year 2013

TVS Jupiter

When it comes to scooters, Chennai-based bike maker TVS really knows its stuff. Its latest offering, the Jupiter, is a great follow-up to the Wego launched a few years ago. While its 110cc CVT-i engine is not what you might call revolutionary, combined with smart features such as a throttle-based econometer offers the best in-class mileage of 62kmpl. The Jupiter also sports a number of segment-first features such as a pass switch for the headlight and gas-charged rear suspension. Combined with other conveniences such as low-fuel indicator, a whopping 375mm of leg space on the foot board, external fuel filler and multiple retractable bag hooks, the Jupiter really makes a strong case for itself.

Rajini claims Group C title.

The fifth and final round of the FMSCI Indian National two-wheeler racing championship got underway on Saturday at the MMRT with India’s leading riders in action. A total of 13 races were held and 10 riders from Nepal also took part in the event.

K. Rajini won a close battle with R. Deepak to clinch the 165cc Group C category. Both riders started well but Rajini managed to pull ahead in the final lap.

In the Group D 165cc novice class, Akash Dingare comfortably won ahead of championship leader Meka Vidhuraj. In the Group D 130cc Novice category, C. Akash won ahead of K.Y. Ahamed and S. Kannan.

Lal Rindika continued his excellent run with a comfortable victory in the TVS Apache RTR180 novice class. Lal finished first in the YZF R15 novice class, too.

Mathana Kumar wins

Mathana Kumar won the YZF R15 open category title and closed in on championship leader Shyam Shankar. Mathana also won a tight race ahead of Arvind Ganesh in the Apache RTR 180 open class. Amit Richard posted his first win of the year, taking the title in the Honda CBF Stunner novice class.

Sarath Kumar beat rival Rajini with ease to win the Honda MMSC one-make championship with CBR 250cc bikes. Akash Dingare inched a step closer to the title with a win over Lal in the Yamaha One Make championship.

Sumit Lucas Toppo took the title with a closely-fought win in the CBR 150cc open class in the Honda MMSC One Make championship.

The penultimate race of the day saw Sumit Lucas winning yet again in the CBR 150cc open category in the Honda MMSC One Make race.

In the final race of the day, Ahamed took the honours in the Group D 130cc novice category. 

Bajaj Auto rushes to export quadricycle

Bike maker’s domestic launch faces delay on stiff opposition from industry rivals

The Bajaj Auto, country’s second-largest bike maker by volume, is rushing to put together export plans for its next generation RE60 or the Quadricycle, much ahead of its now delayed domestic launch which met with stiff opposition from the auto industry. Even as the fate of the domestic launch remains uncertain, the company is initiating a phased commercial launch in international markets by early 2014. It has begun testing out the Quadricycle in a few export destinations.

“There has been a change in plans. The Quadricycle will be launched in the export markets first. As we put together the export roadmap for the Quadricycle, it continues to be tested in a few markets,” informed a source at Bajaj Auto.

The commercial launch for the Quadricycle in Asia and the West Asia is scheduled to take place in February 2014 followed by a debut in the South American market in April 2014, informed the source. The company is testing out the Quadricycle in Sri Lanka and Egypt. It is readying the vehicle for testing purposes in Peru, South America, by February 2014, which is a left-hand driven market.

When asked for a comment, top company executives refused to give away details. “Most of these topics are premature and some of them are ‘confidential information’ at this stage,” said S Ravikumar, senior vice-president (business development & assurance), Bajaj Auto.

The company did not give away the volume numbers for the Quadricycle. Though Bajaj has a strong presence in international markets with exports accounting to over 40% of total sales, Africa accounts for the largest share by volume at 47%. It is relatively new in South America where it has already made inroads in Colombia, Peru and Ecuador and aims to enter Brazil in 2015. The key export destinations for the Quadricycle though will be Europe, Latin America and Asia.

RE60 was unveiled in January 2012 at the auto expo in New Delhi. Though off-late the low-speed Quadricycle, which was scheduled to be launched in Gujarat and Maharashtra in October 2013, now waits for the final approvals from the Centre to commercially introduce the

Mahindra Two Wheelers gets patents

Mahindra Two Wheelers, part of the $16.2-billion Mahindra Group, has received international patents for four of its technologies developed in India -- fuel gauge system, automatic ignition cut-off, distance to empty fuel system and engine immobilizer system.

The engine immobilizer system is an anti-theft solution, the distance to empty system along with the fuel gauge system helps the rider estimate the distance the vehicle will cover using the fuel remaining in the tank when it hits reserve and the automatic ignition cut-off intelligently saves fuel during vehicle idling conditions and the engine can be restarted with a blip of the throttle, according to a statement from the company.

Centuro, which was launched by Mahindra Two Wheelers in July this year, comes with some of these features. The bike features the fuel gauge system, the distance to empty system and the engine immobilizer system. The product was designed entirely in-house at the company's R&D centre in Pune, the statement said.

"The incorporation of these technologies into our range of two-wheelers differentiate us from our competitors and is creating significant consumer demand," said Viren Popli, executive vice-president, Mahindra Two Wheelers.

"At our R&D facility in Pune, we continue to focus on technology driven innovation for our two-wheelers. The internationally patented technologies, developed in-house, are a testimony to this effort," said P S Ashok, senior vice-president and head of R&D, Mahindra Two Wheelers.

TVS Motor Bags Award

TVS Motor Company has been awarded the Best VLSI/Embedded Design in the fourth edition of the Silicon India – Mentors Graphics Leadership Awards for the Embedded/VLSI Industry 2013. These awards recognize the contribution of various companies/individuals in driving the semiconductor industry. The best in the VLSI/embedded software industry were honored at a function held in Bangalore.

Vinay Harne, President – NPI, TVS Motor Company, who received the award said, “This award celebrates those who have transformed stumbling blocks into stepping stones driven by their passion, determination and undying spirit to achieve highest customer satisfaction. A large team of engineers at TVS Motor Company work on design and applications of the embedded systems in our products. This award showcases our technological capabilities with respect to embedded electronic design. It is an acknowledgement of our commitment to deliver high-value engineering solutions.”

The winners of these prestigious awards were chosen by a panel of judges consisting of eminent business leaders.

TVS Motor Company was chosen as the Best VLSI / Embedded design company – in the automotive category.

Honda Activa overtakes Hero's Passion in sales

Honda sold 885,428 Activa units in April to October, up 23%, while Hero sold 832,222 Passion units, a 3.4% increase; Splendor stays No.1

New Delhi: Sales of Honda Motorcycle and Scooter India Pvt. Ltd’s Activa scooters have surpassed Hero MotoCorp Ltd’s Passion motorcycle to become the second-largest selling two-wheeler model in India, as more women choose to buy scooters.

During the April-October period, sales of Honda’s Activa grew 23% to 885,428 units, while sales of Hero’s Passion, grew 3.4% to 832,222 units, according to data provided by Siam.

Hero’s Splendor, however, remained the top-selling model, maintaining a wide lead over the Activa. Hero sold 1.28 million Splendors during the April-October period, even though sales fell 7.22% from a year earlier.

“Scooters are on a roll. It has been the only automotive segment to buck the economic downturn to grow by an impressive 18% (4% for motorcycles),” said Pramod Kumar, senior vice-president, equity research, automobiles and auto ancillaries, at brokerage IDFC Securities Ltd. “Scooters are finding favour with buyers owing to a unisex appeal, increasing female independence, ease of drivability and improved fuel efficiency.” Scooters accounted for 24% of two-wheelers sales in the eight months ended 31 October from 16% in 2009-10. Kumar expects scooters to account for 28% of two-wheeler sales by 2016-17 in India.

Mahantesh Sabarad, deputy head (research), SBICAP Securities Ltd, blamed rising inflation for the poor performance of Passion. “Passion is a mid-segment motorcycle and appeals to semi-urban and rural customers, who look to upgrade from Splendor. But these customers have been hurt in this downturn most due to inflation and hence, have not upgraded their bikes,” Sabarad said. “Activa, on the other hand, is getting customers from different arenas and from both side of the gender.” A Hero MotoCorp spokesperson said his company had good sales this year “thanks to a record festive season”.

“Three of the top-selling five motorcycle brands in the country are Hero brands—Splendor, Passion and HF Deluxe. Indeed, Splendor is the largest-selling two-wheeler brand in the world. What is more—even in the scooter space, our brands—Maestro and Pleasure—are now among the top three brands in the country. We continue to further strengthen our brands,” the spokesperson said.‎‎Scooters are no more an urban phenomenon, said Y.S. Guleria, vice-president of sales and marketing at Honda Motorcycle and Scooter India.

With increasing women’s empowerment and better rural road infrastructure, states like UP, Madhya Pradesh, Rajasthan and Bihar have clocked better scooter sales growth, Guleria said. He claimed that the improved mileage on its scooters helped the company negate the impact of rising petrol price in the country. “A 15% increase in mileage took care of the increase in the petrol price as you know this fuel has been deregulated now its rate fluctuates as per the global crude price,” he said.

Honda’s growth in the segment has also been fuelled by the absence of Bajaj Auto Ltd, a brand once known for its scooters, fewer scooter models and supply constraints in Hero’s portfolio. Chennai-based TVS Motor Co. has six offerings in the segment, followed by Honda’s four and Hero’s two.
To be sure, Honda based its India strategy on scooters (at a time when virtually all two-wheeler makers pulled out of the segment citing poor sales) as it was not allowed to sell motorcycles under the joint venture agreement with the then Hero Honda Motors Ltd. Both parties called off the 27-year-old joint venture in December 2010.

Honda still has an order backlog of at least 70,000 units in November, Guleria said.
“This is despite our Bangalore plant becoming operational in July. So from January to November, the backlog has increased,” he said.

Honda is seeing demand coming from smaller cities and with professionals such as teachers, BPO employees and increase in women riders. “I may not have the figures on share of scooters in rural areas until three years ago but in the last two-three years, at least 30% of our scooter sales have come from the rural region,” Guleria said. “With tar roads replacing kuccha (unmetalled) roads, we expect it to grow further.”

Hero MotoCorp acquires 60% stake in JV with Magneti Marelli


Hero MotoCorp has subscribed to a total of 1,749,999 equity shares of face value Rs 10 of 'HMC MM Auto Ltd' constituting 60 per cent shareholding in the JV company, Hero MotoCorp said in a filing to the BSE.

Country's largest two-wheeler maker Hero MotoCorp  Wednesday said it has acquired 17.49 lakh shares, constituting around 60 per cent stake, in its joint venture with Italian firm Magneti Marelli. ( Read More ) Financial details were not immediately available. Hero MotoCorp has subscribed to a total of 1,749,999 equity shares of face value Rs 10 of 'HMC MM Auto Ltd' constituting 60 per cent shareholding in the JV company, Hero MotoCorp said in a filing to the BSE. "The purpose of the joint venture is to, amongst others, sell, distribute and market complete two wheeler fuel injection systems or components parts thereof," it added. Earlier this month, the partners--Hero Motocorp and Magneti Marelli had announced plans to invest USD 27 million in the JV over the next ten years. The JV is targeting sales of around USD 100 million in the first five years.

The partners had said they would invest USD 8.5 million in ratio of 60:40 JV over a period of three years. Magneti Marelli, which designs and produces advanced systems and components for the automotive industry around the globe, reported a turnover of 5.8 billion Euros in 2012. Shares of Hero MotoCorp today closed at Rs 2,169.75 apiece on the BSE, down 1.51 percent from its previous close. Hero Motocorp stock price On December 12, 2013, at 13:08 hrs Hero Motocorp was quoting at Rs 2149.70, down Rs 20.05, or 0.92 percent. The 52-week high of the share was Rs 2214.70 and the 52-week low was Rs 1434.05. The company's trailing 12-month (TTM) EPS was at Rs 104.77 per share as per the quarter ended September 2013. The stock's price-to-earnings (P/E) ratio was 20.52. The latest book value of the company is Rs 250.70 per share. At current value, the price-to-book value of the company is 8.57.

Hero looks to sell 2 mn splendors in 2013-14

India’s largest two wheeler manufacturer Hero MotoCorp said it expects sales of its best-selling motorcycle Splendor to rebound over the next few months and wants to end the financial year with sales of over 2 million units.

Splendor has been the largest selling motorcycle in the world for over 10 years but has seen sales decline in India by nearly 16% in the first half of this financial year to little over 900,000 units as the market is slowly graduating to bigger bikes.

“The entire industry was struggling in the first half of the year and brands like Splendor and Passion were not insulated. But in the past two months of the festival season, there has been a revival,” said Anil Dua, senior vice-president (marketing and sales) Hero MotoCorp. “Right now, we need stocks. In January we will know if the revival is sustainable but Splendor will continue to be a 2 million unit brand (per annum).”

The company’s bread-and-butter brands Splendor and Passion continue to be powered by erstwhile partner Honda’s technology but Dua said there is neither any compulsion nor a hurry to replace it with in-house technology.

“We are developing our own technology for the whole portfolio but there is no compulsion for us to replace the Honda legacy,” he said. “We can continue to use it or improve it internally for as long as we want.”

Hero has developed a fuel saving ‘start-stop technology’ for two-wheelers, which would be introduced first in the Splendor later this month. The technology so far used in cars, shuts the engine when idling and restarts at the press of the clutch and is useful in urban traffic.

Hero looks to sell 2 mn splendors in 2013-14

India’s largest twowheeler manufacturer Hero MotoCorp said it expects sales of its best-selling motorcycle Splendor to rebound over the next few months and wants to end the financial year with sales of over 2 million units.

Splendor has been the largest selling motorcycle in the world for over 10 years but has seen sales decline in India by nearly 16% in the first half of this financial year to little over 900,000 units as the market is slowly graduating to bigger bikes.

“The entire industry was struggling in the first half of the year and brands like Splendor and Passion were not insulated. But in the past two months of the festival season, there has been a revival,” said Anil Dua, senior vice-president (marketing and sales) Hero MotoCorp. “Right now, we need stocks. In January we will know if the revival is sustainable but Splendor will continue to be a 2 million unit brand (per annum).”

The company’s bread-and-butter brands Splendor and Passion continue to be powered by erstwhile partner Honda’s technology but Dua said there is neither any compulsion nor a hurry to replace it with in-house technolgy.

“We are developing our own technology for the whole portfolio but there is no compulsion for us to replace the Honda legacy,” he said. “We can continue to use it or improve it internally for as long as we want.”

Hero has developed a fuel saving ‘start-stop technology’ for two-wheelers, which would be introduced first in the Splendor later this month. The technology so far used in cars, shuts the engine when idling and restarts at the press of the clutch and is useful in urban traffic.

Mahindra two wheelers ramps up production of Centuro

Mahindra Two Wheelers, which has received four international patents for its four indigenously developed technologies, is ramping up production capacity to meet increasing demand for its new single model motorcycle Centuro.

“The four international patents for our four indigenously developed technologies with unique features to meet the evolving needs of global two wheeler users will boost our sales both in the domestic and international markets,” Viren Popli, executive vice president at Mahindra Two Wheelers told Financial Chronicle.

The four innovations for which patents were received by the Mumbai-based company are the fuel gauge system, the automatic ignition cut-off, the distance to empty fuel system, and the engine immobilizer system.

“These technologies are incorporated into the current and future range of Mahindra Two Wheelers’ products,” Popli said.

He said the all new 110 cc Centuro motorcycle launched last July was designed entirely in-house at the company’s world class, state-of-the-art R&D centre in Pune.

“The fully loaded Centuro priced at Rs 46,500 at New Delhi showrooms already features the internationally patented fuel gauge system, distance to empty system and engine immobilizer system,” Popli said. He said these features are pioneering, never seen before features in motorcycles.

“With our in-house technologies getting international patents, we are reaffirming our commitment to offer best-in-class technology and innovative products to meet customers unmet needs,” Popli said.

He said Mahindra’s indigenously developed intelligent MCi-5 (Micro Chip ignited-5 curve) engine fitted in the Centuro allows it to respond smartly to the need for muscle by, delivering a power output of 8.5 BHP @ 7500 RPM, 8.5 Nm of peak torque @ 5500 rpm. He said gives a mileage of 85 km per litre as certified by Automotive Research Association of India (ARAI).

The company reported sales of 24,245 units during November 2013, a growth of 126 per cent. Domestic volumes stood at 23,831 units, a growth of 136 per cent over the previous year.

“Bulk of the sales is driven by Centuro at an average of 20,000 units per month,” Popli said. He said at present the company had received a firm booking order of over 20,000 units of Centuro with a down payment of Rs 2,500 per bike.

“We have brought down the waiting period of around six weeks to three-four weeks. We will reduce the waiting period further after we complete the ramping up of production from 1,200 units a day to about 1,700 – 1,800 units a day over the next three-four months,” Popli said.

He said since three months the company was also exporting 1,000 – 2,000 units of Centuro bikes to some countries in Africa, Latin America and South Asia. “Our target is to double this number from next fiscal,” Popli said.

Mahindra sells a range of 125 cc scooters such as Rodeo RZ Standard, Rodeo RZ, Duro DZ, Flyte and 70 cc Kine priced between Rs 48,580 and Rs 34,331 and 110 cc Pantero motorcycle (Rs 44,190).

Mahindra’s facility at Pithampur, Indore has an installed capacity to make 10 lakh two-wheelers annually.

KTM 390 Duke price hiked

Bajaj Auto has confirmed that it would be hiking the price of its naked performance bike, the KTM 390 Duke by Rs 6,000. This shouldn’t come as a surprise since at the time of the bikes launch back in June priced at Rs 1.8lakh (ex-showroom Pune), KTM had said that it was an introductory pricing and it would be hiking it eventually. KTM had followed the same policy with the 200 Duke as it had also hiked its price within a year of its launch.

DSK to bring mass market Hyosung bike to India

DSK Motowheels, a Pune-based company that has tied-up with Hyosung to assemble and market its super bikes in India, has plans to bring in a mass segment 125cc bike by the middle of 2015.

The company is also in talks with the Korean super bike maker to jointly develop a single cylinder engine for the 125cc bike, which will be almost entirely localised to keep the costs down, Shirish Kulkarni, Chairman, DSK Motowheels, said.

Competitive pricing

Elaborating on the project, he said that Hyosung has a twin cylinder 125cc bike that was too expensive for the Indian mass market. Developing the new engine would involve an estimated investment of around Rs 200 crore, and the modalities are still being worked out, he said.

According to Kulkarni, Hyosung was convinced that the price point he was talking about was possible. “I think we might be able to launch it at around Rs 50,000 to 60,000 per unit. I don’t know what the exact price will be by then, but I know it will be competitive,” he asserted, adding that the idea was not to take on the large players in the Indian market, but give consumers another choice.

New facility at Karad

DSK Motowheels, which assembles five models of 250cc and 650cc superbikes from CKD kits at an assembly plant at Wai, is setting up a new facility at Karad, and is acquiring 100 acres for the purpose.

It will invest an additional Rs 200 crore for this, and expects to roll out the first model from here by August 2014, Kulkarni revealed.

It is also adding five new outlets in Nagpur, Kochi, Patna, Ranchi and either Vizag or Mysore, by March 31, 2014, taking the total tally of dealerships to 31, and expects to close the fiscal with sales of 1,400 units.

Earlier today, to mark its first anniversary, DSK Motowheels launched a limited number Signature Edition of the GT 250R Hyosung. The paint work for the bike, in a bright hurricane yellow has been done locally in Pune. It has been priced at Rs 2.97 lakh (ex-showroom Pune).

Japanese industrial park to be set up near Pune

The Japan External Trade Organization (Jetro), an official promotion body for trade and investment, and the Maharashtra Industrial Development Corporation (MIDC) have signed a memorandum of understanding to set up an exclusive industrial park for Japanese companies in the Pune region.

The park will come up on 1,200 acres at the Supa Parner industrial estate in Ahmednagar, around 75 km from Pune.

Around 27 companies have evinced interest in establishing a base here, and a special cell will be established to process and expedite the applications, an MIDC official said. Land acquisition for the project is underway and is expected to take six months.

Pune, being home to large automobile OEMs, is a potential area for auto components sourcing with huge consumer market, Takehiko Furukawa, Director-General, Jetro-Mumbai, said.

“Japanese companies are noticing huge business opportunities in Pune, and the flourishing automobile industry in this region provides a major investment opportunity for Japanese auto component manufacturers in the proposed industrial zone,” he added.

To date, India is home to 962 Japanese companies across 1,804 locations, including 76 in Pune. Jetro’s first industrial park in India is at Neemrana in Rajasthan where 30-odd Japanese companies have invested over Rs 2,500 crore.

How Rajiv Bajaj’s mentoring relationship with Jack Trout changed the way Bajaj Auto is run

A book-reading session is not what you'd expect from a CEO when his company is in the doldrums. Sometime in 2008, when Bajaj was on a sticky wicket, CEO Rajiv Bajaj, then 41, addressed his top 

generals, a copy of Jack Trout's Differentiate or Die in his hands. The young Bajaj read out passages for a good 90 minutes, expounding the key messages gleaned, why Bajaj Auto was floundering, and how some of Trout's theories could
come in handy.

Finally, as Bajaj wrapped up the last chapter, Tom Ishikawa, a Japanese executive who had joined Bajaj Auto from Yamaha, said: "Rajiv San, all you have said is ok, but this is just a book." Bajaj shot back: "Tom San, Yamaha is such a big name. Even then, why isn't it making money?"


Five years later, Bajaj still recalls the incident. The point being at that time, he had also been grappling with a question: the Japanese (Sony), or Korean (LG) or Taiwanese companies, which had mastered technology, quality, efficiency and productivity, weren't making money. Why? It was that cold splash of market reality, which ultimately led Bajaj to Jack Trout, the 76-year-old author and management guru.


Since then, a fairly intense guru-shishya relationship between Bajaj and Trout has helped the former find the answers and transformed the way Bajaj runs the Rs 20,973 crore company. Under Trout's influence, Bajaj Auto has adopted a successful brand-led growth strategy and morphed into a marketing company; Bajaj no longer sees it as an auto company.

Most products are sharply differentiated and enjoy better profitability. "Our operating profit margins stand at 22%, while that of the market leader stands at 10%, and they have nearly double our volumes," says Bajaj. "If I had their volumes, I would be at 25-26% profit margins."

In the five years since Bajaj met Trout, Bajaj Auto's net profit has grown almost five-fold to Rs 3,044 crore.

Though Bajaj runs a very tight ship with variable costs on a leash and fixed and employee costs a shade under 8 per cent of sales, he credits Trout's contribution in shaping Bajaj Auto's brand-led strategy as the reason for its higher profitability. "We didn't become better in the kitchen, we serve better in the restaurant," says Bajaj. Adds Rajiv Memani, Country Managing Partner, EY India: "Under Rajiv's leadership, Bajaj Auto has aligned well strategically. He is very clear, he is chasing profitability, not blind market
share."


Corporate Dossier met up with Bajaj and Trout in Delhi last month where Bajaj and his marketing team spent a few hours sharpening the positioning and communication strategies for the new range of Discover motorcycles that the company is in the process of launching. The guru was visibly pleased with his shishya. "After years of working all over the globe, I
can safely say that Rajiv is my best student," says Trout. "He has read my material so carefully. Sometimes he quotes from my books, and I ask: Did I say that?"


How the penny dropped

Three years after Rajiv Bajaj took charge, it was all smooth sailing till the tide turned at Bajaj Auto. Its newest launch XCD, a 125cc bike targeted at the commuter segment, bombed, sales of the Discover dipped and overall volumes plunged. The crisis led Bajaj, a seeker and radical self improver, to Trout's books.

After weeks of introspection, Bajaj conceded his company didn't have a coherent strategy. And thus began Bajaj's deep dive into understanding 'strategy'. But Bajaj was quickly disillusioned with modern management science as the failure rate of new products still exceeded 90%. He turned to unlikely places - yoga, homeopathy and even philosophers, like Seneca and Confucius - to glean management lessons. "The penny dropped," says Bajaj, when he was reading Trout's and Steve Rivkin's. Differentiate or Die. "I learnt almost very late that people don't actually buy products, they buy brands. If you take the brand out of the equation, you reduce everything to the product level," says Bajaj. "I didn't understand the true
meaning of the word 'brand' till I read his books - and later, met Mr Trout."


Ever since then, Bajaj has been relentlessly drilling Trout's insights into the DNA of the company. Take sports bike Pulsar, for instance. Its attributes are clear: it's big, fast, expensive, powerful, and its strong point is definitely not mileage. So these attributes are made explicitly clear not only to the consumer but also to internal functions, like R&D, marketing, sales etc.

In internal meetings at a large meeting room adjacent to his office, Bajaj asks his top team to imagine that a Pulsar is placed in the centre of the large oval table. All discussion always flows within the boundaries of Pulsar attributes and brand image. Bajaj often rejects perfectly good designs and variant proposals because they aren't true to the Pulsar attributes. "Great brands have to be true to their brand promise," says Bajaj.

Bajaj's competitive edge has been its consistent focusing on 'brands', 'positioning' and creating 'exciting segments' for two-wheeler enthusiasts," agrees Sameer Lumba, Managing Director, JM Financial Institutional Securities. Like a true student, Bajaj tests Trout's teachings in different situations. When flagship brand Pulsar - it has 47% market share in the sports bike category - started drawing competition, Bajaj implemented another idea from Trout and Al Reis' book, Marketing Warfare. In the marketing tome, the authors advise creating a real and perceptual benefit into the product while defending leadership. They cite the example of Gillette defending market share by adding an extra blade to the razor, and then, another. Bajaj adapted the insight, launching Pulsar 200 NS with three spark plugs for better performance. Competitors have only one or two spark plugs.

It's a similar story in global markets, which now account for 40% of Bajaj Auto's sales. In Indonesia, the company was struggling with a market share of only 2% even six years after entering the country. Japanese heavyweights, Honda and Yamaha, and cheap Chinese brands dominate the market.


Bajaj tied-up with Kawasaki, the Japanese manufacturer that focused on the 400cc plus category. It also targeted the value segment by selling the Pulsar as a Kawasaki Bajaj. "In Indonesia, we had to find out, as Mr Trout says, a way to supply the customer with a reason to buy. We positioned ourselves as a motorcycle specialist with a specific technology (triple spark) vis-a-vis the Japanese , who offered a buffet of twowheelers," says Bajaj. "From our end, we solved the differentiation problem and from their side (Kawasaki), we solved the consumer access problem. So that becomes the strategy, otherwise, it is impossible to crack the market where we are 50 years late."

But is running a business as simple as merely copying lessons from management books? Sure, Trout and his books did have an influence on Bajaj, but four things set him apart - his ability to synthesize and figure out what works for Bajaj Auto; absolute conviction in driving ideas and actions once he has tested them; a laser-sharp focus on motorcycles.
Lastly, credit must go to his father Rahul Bajaj for rotating him through functions. In his nearly 23 years at the company, Bajaj had spent five years each at manufacturing, engineering and marketing before taking the top job in April 2005.


It's interesting that Bajaj chose to work with Trout because he takes everything with a pinch of salt and even McKinsey reports gather dust in his drawers. So what was it about Trout that appealed to Bajaj? "Mr Trout's books give principles upon which to reflect. Unfortunately, there is no first law of management, like the first law of thermodynamics.... sometimes, there are seven new hats or seven habits or blue ocean or bottom of the pyramid. But you can reflect on the principles he propounds for weeks, months," says Bajaj.


One of Bajaj's most controversial decisions has been to exit and stay out of scooters, a category that's now growing at 20 per cent, and more importantly, was his father Rahul Bajaj's heritage. "Great brands are built on the foundation of sacrifices," says Rajiv Bajaj. "Making more scooters doesn't mean making more money. We are a specialist motorcycle company; we won't venture out of that easily."  Trout backs Bajaj's bold call to stay out of scooters. "The scooter business is a bit of a jungle with amazingly tough brands and pricing pressure. I think Rajiv made the right call there," he says.

And where does Trout fit in Bajaj's fourwheeler strategy? According to the CEO, it's another ploy to defend leadership in the three-wheeler category where they are global leaders. His logic: If we can add a second or third spark plug to Pulsar, why can't we add another wheel to the three-wheeler, thereby increasing comfort, safety and also giving consumers a certain feeling of prestige. "The best three-wheeler is a four-wheeler," he says. "We want to create a new category with Bajaj RE. Those who create categories, create long-term
businesses," says Bajaj.


Trout in choppy waters

Given the amount of ground the guru-shishya duo has covered together, surprisingly, there are two sides to the story of how they met. Trout remembers meeting Bajaj after a talk in Mumbai sometime in 2008. Bajaj told him that he wanted him to work with his team. Bajaj, on the other hand, says he had written several emails to Trout before the meeting, without any response. Trout doesn't remember the emails and says he hadn't even heard about the company until then.


Five years later, the two enjoy a relationship that's long crossed the confines of a consultant-CEO commercial engagement. They share a strong personal bond. Bajaj also ensures his team members regularly get to spend enough time with Trout. Earlier, Trout would spend 8-10 days a year with Bajaj and his managers; now it's down to once every quarter.


Despite the fruitful partnership, the two are yet to crack a vexing problem - managing Bajaj, the family brand. It has been extended into too many products, says Trout. He even met with the Bajaj board and family members advising them to rebrand all other Bajaj businesses. 
"Gentlemen, this is a mistake, I told them. But they wouldn't let go," recalls Trout. The more successful the motorcycle brand gets, the more Bajaj will become a motorcycle brand. Why do you want a motorcycle brand on your electrical appliances or insurance products or sugar?"


Bajaj too is vocal about his views on this. "If I tell you I want to show you a Bajaj product outside, you wouldn't know what I would show you — a hair oil, a mixer grinder or a financial product." But Bajaj enjoys a good challenge. "Einstein said that he derived less satisfaction from E=MC2 than from thinking about the problem," he says. "Mr Trout's biggest contribution would be that he has taught us how to think through problems."

Trout knows Bajaj and his brash ways all too well. He recently presented Bajaj with a signed copy of his book Big Brand, Big Trouble. This is what he wrote as he signed: "Rajiv, make sure to stay out of trouble."



Honda arms trade in profits for better future.

Digging in for the long haul, the two local subsidiaries of the Japanese automobile major Honda Motor are sacrificing profits in the short-term as it builds scale through new products, manufacturing capacities ramp-ups and promotional spends in India.

Honda Motorcycle & Scooter India (HMSI), the Honda subsidiary that makes two-wheelers, posted its first decline in profit in the last five years, and its car subsidiary Honda Cars India saw losses swell to Rs 1,000 crore for 2012-13.

 Honda Motorcycle and Scooter India's net profit for FY13 declined over 5.54% to Rs 389.31 crore versus Rs 412.18 crore posted by the company in FY12, whereas for Honda Cars India losses jumped over 85% to Rs 1,109 crore.

While Honda Cars has accumulated losses of Rs 1,300 crore, Honda's two-wheeler arm is sitting on a surplus of Rs 1,100 crore. Honda Cars India grew volumes by over 35% in FY13 to 73,483 units with a market share of 2.74%, whereas HMSI posted a healthy volumes growth of 31% to 2.75 million vehicles.

Analysts reckon that a large part of the pressure on the bottom line for the car company has been on account of volatile yen due to significant imports, and also due to the unutilised second plant in Tapukara. This along with higher depreciation, costs and rising costs on promotions on account of the overall market slowdown has indeed cramped margins.

Barring the Amaze which was launched in FY14, all its other models declined in line with the market trend in FY13. As for the two-wheeler subsidiary, the increasing share of lower margin mass market motorcycles, rising ad spend with the company hiring film star Akshay Kumar as its brand ambassador, increase in man power cost and raw material cost took a toll on the company's profits and margins.

To be sure, HMSI's volumes grew at over 20-30% in the last three to four years, the margins shrunk over 350 basis points to 10.1% in FY13. In FY14, the company tied-up with HDFC Bank to sell Dream Yuga at an attractive finance offer and in some markets, the company had schemes running of 0% processing fee.

When contacted, HMSI spokesperson said the company has been on an aggressive expansion overdrive since FY10.

"To realise this huge sales growth, appropriate investments and expense on capitalisation of 2nd plant at Tapukara, Rajasthan, due to which depreciation costs have significantly risen and PAT has been impacted. Increase in expense is due to proportionate increase in new manpower to support our expansion. Increase in advertisement and branding expenses. Increase in material cost due to increase in input prices of steel, aluminum, plastics etc," the spokesperson explained.

The spokesperson for Honda Cars India added: "At any time, there are internal and external factors at work which impact a company's performance and recent currency weakening is one of the reasons at play. With a clear product strategy and expansion plans we are confident of a new phase of growth for Honda in India."

HMSI said attributing falling margins and profits to the increasing share of motorcycle sales would be inappropriate. "Primarily, heavy investments for additional production capacity resulted in moderation of margins," the company explained.

 According to Deepesh Rathore co-founder, EMMAAA, an automotive consultancy firm, the drop in profits and margins for brand Honda (two-wheelers and cars) is on expected lines.

"On the two-wheeler front, Honda wants to be number 1 and is running behind volumes and market share. So, higher spend on advertising, promotions are a given and it is taking Hero head on, in their turf, so the margins are expected to be lower. Eventually once they reach a scale, margins and profits will come back. On the cars front, apart from Amaze, the other models were falling in line with the market. So, the company had to shell out more for promotions, relatively unutilised Tapukura plant and diesel engine plant expansion too took a toll on the company's profits," said Rathore.

But such pain is only in the short term. About the future, Rathore feels the best is yet to come, "The next two to three years for both cars and two-wheelers is going to be extremely good," he added.

Bajaj Auto bike sales decline 14.69% in November

Bajaj Auto  Ltd (BAL) on Tuesday reported a decline of 14.69 per cent in motorcycle sales at 2,78,703 units in November 2013.

The company had sold 3,26,727 units in the corresponding month last year, Bajaj Auto Ltd (BAL) said in a statement.

BAL said exports were up 8 per cent during the month at 1,33,731 units compared to 1,24,115 units in November 2012.

In the commercial vehicles category, the company said its sales stood at 31,888 units as against 45,566 units in the same month last year, a decline of 30 per cent.

Total vehicle sales of the company last month stood at 3,10,591 units as compared to 3,72,293 in the same period a year ago, a decline of 17 per cent, the statement said. The stock of the company closed  at Rs 1,954  or 0.55 per cent down on the BSE. 

Hero Fights Honda to Sate Female Scooter Demand: Corporate India


Hero MotoCorp Ltd. (HMCL), India’s largest motorcycle maker, plans to unveil additional models in February to woo women customers for its scooters and fight Honda Motor Co.’s surge in the two-wheeler market.

Rising demand for personal transport in India’s villages and small towns, especially among women, is spurring the 18 percent growth in the nation’s scooter sales, Anil Dua, New Delhi-based Hero’s senior vice-president for sales and marketing, said in a Nov. 27 interview in the city. Hero also aims to tap the expanding 125cc motorcycle segment, Dua said.

Tokyo-based Honda Motor Co. is seeking to overtake Hero MotoCorp Ltd. after ending a joint venture with the Indian company in 2010. Photographer: Prashanth Vishwanathan/Bloomberg

“My clear mission is to grow faster than the market,” said Dua. “The only two segments that are growing at double digits are scooters and 125cc.”

The two categories offer Dua some respite from a slowdown in Indian economic expansion that has reduced demand for the 100cc bikes, which account for about 73 percent of Hero’s sales. In scooters, Dua is seeking to close the gap to Honda (7267), which sold more than 1 million units in the segment for April through October versus Hero’s 393,468. Scooters are seeing a resurgence, spurred in part by purchases by working women.

Tokyo-based Honda is seeking to overtake Hero after ending a joint venture with the Indian company in 2010, banking on a lack of public transportation in rural areas of the country of 1.2 billion people. Honda, the world’s biggest motorcycle maker, became India’s second-largest two-wheeler seller in the year ended March.

Aspirational Customers

Hero and Honda also want to take advantage of customers moving up to 125cc bikes from smaller runabouts as incomes rise, a shift being driven by increasingly aspirational Indian consumers, according to Emerging Markets Automotive Advisors.

“Scooters will help Hero offset increasing competition in motorcycles,” said Yaresh Kothari, an analyst with Angel Broking Ltd. in Mumbai. “While scooters are growing fast in urban and semi-urban markets, people are gradually moving to higher capacity motorcycles, and the 125cc segment offers a good mix of looks as well as fuel efficiency.”

Hero has climbed 9.3 percent this year, compared with the 7.6 percent increase in the S&P BSE Sensex Index. (SENSEX) The stock, which Kothari rates at neutral, rose 1.2 percent to 2,077.55 rupees at 1:30 p.m. in Mumbai.

Hero, which targets a doubling of its sales to 12 million units by 2020, expects to spend about 1.5 percent of annual revenue on research and development, Dua said. The company will introduce the first models with Hero-developed engines at the New Delhi Auto Expo motor show in February, he said.
Research and Development

“When we split up with Honda, we had no R&D capabilities of our own,” said Dua. “Now, we are filing patents and are adding new technology to our motorcycles.”

Hero’s second-quarter profit rose 9 percent to 4.8 billion rupees ($77 million) from 4.4 billion rupees a year earlier.

The company sold 41 percent of the 8.53 million two-wheelers sold in India in the seven months through October. Sales of its 100cc bikes dipped about 3 percent in the period from a year earlier.

The company has two scooter models -- starting at about 43,000 rupees for the Pleasure and Maestro, targeted at women and men respectively. Honda offers three scooter models, starting at 45,506 rupees, according to the companies’ websites.

Companies including Yamaha Motor Co. (7272), TVS Motor Co. Ltd. (TVSL) and Piaggio & C. SpA (PIA) have added scooter models in the last two years.

“Hero MotoCorp is banking on its revamped existing brands to claw back some of its lost market share,” wrote Surjit Singh Arora, an analyst at Prabhudas Lilladher Pvt., in a note dated Oct. 23. “Hero has made a strong comeback in the recent months on the strength of its strong brands and distribution.”

New Models

The average motorcycle engine displacement in India has risen to 125.61cc for the first 10 months of 2013, compared with 116.3cc in 2005, according to a Nov. 27 report by New Delhi-based Emerging Markets Automobile Advisors. Two-wheeler sales in India are expected to be about 22 million units in 2018, driven by motorcycles as well as scooters, according to the report.

“There’s a huge penetration potential in India,” said Dua. “We have been bringing out new models at a pace of once or twice a year. That pace is going to accelerate.”

High-end bikes & electric cars made in India for China

In what may come as a surprise to many, India is quietly becoming a production hub of high-end vehicles meant for export to China. Iconic US motorbike maker Harley Davidson, Austrian motorcycle manufacturer KTM and Mahindra & Mahindra have preferred to set up manufacturing facilities in India than in the relatively low-cost China and export the output.

KTM, 48 per cent owned by Bajaj Auto, has identified two of its products under the Duke brand for export to China as completely knocked-down (CKD) units. The initial target is to sell over 10,000 CKD units of these high-end bikes annually. Exports are expected to commence in 2014. The two bikes are Duke 200 (Rs 1.35 lakh, ex-showroom, Delhi) and Duke 390 (Rs 1.88 lakh) manufactured at Chakan in Pune as part of the company’s joint development programme with Bajaj Auto. The KTM strategy is to sell high-power bikes from Europe and low-power ones from India. The bikes would be assembled at an outsourced facility in China.

Confirming the plans, S Ravikumar, senior vice-president (business development), Bajaj Auto, said, “The China strategy for KTM is clear. They want to target the niche upper end of the motorcycle market in China. They are not interested in the lower end where there are many players and huge volumes. We expect there to be a large market for high-end bikes in China.” The China thrust is part of the joint strategy of Bajaj-KTM to treble exports to around 70,000 units per annum from India, from about 25,000 currently. That effectively means about 13 per cent of the exports would come from selling to China.

Stefan Pierer, CEO, KTM Motorcycles AG, said, “We are in the process of setting up an assembly unit in China, which is expected to be commissioned sometime next year.” Keeping KTM company will be Harley Davidson, which has lined up for export models developed on the recently unveiled Street platform from its facility in Bawal (Haryana). Currently, Harley does not have any plants outside the US, except in Brazil and India, and it wants to leverage those plants for export to China. Anoop Prakash, managing director, Harley Davidson India, said, “Harley Davidson has developed the Street platform after a gap of 14 years. Both Street 750 and Street 500 will be manufactured in India, the only other production hub for the models apart from Kansas in the US.

These bikes will be exported from India to markets in Europe and Asia, including China.” Production and export of both models on the Street platform are expected to commence in India mid next year. Prakash, however, declined to specify a timeline for starting exports to China.

Abdul Majeed, partner and leader (automotive practice), PricewaterhouseCoopers (PwC) explained, “Both India and China are key markets in terms of two-wheeler sales. Given that customer requirements in both countries are largely similar, two-wheeler makers operating out of India only stand to gain in cost leadership if they are able to attain quality parameters while exporting to China.”

The potential to gain volumes in electric vehicles has drawn Mahindra & Mahindra to explore opportunities in China. The discontinuation of government incentives on green vehicles has meant the Mahindra e2o has sold only about 400 units since its launch in March — numbers the company was expecting to clock monthly.

Mahindra & Mahindra group company Mahindra Reva Electric Vehicles (MREV) is developing a variant of the electric car for exports scheduled to commence in early 2014. While the export variant would be first shipped to countries in the European region, MREV is additionally looking at opportunities to tap the growing market for electric vehicles in China. Chetan Maini, chief of strategy and technology, MREV, had told Business Standard earlier, “The export variant would be ready by early next year. We are looking at exporting the e2o to all markets we previously exported the Revai. We will also explore possibilities in China.”

According to industry estimates, the Chinese market has the potential for sales of five million electric vehicles by the end of the decade. Nearly half the 4,750 units of the Revai manufactured since inception were sold in 24 countries, mostly across Europe and West Asia.

Bajaj Auto drafts global roadmap for quadricycle

There is just one final notification due from the Government which will give Bajaj Auto the go-ahead to operate the RE60 on Indian roads. While this is scheduled to happen within the next two months, there is no telling if the launch could be delayed even further.

From the company’s end, there are no production glitches but as Rajiv Bajaj, Managing Director, says, there are “some members of the industry” who are still opposed to the RE60 and the quadricycle concept. Should they seek legal intervention to delay its debut here, there is little that can be done.

Bajaj is categorical, though, that he is not going to wait forever to launch the RE60 even if it means India is out of the reckoning. Markets such as Nigeria, Sri Lanka, Colombia and Indonesia would “be more than delighted” to have the four-wheeler on their roads, he says.

Yet, the final notification from the Indian Government is critical because it will allow the company to be better aware of the specifications for the quadricycle and plan an aggressive global strategy.

In the meantime, reports are doing the rounds that a passenger version is ready and being tested overseas. It is believed to be ‘sleek and top-class’ but Bajaj refuses to comment on this piece of news. Thus far, it is only one version that has been displayed even though it was amply clear that the platform would spawn other options, including a personal mode of transport.

“From my point of view, the issue boils down to urban mobility which has become a challenge not only in India but across the world right from South America to Southeast Asia,” Bajaj says.

It is here, he adds, that the quadricycle is the best bet to overcome problems of traffic congestion which is fast becoming a global problem.

Hence, even while cities are evolving mobility solutions like the metro or BRTS, Bajaj believes the quadricycle will meet the important requirement of last-mile connectivity. “In most parts of the world, it is the ideal solution for intra city transport. It is compact, light and cannot go beyond a certain speed,” he says. And with a fuel efficiency of nearly 35 km/litre, it is light on the pocket too.

This is precisely why a quadricycle would work in markets like Europe too where age demographics are changing coupled with falling incomes. It explains why smaller motorcycles are being sought after and, as an extension, why the quadricycle could emerge a practical solution.

However, back home in India, the argument is not cutting much ice with the likes of Tata Motors, Maruti and TVS Motor. Carmakers could be concerned that the quadricycle will eat into their own businesses especially when it is likely to be competitively priced at under Rs 2-lakh.

Bajaj is flummoxed why everyone has got the issue “by the tail where the number of wheels has become an obsession”.

“Cars are a different play compared to this puny thing. Crash norms make the car beefier and heavier, affecting emissions and mileage as a result,” he had told this paper on a previous occasion.

As for safety concerns, which a section of industry believes is relevant to the RE60, Bajaj had said, “How a four-wheeler can be considered unsafe beats me when you acknowledge the presence of two- and three-wheelers on the road.”

Hero inks pact with Italian firm

Hero MotoCorp today announced a joint venture with Italy-based component maker Magneti Marelli to make fuel-injection systems and powertrains in the country.

Hero MotoCorp will hold 60 per cent in joint venture HMC-MM Auto Limited, and the duo will invest $27 million over 10 years. Magneti Marelli had reported a turnover of 5.8 billion euros in 2012.

“We have decided to form a joint venture with Magneti Marelli for next-generation fuel injection systems. A total equity injection of $8.5 million in the ratio of 60:40 will be invested in the JV over a period of three years,” Hero MotoCorp managing director and CEO Pawan Munjal said.

The joint venture will target sales of around $100 million in the first five years. “We believe that this development will help the cause of Hero products and engines immensely. It will improve the drivability of our products. It will also help in meeting environmental regulations,” Munjal said.

On the terms of the agreement, Munjal said, “The joint venture is also open to supply to other manufacturers and would not be an exclusive supplier to Hero MotoCorp.” The joint venture will bring in key engine-related technology within the Hero group, thereby reducing the dependence on external vendors, he added.

The new company will start manufacturing by the end of 2014. At present, only two models from Hero MotoCorp — ZMR and Glamour 125cc — have advanced fuel injection systems.

Magneti Marelli CEO Eugenio Razelli said the aim was to partner Hero MotoCorp to equip all Hero motorcycles and scooters with advanced powertrain solutions.

“We believe in partnerships and we care a lot about the new joint venture. We hope to be a great asset for the Hero group,” he added. The venture will help to build electronic fuel injection systems, which will benefit engines used in Hero two-wheelers,” Razelli said.

Hero had recently unveiled 15 two-wheelers, which will hit the market within this fiscal. The company said it would enter Turkey and Egypt in the next few months and was also working on a low-cost entry-level bike.

Stricter Emission norms for two-wheelers on the anvil

The government is set to drive in stricter emission norms for two-wheelers which will make motorcyles and scooters less polluting but costlier by . 1,500-10,000.

New emission norms for twowheelers to be sold in the country from 2015 have been finalised and will be notified shortly, a senior government official told ET. “We have carefully scrutinised the requirements for the Indian market. The Indian emission norms for two-wheelers are unique since we don’t follow the European Union as we do in the case of bigger vehicles like cars, trucks and buses,” said the official, who did not wish to be named.

The new norms are likely to cut down emissions from twowheelers by about a quarter and are expected to make a significant contribution to containing vehicular pollution since two-wheelers account for more than 75% of the country’s automotive market.

Two-wheeler makers will have to go in for engine improvements, after-treatment devices and evaporative emission control to conform to the new norms, experts said. This will lead to an increase of about . 1,500 in the price of the mass market two-wheelers and about . 10,000 in the price of superbikes.

The new norms will take vehicular technologies to the next level, an official said, explaining that besides the regular combustion improvements in engines to make them cleaner and an improvised exhaust catalytic converter, all motorcycle manufacturers will also have to meet a new evaporative emission regulation. Therefore, all two-wheelers will come with a mandatory evaporative emission control unit.

At present, fuel tanks of motorcyles have a small opening that allows flow of the fuel to the engine from the tank. However, when the motorcycle is parked, especially in hot summers, a small amount of petrol evaporates and escapes from the opening. This results in evaporative emissions. Under the new norms, this evaporative loss of fuel from twowheelers in stationary position will be regulated by an evaporative emission control unit. The equipment has been a mandatory requirement in cars since 1996.

A new testing procedure, called Worldwide Harmonised Testing Cycle (WMTC), will also come in force as per the new norms. “Until the last applicable emission norms notified in 2010, we were following our own Indian cycle that was unique and crafted specially for India. Now, we will adopt the global pattern of testing and regulating the emission norms for twowheelers that will take them closer to the global norms followed in Europe and other markets,” the official said.

Emission norms are being gradually made more stringent in the country every five years or so and most companies are prepared for it. Hero MotoCorp, the world’s leading two-wheeler manufacturer, has already started the process of upgrading its products to confirm to the upcoming norms. “Hero MotoCorp has always complied with all applicable emission regulations. The new norms, when notified, will also be complied with well ahead of time,” said a Hero MotoCorp spokesperson.

Experts said manufacturers would be forced to phase out several models as they move ahead to comply with the new norms.

Parameters Determining Emission from Vehicles

• VEHICULAR TECHNOLOGY

• DRIVING CYCLE

• AFTER-TREATMENT DEVICES LIKE CATALYTIC CONVERTER

• FUEL QUALITY

• INSPECTION AND MAINTENANCE OF IN-USE VEHICLES
ROAD AND TRAFFIC MANAGEMENT

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