Monday, February 13, 2012

India Drowns In Car Factories

India, often touted as the "next China," has too much capacity and not enough sales, says a report by Reuters. It is getting worse: India's carmakers "speed towards a head-on collision with a capacity glut," the report says.

According to the report, carmakers earmarked $6 billion to almost double India's annual production to more than 6 million vehicles. After record growth in the past two years, car sales in India are set to shrink in the current fiscal year, for the first time in 10 years. The report sees an excess capacity of around 1 million cars, and a capacity utilization of around 60 percent. In the industry, capacity utilization below 80 percent is considered dangerous.

While domestic and foreign makers continue to build assembly plants in India, Credit Suisse predicts that capacity growth will outstrip demand growth for the next two to three years. GM sold 111,510 cars in India in 2011, only 700 more than in 2010. No reason to worry, says P. Balendran, VP of GM India:

"We have already created the capacity and are aligning our production suiting the demand. Since we are expecting double-digit growth in the next financial year, we are not envisaging any capacity utilization fall."

Michael Boneham, president of Ford India, opines:

"The sales slowdown is creating a short-term concern domestically. But we're not depending on one market. Our growth is both domestic and export focused and we have a flexible manufacturing process…We're not taking our foot off the pedal."

 



from The Truth About Cars http://www.thetruthaboutcars.com




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