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India’s Tata Motors reports flourishing profits, led by JLR

MUMBAI (AFP) ― India’s top vehicle maker Tata Motors on Thursday reported a nearly fourfold increase in annual profit, boosted by booming sales and strong demand for British brands Jaguar and Land Rover.

Net profit was 92.7 billion rupees ($2.04 billion) for the year to the end of March 2011, up from 25.7 billion rupees in the previous year, the company said in a statement to the Bombay Stock Exchange.

Total sales rose 24.2 percent to nearly 1.1 million units, while revenues jumped 33 percent to 1.26 trillion rupees in the last financial year.

Jaguar and Land Rover saw improved sales, with demand for luxury cars rising in key markets like the United States, Europe, Russia and China as they recover from the global economic crisis.
A Tata Motors Ltd. Nano automobile parked in front of a building in Mumbai, India. (Bloomberg)
A Tata Motors Ltd. Nano automobile parked in front of a building in Mumbai, India. (Bloomberg)

Jaguar Land Rover net profit for the fiscal year touched 1.04 billion pounds on revenues of 9.91 billion pounds ($16 billion), the company said, without giving comparative year-earlier data.

Sales of JLR cars rose 25 percent from a year earlier to 243,621.

The two British brands have become important growth drivers for Tata Motors, recording six successive quarters of profit after the Indian conglomerate bought them from Ford for $2.3 billion in 2008.

“We are very optimistic about Jaguar Land Rover in terms of volume growth,” JLR’s chief executive Ralf Speth told a news conference in Mumbai.

“There is a very clear demand for our cars from developed markets,” said Del Sehmar, spokesman for Jaguar Land Rover India, adding that JLR now had its “best product line-up ever.”

Tata Motors, part of the tea-to-steel Tata Group conglomerate, is to open its first assembly plant in India for Jaguar Land Rover cars on Friday.

Rising disposable incomes, cheap auto loans and the launches of new models boosted Tata Motors’ domestic sales of cars, sports-utility vehicles and commercial vehicles in India.

But despite higher volumes, Tata Motors said competition and rising input costs were concerns in the region.

“We have to be watchful about where commodity prices go,” chief financial officer C. Ramakrishnan told reporters.

Tata Motors has been forced to raise the prices of some of their vehicles, including the low-cost Nano, as prices of raw materials such as steel and rubber continue to rise.

Sales of the Nano, the world’s cheapest car, crossed 100,000 in the fiscal year ended March, officials said, with plans to export the sporty, jellybean-shaped car in the months ahead.

Carl-Peter Forster, chief executive of Tata Motors, said that although Nanos will be shipped to overseas markets, the aim is to build “a solid, long-term presence in such markets, prior to exporting the car.”

Indonesia, Thailand and Sri Lanka are some countries where the Nano could be exported, but officials declined to confirm details.

Tata Motors said it plans to introduce versions of the Safari, Nano, Aria, Manza and Indica Vista passenger vehicles, and variants of medium and heavy commercial vehicles and a global range of light commercial vehicles this year.

Tata Motors gained 27.75 rupees or 2.45 percent to 1,161.25 on expectations of strong earnings before results were announced.
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