logo
JLR to begin production of cars at TaMo's new plant in Tamil Nadu by early 2026

JLR to begin production of cars at TaMo's new plant in Tamil Nadu by early 2026

Mint5 days ago

Tata Motors Ltd-owned Jaguar Land Rover (JLR) will begin the production of its vehicles at its parent's new plant in Tamil Nadu by early 2026, a top company official said on Tuesday.
JLR will look to begin assembly of completely knocked down (CKD) units at the new plant in Panapakkam in Tamil Nadu, which is expected to attract more than ₹ 9,000 crore investment from Tata Motors.
'We have all the CKD operations currently at Pune. Over a period of time, we will probably migrate it there (the TN facility),' PB Balaji, group chief financial officer at Tata Motors, told reporters in Mumbai.
The plant, whose construction began in September 2024, will be used to make Tata Motors and JLR cars with an annual production capacity of more than 250,000 vehicles.
The seller of luxury cars such as Defender and Range Rover first began assembling the completely knocked down units of its Land Rover Freelander 2 model in the country in May 2011 at Pune.
In 2024, the company began the local assembly of its Range Rover and Range Rover Sport models at the Pune plant in a bid to expand its presence in the country and lower prices.
While imports of completely built units of cars attract around 110% tariffs currently, the completely knocked down units of vehicles attract only 16.5% effective tariff rate.
Acquired by Tata Motors in 2008 for $2.8 billion, JLR posted its highest ever retail sales numbers in the country in the last financial year. The company's sales jumped 40% to reach 6,183 cars, with the January-March quarter recording a 110% growth to 1,793 car sales.
Its best-selling cars in the country include Defender, Range Rover and Range Rover sport.
While it currently is not making the Defender models in the country, JLR's chief financial officer Richard Molyneux said during the company's last earnings call on 13 May that 'plans are in process to assemble the cars locally'.
The bid to expand presence in India comes at a time when JLR is facing challenges in the global markets. During the investor day held on 16 June, JLR said that it is lowering its earnings before interest and tax margin guidance to 5-7% in FY26 from the earlier stated 10% due to the impact of US tariffs and slowdown in the Chinese market.
Its profit after tax also fell 30% in FY25 to 1.8 billion pounds from 2.6 billion pounds in FY24.
Meanwhile, the country's luxury car market has continued to grow, driven by demand for premium vehicles. In FY25, luxury car sales in the country touched an all-time high of 51,000 units.
With its local assembly leading to price cuts of up to ₹ 44 lakh for its models last year, JLR managed to dethrone Audi India from the third position.
The UK-based company is responsible for 71% of Tata Motors' overall revenue and 79% of its overall profits.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Quick commerce apps stack up extra fees to curb losses
Quick commerce apps stack up extra fees to curb losses

Time of India

time42 minutes ago

  • Time of India

Quick commerce apps stack up extra fees to curb losses

ETtech ETtech Quick commerce companies have begun adding a range of fees — from platform and handling charges to convenience, small-cart and rain levies — to customer orders in an attempt to shore up their unit economics, or earnings from each transaction, according to industry executives and analysts.A check across the top five quick commerce apps shows these charges, which come on top of the standard delivery fees and vary across cities and platforms, range between 6 and 30 per its app, Zepto says it levies a handling charge 'towards handling of products in your orders at our stores', while rival Blinkit says this fee goes towards ensuring 'proper handling' and 'high-quality quick deliveries'. Zepto and Instamart offer bulk orders at platforms charge a higher handling fee on large is also a surge fee, charged during high-demand hours or when there is a shortage of delivery workforce and the order value is below certain thresholds. Eternal Ltd-owned Blinkit, Swiggy 's Instamart and Zepto control 80–85% of India's quick commerce fees are not unusual in the consumer internet ecosystem. Companies in segments including food delivery, online travel, movies and event ticketing and big ecommerce platforms such as Amazon and Flipkart also levy similar the quick commerce segment, however, these fees assume significance given the rising competition in the sector, which has resulted in the top three players, as well as others like BigBasket's BBnow and Flipkart Minutes, increasing discounting to all-time high levels, as reported by ET on June platforms have also raised the minimum order value to unlock free deliveries, which again suggests that platforms are pushing customers towards higher AOV (average order value) purchases, analysts at brokerage firm JM Financial wrote in a research report. 'These service fees lead to improvement of take rates for these platforms as it directly goes to revenue and subsequently leads to margin improvement.'Take rates refer to the ratio of a company's gross order value to its executives said intensifying competition has prevented them from increasing delivery charges, where they continue to subsidise a gap between what they collect from a consumer and pay to the gig worker.'One of the components of expanding losses, besides expansion of the dark store footprint, is the inability to increase delivery fees,' a senior executive at a quick commerce company said. 'Right now, companies are focused on retaining their power users as much as they are going behind new customers. For most new markets, anyway companies offer a few free or discounted deliveries.'Market leader Blinkit reported an operational loss of Rs 178 crore for the January-March period, almost five times wider than the same quarter last year. Swiggy Instamart's operating loss jumped nearly threefold to Rs 840 crore in the same quarter. The parents of both Blinkit and Instamart are Blinkit, Zepto, BigBasket and Flipkart Minutes did not reply to ET's emails seeking food delivery players such as Zomato, also owned by Eternal, have reported a meaningful contribution to their unit economics from the levy of a platform fee. Zomato and rival Swiggy have increased their platform fees from Rs 2 in August 2023 to Rs 10 in October 2024. The companies have retained the fees at Rs 10 as they fear customer attrition in a market that is already witnessing sluggish the quick commerce sector, however, the market is steadily expanding, and is estimated to become $31 billion by FY28 from $8.2 billion in FY25, as per BNP Paribas.'As new platforms launch their service and as incumbent platforms enter each other's turf, they are likely to offer higher discounts initially. We expect even high-end convenience seeking users to shift in search of better bargains,' the brokerage firm said. 'Incumbents are unlikely to let go of their high-end users and will likely respond. We believe we are currently in this phase and expect this to continue for at least the next 9-12 months at least.'Eternal chief financial officer Akshant Goyal, during the company's March-quarter earnings call, said that the company would continue to chase market share for Blinkit even if it came at the cost of near-term profitability.'Platforms take commissions from brands but there is a limit to how much commission they can charge,' said Mandar Lande, cofounder and chief executive of food delivery platform Waayu. 'Meanwhile, their marketing and customer acquisition costs are rising as they are entering new markets and rising competition. So, they are levying these additional charges (such as service fee, platform fee) on the consumers.'Users have been complaining on social media about the rising costs and hidden charges. A user on microblogging site X said last month that Zepto was charging GST on item handling fee and rain hidden charges have also been recognised as one of the 13 dark patterns by the central government, which in the first week of June asked consumer internet platforms to submit a self-audit of such manipulative tactics within three months to ensure they are not indulging in these practices.

QComm Orders Are Becoming More Feesible
QComm Orders Are Becoming More Feesible

Time of India

timean hour ago

  • Time of India

QComm Orders Are Becoming More Feesible

Quick commerce companies have begun adding a range of fees — from platform and handling charges to convenience, small-cart and rain levies — to customer orders in an attempt to shore up their unit economics, or earnings from each transaction, according to industry executives and analysts. A check across the top five quick commerce apps shows these charges, which come on top of the standard delivery fees and vary across cities and platforms, range between ₹6 and ₹30 per order. On its app, Zepto says it levies a handling charge 'towards handling of products in your orders at our stores', while rival Blinkit says this fee goes towards ensuring 'proper handling' and 'high-quality quick deliveries'. Zepto and Instamart, which also offer bulk orders at discounts. Both platforms charge a higher handling fee on large baskets. There is also a surge fee, charged during high-demand hours or when there is a shortage of delivery workforce and the order value is below certain thresholds. Eternal Ltd-owned Blinkit, Swiggy's Instamart and Zepto control 80-85% of India's quick commerce market. These fees are not unusual in the consumer internet ecosystem. Companies in segments including food delivery, online travel, movies and event ticketing and big ecommerce platforms such as Amazon and Flipkart also levy similar charges. For the quick commerce segment, however, these fees assume significance given the rising competition in the sector, which has resulted in the top three players, as well as others like BigBasket's BBnow and Flipkart Minutes, increasing discounting to all-time high levels, as reported by ET on June 16. Most platforms have also raised the minimum order value to unlock free deliveries, which again suggests that platforms are pushing customers towards higher AOV (average order value) purchases, analysts at brokerage firm JM Financial wrote in a research report. 'These service fees lead to improvement of take rates for these platforms as it directly goes to revenue and subsequently leads to margin improvement.' Take rates refer to the ratio of a company's gross order value to its revenue. Industry executives said intensifying competition has prevented them from increasing delivery charges, where they continue to subsidise a gap between what they collect from a consumer and pay to the gig worker. 'One of the components of expanding losses, besides expansion of the dark store footprint, is the inability to increase delivery fees,' a senior executive at a quick commerce company said. 'Right now, companies are focused on retaining their power users as much as they are going behind new customers. For most new markets, anyway companies offer a few free or discounted deliveries.' Market leader Blinkit reported an operational loss of ₹178 crore for the January-March period, almost five times wider than the same quarter last year. Swiggy Instamart's operating loss jumped nearly threefold to ₹840 crore in the same quarter. The parents of both Blinkit and Instamart are listed. Instamart, Blinkit, Zepto, BigBasket and Flipkart Minutes did not reply to ET's emails seeking comment. Earlier, food delivery players such as Zomato, also owned by Eternal, have reported a meaningful contribution to their unit economics from the levy of a platform fee. Zomato and rival Swiggy have increased their platform fees from ₹2 in August 2023 to ₹10 in October 2024. The companies have retained the fees at ₹10 as they fear customer attrition in a market that is already witnessing sluggish growth. For quick commerce sector, however, the market is steadily expanding, and is estimated to be $31 billion by FY28 from $8.2 billion in FY25, as per BNP Paribas. 'As new platforms launch their service and as incumbent platforms enter each other's turf, they are likely to offer higher discounts initially. We expect even high-end convenience seeking users to shift in search of better bargains,' the brokerage firm said.

Manipal Health Enterprises leads race to buy Sahyadri Hospitals with Rs 6,838 crore bid
Manipal Health Enterprises leads race to buy Sahyadri Hospitals with Rs 6,838 crore bid

Time of India

timean hour ago

  • Time of India

Manipal Health Enterprises leads race to buy Sahyadri Hospitals with Rs 6,838 crore bid

Live Events (You can now subscribe to our (You can now subscribe to our Economic Times WhatsApp channel IPO-bound Manipal Health Enterprises is leading the race to acquire Sahyadri Hospitals with a Rs 6,838 crore ($800 million) bid, people familiar with the matter said. It is trailed closely by Blackstone , they the sources did not reveal the financial terms of the global investment firm's offer, the strong interest in the Pune-headquartered hospital chain owned by Canada's pension fund Ontario Teachers' Pension Plan (OTPP) is symptomatic of the high-intensity consolidation ongoing in India's hospital space. IHH Healthcare-backed Fortis Healthcare and EQT Partners also submitted bids on June 23, which was the last day to submit binding financial offers were termed 'uncompetitive' by people ET spoke with. Manipal, Blackstone, Fortis and OTPP declined to comment. EQT did not responded to ET's queries until press time acquired Sahyadri from Everstone Capital in August 2022 at a valuation of around Rs 2,500 crore, outbidding Max Healthcare. Everstone had bought the hospital chain three years earlier in 2019 from its founder, neurosurgeon Charudutt Apte, for about Rs 1,000 crore. ET first reported on December 6 last year that OTPP was planning to put Sahyadri Hospitals on the block. In May, ET reported that Manipal Health, Singapore's IHH Healthcare, Blackstone-owned hospital chain Quality Care India, KKR & Co and EQT Partners were among those that had submitted initial bids for Hospitals operates 11 facilities across Pune, Nashik, Ahilya Nagar and Karad, comprising 1,300 beds, 2,500 clinicians and 3,500 support staff, according to information available on its website. Sahyadri Hospitals is estimated to have posted Rs 210 crore in earnings before interest, tax, depreciation and amortisation on revenue of Rs 1,200 crore in FY25, said a fund manager at one of the bidding private equity Manipal Health, commonly known as Manipal Hospitals, the deal could provide a muchneeded strategic foothold in western India, where it currently lacks a significant presence. In June 2025, KKR invested $600 million in debt into the Manipal Group to support its accelerated expansion and corporate growth IPO-bound Manipal Hospitals, the second-largest hospital chain in India, has been on an aggressive acquisition spree. In 2023, it acquired an 84% stake in Kolkata-based AMRI Hospitals in a deal valued at Rs 2,400 crore. Two years earlier, it bought Columbia Asia's Indian operations for Rs 2,100 crore.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store