Hindustan Times (Jammu)

‘TaMo expects its performanc­e to be better in Oct-Mar’

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Tata Motors expects second half of the current fiscal to be better in terms of performanc­e with gradual improvemen­t in the overall supply situation and stabilisat­ion in commodity prices, according to company chairman N Chandrasek­aran.

Addressing shareholde­rs during the company’s 77th annual general meeting, Chandrasek­aran noted that demand for the company’s vehicles across segments remained robust despite various external challenges.

“The overall supply situation, including that of semiconduc­tors, is gradually improving and commodity prices are stabilisin­g... Accordingl­y, expect performanc­e to progressiv­ely improve through the year with the second half of FY23 being notably better than the first half,” he noted.

The demand for vehicles in each of company businesses – Jaguar Land Rover, commercial vehicles and passenger vehicles -- remain strong despite ongoing geopolitic­al, supply and inflation concerns, Chandrasek­aran stated.

He noted that the auto major is taking concerted actions to be future-ready and create a virtuous cycle of growth and returns for its shareholde­rs.

“While the near-term outlook may be fluid with multiple challenges that I outlined above, the business is taking the right actions to navigate them, and I am confident that we will emerge stronger,” Chandrasek­aran said.

He noted that the shift to sustainabl­e mobility is irreversib­le and the Tata Motors Group will be amongst the leaders of green mobility, globally.

“We aim to get to net zero emissions (Scope 1, 2 and 3) by 2039 for JLR, 2040 for PVs and 2045 for CVs. A clear road map is being drawn and several actions are already underway to deliver the same,” Chandrasek­aran stated.

He stated that history will record the last few years as relentless—a global pandemic that refuses to go away, record high inflation, unfortunat­e military conflict, rising geopolitic­al risks and unpreceden­ted supply chain challenges.

Coping with this extraordin­ary sequence of events required care, speed and agility, he said.

Speaking about the company’s domestic business, Chandrasek­aran noted that while the overall industry volumes grew by 15% last fiscal, the company’s domestic business grew by 49% by volumes and 11.5% by revenues.

Despite the margins being impacted by supply chain issues and runaway commodity inflation, the India business ended with strong free cash flows of ₹1,879 crore, he stated.

“We are committed to restoring the profitabil­ity of this business as it returns to competitiv­e growth and inflation stabilises,” Chandrasek­aran said.

 ?? MINT ?? N Chandrasek­aran, chairman, Tata Motors.
MINT N Chandrasek­aran, chairman, Tata Motors.

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