Mumbai:
Change is the only constant in Indias burgeoning
two-wheeler automobile industry.
Riding
on the back of the success of new motorcycle launches,
relatively smaller two-wheeler manufacturers, notably
LML, TVS Motor Company and Yamaha India, have succeeded
in making a dent in the market shares of big players like
Hero Honda and Bajaj Auto in the month of January 2003.
What
makes everyone happy is that the sales of motorcycles
of all makes continued to increase; scooters and mopeds
remained in the negative territory, though.
According
to figures released by the Society of Indian Automobile
Manufacturers (SIAM), in January 2003, LML and TVS Motor
Company showed a sales growth of 198.7 per cent and 32.5
per cent, respectively.
Bajaj
Auto showed a 19.8-per cent sales growth, selling 75,059
units of motorcycles against the sales in the corresponding
period in January 2002. This is significantly lower than
its growth of 37 per cent in the 10-month period of April
2002-January 2003.
The
leader of the pack, Hero Honda, reported a miserly sales
growth of 6.6 per cent. Yamaha, Kinetic Engineering and
Royal Enfield Motors are yet to announce sales figures.
Sales
galoreTVS sold 61,223 bikes in January 2003 as against 46,187
bikes in the same period last year and its cumulative
bike sales between April 2002 and January 2003 were up
by almost 72 per cent at 6.01 lakh units, over the corresponding
period of year 2002. TVS also reported a 32-per cent rise
in scooter sales in January, at 12,947 units, improving
its April-January sales to 1.33 lakh units.
LML
reported an astonishing rise in sales of 14,477 units
in January 2003, up from 4,846 units in the same month
last year, while its total motor bike sales between the
April-January period touched 83,001 units (38,418 units
during April-January last year).
According
to the company, the growth in motorcycle sales has come
almost entirely from the sales of the Freedom; the bikes
huge success has turned the companys fortune. Company
officials say in the future it intends to increase the
production capacity for motorcycles, and will also introduce
a greater number of motorcycle models.
TVS
Motor Companys sales growth has been on the back
of its best-selling four-stroke motorbike Victor, which
helped the company triple its net profit for the third
quarter ended 31 December 2002.
The
total turnover of the company in the first nine months
of 2002-03 touched Rs 2,054 crore, registering a 50-per
cent improvement over the corresponding period last fiscal
(Rs 1,369 crore).
TVS
plans to launch a motorcycle with a totally different
engine and design, by May 2003, the name of which has
not been disclosed yet. It hopes to sell close to 20,000
units of the new bike per month.
Fiery
competitionAlso on the anvil is a totally new Fiero, a 150cc four-stroke
bike, with better styling and better handling. The company
is also planning two new models of the Victor, a more
stylish and sleeky version and a more rugged version,
by March 2003.
Bajaj
Auto, the No 2 player, showed a relatively mediocre performance
in January even as its newly launched motorbike, Byk,
the cheapest four-stroke model on sale in India, sold
almost 6,000 units in January, the second month since
its launch.
Auto
analysts attribute the drop in growth rates to the companys
high motorcycle sales in the second half of fiscal 2002,
and a partial effect of drought conditions, especially
in rural markets.
The
analysts add that the bikes, which Bajaj developed indigenously,
have begun to outpace the growth of the Kawasaki range
of bikes it sells in India. In January 2003, Bajajs
two indigenously developed products Pulsar and
Byk contributed over 38 per cent of its total bike
sales.
Hero
Honda, the leader of the market with its highest-selling
Splendour range of bikes, reported sales of 1.45 lakh
vehicles during January against 1.37 lakh vehicles in
January last year and achieved cumulative sales of 14.27
lakh units by the end of January this fiscal against 11.63
lakh.
While
the demand for motorcycles has been quite robust, Hero
Honda Motors, the leader of the pack, has not been able
to capitalise on this trend. The companys recent
product launches have not bought in the volumes for the
company, resulting in the companys sales lagging
behind the overall growth rate for the motorcycle market.
All
are not rosyEven in the last festival period season (October and November)
the company showed a lacklustre volume growth. However,
despite the fall in market share, Hero Honda Motors continues
to be the leader in the motorcycle market. Its market
share is roughly estimated at 44.5 per cent in January
from about 50.7 per cent in the same period previous year.
During
the nine months of 2002-03, the total motorcycle sales
grew by about 39.7 per cent while Hero Honda has managed
a 27.5-per cent improvement during the period.
The
analysts say Hero Honda is slowly losing its earlier scorching
pace even as its tie-up with Honda is increasingly becoming
uncertain. Growing competition from Bajaj Auto, TVS Motor
and Yamaha has eaten into the market share of Hero Honda.
While the new product launches like the Pulsar and the
Victor from Bajaj Auto and TVS Motor, respectively, proved
to be a hit, Hero Honda is yet to come up with a successful
model to regain the market share.
Though
the launch of the Passion did bring in the volumes, its
other offering, the Dawn, was not a big success. Also,
the 133cc model Ambition, launched more recently, has
yet to see significant volume sales.
SIAM
says Hero Hondas sale volume, of motorcycles with
an engine capacity of over 125cc (consisting primarily
of the CBZ and the Ambition), dropped to 11,281 units
from 12,887 units at the end of the last year. Yamaha
Motors India last year achieved a dramatic turnaround
on the back of the success of its 125cc Enticer and 106cc
Libero models.
Enticing
marketThe companys Enticer bike model is fuelling growth
for the company, which has cashed in on the winning formula
of fuel economy plus power along with an irresistible
price of Rs 49,000.
The
company plans to launch two variants of the Enticer in
2003 since there is a huge demand in this segment, according
to company officials. Till December 2002, the Enticer
notched up 35,000 units in sales since its launch, while
the Libero sold 15,000 units since its launch in October
2002.
Kinetic,
which recently launched the cricket-inspired bike Boss,
is also focusing a great deal more on motorcycles. The
company plans to launch a new 165cc motorcycle in March
2003 and a 115cc motorcycle in the first quarter of the
next year as part of its plans to introduce a new motorcycle
in every quarter during the next one year.
According
to the company, the GF 165cc motorcycle would be introduced
in two variants City and Sports and would
be produced as part of Kinetics existing technical
alliance with Koreas Hyosung Motors. Another 115cc
motorcycle, the Velocity, will also be out in the first
quarter of the next year, the officials add.
Besides
this, Kinetic plans to launch a 250cc completely imported
motorcycle, the Aquila, in March 2003. Kinetic recently
displayed the 250cc Aquila at the Bombay auto expo.
The
Aquila 250 is a true cruiser bike with a 250cc engine
priced at more than Rs 1 lakh. Kinetic believes that it
will be the best available motorcycle in the country and
the only real, true-blue cruiser.
Watch
out for more two-wheeler action on our roads.
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